https://youtu.be/B_wtPtTKA8E
nemesis maturity
Published on Jul 23, 2018
Stargazers will be able to see both Saturn and the Moon on full display on July 24. The ringed planet will appear directly below the waxing gibbous Moon. In the days ahead, the Moon will be moving toward Mars, now at its best since 2003. On the night of July 27, the moon will be near Mars and will stage the century’s longest lunar eclipse. In the southeastern sky after dusk on the evening of Tuesday, July 24, the full moon will sit 2 degrees to the upper right of bright, yellowish Saturn. The two objects will cross the sky together during the night and will easily fit within the field of binoculars or a telescope at very low magnification. Meanwhile, the moon's separation from the bright planet will noticeably decrease as the moon slides eastwards in its orbit. https://www.space.com/16149-night-sky... The pair will also be visible to the naked eye worldwide. The Moon will be at mag -12.4, and Saturn at mag 0.0, both in the constellation Sagittarius. https://in-the-sky.org/news.php?id=20... Over the next several days, as darkness falls, watch for the moon to move away from the planet Saturn and toward the very bright and very red planet Mars. On July 27, the night of Mars’ long-awaited opposition, the moon will be near Mars. And that July 27 moon will undergo an eclipse, the longest total lunar eclipse of the 21st century. http://earthsky.org/tonight/moon-near... earthsky.org Clips, images credit: NASA/JPL, ESA/HUBBLE & nemesis maturity channel Music credit: YouTube Audio Library