In the Sky This Month

Three bright planets stairstep up the evening sky for most of the month. Venus, the Evening Star, is the brightest, followed by Jupiter, then Mercury (see Featured Event). Scorpius arcs low across the south during the night, while the Summer Triangle—the bright stars Vega, Deneb, and Altair—is in the east at nightfall and soars high overhead in the wee hours. The Big Dipper is high in the north at nightfall early in the month, but a little lower in the northwest by June’s end.

The full Moon of June is known as the Flower Moon, Strawberry Moon, Rose Moon, or Honey Moon.

Perigee June 14
Apogee June 28

Moon phases are Central Time.

Moon Phases

June 8 5:00 am
Last Quarter Last Quarter
June 14 9:54 pm
New Moon New Moon
June 21 4:55 pm
First Quarter First Quarter
June 29 6:56 pm
Full Moon Full Moon

Procyon

Procyon, the brightest star of the little dog, climbs into view, due east, by about 9 p.m. That’s just before Sirius, the Dog Star, which rises to the lower right of Procyon. The name Procyon means “before the dog,” indicating that it leads the Dog Star across the sky.

Long-Night Moon

This is a great night for werewolves and other lunaphiles in the northern hemisphere because it’s the night of the Long-Night Moon. It is the full Moon that’s in view longer than any other full Moon of the year.

Geminid Meteors

Friday the 13th brings a bit of bad luck for skywatchers. The Geminid meteor shower is at its peak, and it’s generally one of the year’s best, with more than 100 meteors per hour. But the Moon is almost full, so it will overpower all but the brightest meteors.

Northern Cross

Look to the northwest after nightfall this evening for the Northern Cross, the same stars that outline Cygnus, the swan. As it begins to set, a few hours after sunset, the cross stands upright, as though it were anchored to the horizon.

Future Leader

Gamma Cephei is a future North Star. A thousand years from now, it will be closer to the north celestial pole than Polaris, the current North Star. You can find it standing directly above Polaris at nightfall at this time of year.

The Fox

Vulpecula, the fox, is well up in the west as night falls. The constellation is between the stars Deneb and Altair, the two points that form the top side of the bright Summer Triangle.

Beta Pictoris

From the far-southern U.S., the star Beta Pictoris just climbs into view around midnight. It is low in the south, to the upper right of Canopus, the second-brightest star in the night sky. Beta Pictoris has two known planets plus the ingredients for making more planets.

First-Quarter Moon

The Moon is at first quarter this morning, one-quarter of the way through its month-long cycle of phases. Sunlight illuminates half of the lunar hemisphere that faces our way.

Moon and Saturn

The Moon barrels toward Saturn tonight. The planet looks like a bright star, to the upper left of the Moon at dusk. As they drop lower, the gap will close. From most of the country they will be separated by the width of one or two fingers held at arm’s length.

Climbing Higher

Orion is climbing higher into the evening sky. Look eastward in mid-evening for a line of three stars extending straight up from the horizon, flanked by two brighter stars: orange Betelgeuse to the left, and blue-white Rigel to the right.

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