1375:
1355:
1305:
942:
969:
1087:
180:
1208:
992:
911:
140:
1107:
1188:
1395:
31:
1304:
499:
interval between corresponding conjunctions (for example the first of one set and the first of the next) is 1.599 years (583.9 days), based on the orbital speeds of Venus and Earth, but arbitrary conjunctions occur at least twice this often. The synodic cycle of Venus (1.599 years) is close to five times as long as that of
Mercury (0.317 years). When they are in phase and move between the Sun and the Earth at the same time they remain close together in the sky for weeks.
305:
487:
opposition, it will be in conjunction with Venus or
Mercury an odd number of times. So the average interval between, say, the first conjunction of one set and the first of the next set will be equal to the average interval between its oppositions with the Sun. Conjunctions between Mercury and Mars are usually triple, and those between Mercury and planets beyond Mars may also be. Conjunctions between Venus and the planets beyond Earth may be single or triple.
120:
2072:
380: — will "drop back" in right ascension until it almost allows another planet to overtake it, but then the former planet will resume its forward motion and thereafter appear to draw away from it again. This will occur in the morning sky, before dawn. The reverse may happen in the evening sky after dusk, with Mercury or Venus entering retrograde motion just as it is about to overtake another planet (often Mercury
2096:
2048:
2084:
2060:
163:). This is called conjunction in right ascension. However, there is also the term conjunction in ecliptic longitude. At such conjunction both objects have the same ecliptic longitude. Conjunction in right ascension and conjunction in ecliptic longitude do not normally take place at the same time, but in most cases nearly at the same time. However, at
398:
inverse of its period, and the speed difference between two planets is the difference between these. For conjunctions of two planets beyond the orbit of Earth, the average time interval between two conjunctions is the time it takes for 360° to be covered by that speed difference, so the average interval is:
1420:
In the 19th century the greatest approach of Pallas and Sirius took place on
October 11, 1879, when 8.6 mag bright Pallas passed Sirius 1.3° southwest and in the 20th century the lowest distance between Pallas and Sirius was reached on October 12, 1962, when Pallas, whose brightness was also 8.6 mag,
1065:
Venus, Mars and Saturn appeared close together in the evening sky in early May 2002, with a conjunction of Mars and Saturn occurring on 4 May. This was followed by a conjunction of Venus and Saturn on 7 May, and another of Venus and Mars on 10 May when their angular separation was only 18 arcminutes.
979:
Between
December 22, 1503, and December 27, 1503, all three bright outer planets Mars, Jupiter and Saturn reached their opposition to sun and stood therefore close together at the nocturnal sky. During the opposition period 1503 Mars stood 3 times in conjunction with Jupiter (October 5, 1503, January
1338:
During most of
February, March, and April, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn were close to each other, and so they underwent a series of conjunctions: on March 20, Mars was in conjunction with Jupiter, and on March 31, Mars was in conjunction with Saturn. On December 21, Jupiter and Saturn appeared at their
1056:
In May 2000, in a very rare event, several planets lay in the vicinity of the Sun in the sky as seen from the Earth, and a series of conjunctions took place. Jupiter, Mercury and Saturn each reached conjunction with the Sun in the period 8–10 May. These three planets in turn were in conjunction with
1023:
Over the period 4–6 February 1962, in a rare series of events, Mercury and Venus reached conjunction as observed from the Earth, followed by Venus and
Jupiter, then by Mars and Saturn. Conjunctions took place between the Moon and, in turn, Mars, Saturn, the Sun, Mercury, Venus and Jupiter. Mercury
952:
A triple conjunction between Mars and
Jupiter occurred. At the first conjunction on May 26, 929, Mars, whose brightness was −1.8 mag, stood 3.1 degrees south of Jupiter with a brightness of −2.6 mag. The second conjunction took place on July 4, 929, whereby Mars stood 5.7 degrees south of Jupiter.
1047:
separately reached conjunction with each other, and each separately with the Sun, within a 7-day period in August 1987 as seen from the Earth. The Moon also reached conjunction with each of these bodies on 24 August. However, none of these conjunctions were observable due to the glare of the Sun.
498:
of Venus), an even number of conjunctions with
Mercury take place. There are usually four, but sometimes just two, and sometimes six, as in the cycle mentioned above with a quintuple conjunction as Venus moves eastward, preceded by a singlet on August 6, 2047, as Venus moves westward. The average
263:
A conjunction, as a phenomenon of perspective, is an event that involves two astronomical bodies seen by an observer on the Earth. Times and details depend only very slightly on the observer's location on the Earth's surface, with the differences being greatest for conjunctions involving the Moon
486:
Conjunctions between a planet inside the orbit of Earth (Venus or
Mercury) and a planet outside are a bit more complicated. As the outer planet swings around from being in opposition to the Sun to being east of the Sun, then in superior conjunction with the Sun, then west of the Sun, and back to
388:
of the planets involved, and when this situation arises they may remain in very close visual proximity for several days or even longer). The quasiconjunction is reckoned as occurring at the time the distance in right ascension between the two planets is smallest, even though, when declination is
1074:
A conjunction of the Moon and Mars took place on 24 December 2007, very close to the time of the full Moon and at the time when Mars was at opposition to the Sun. Mars and the full Moon appeared close together in the sky worldwide, with an occultation of Mars occurring for observers in some far
1014:
In early
December 1899 the Sun and the naked-eye planets appeared to lie within a band 35 degrees wide along the ecliptic as seen from the Earth. As a consequence, over the period 1–4 December 1899, the Moon reached conjunction with, in order, Jupiter, Uranus, the Sun, Mercury, Mars, Saturn and
397:
The interval between two conjunctions involving the same two planets is not constant, but the average interval between two similar conjunctions can be calculated from the periods of the planets. The "speed" at which a planet goes around the Sun, in terms of revolutions per time, is given by the
921:
On February 27, 1953, BC, Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn formed a group with an angular diameter of 26.45 arc minutes. Jupiter was on the same day only a few degrees away, so that on this day all 5 bright planets could be found in an area measuring only 4.33 degrees. David Pankenier and
1374:
1354:
1416:, the brightest star in the night sky, on October 9 to the south at a distance of 8.5 arcminutes (source: Astrolutz 2022, ISBN 978-3-7534-7124-2). As Sirius is far south of the ecliptic only few objects of the solar system can be seen from earth close to Sirius.
941:
167:, it is possible that a conjunction only in right ascension (or ecliptic length) occurs. At the time of conjunction – it does not matter if in right ascension or in ecliptic longitude – the involved planets are close together upon the
980:
19, 1504, and February 8, 1504) and 3 times in conjunction with Saturn (October 14, 1503, December 26, 1503, and March 7, 1504). Jupiter and Saturn stood on May 24, 1504, in close conjunction with an angular separation of 19 arcminutes.
956:
The second conjunction might have been from all conjunctions between outer planets since Birth of Christ that at which both planets had greatest brightness. At all other conjunctions between outer planets at least one planet was dimmer.
1086:
1668:
1664:
1647:
1643:
1057:
each other and with Venus over a period of a few weeks. However, most of these conjunctions were not visible from the Earth because of the glare from the Sun. NASA referred to May 5 as the date of the conjunction.
1066:
A series of conjunctions between the Moon and, in order, Saturn, Mars and Venus took place on 14 May, although it was not possible to observe all these in darkness from any single location on the Earth.
991:
968:
361:
just 116 days in length. An example will occur in 2048, when Venus, moving eastward behind the Sun, encounters Mercury five times (February 16, March 16, May 27, August 13, and September 5).
474:
1887:
247:. An example of an occultation is when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, causing the Sun to disappear either entirely or partially. This phenomenon is commonly known as a
910:
143:
A conjunction of Mars and Jupiter in the morning of 1 May 2011, when, about an hour before sunrise, five of the Solar System's eight planets and the Moon could be seen from
1106:
1187:
1916:
1028:
produced a total solar eclipse visible in Indonesia and the Pacific Ocean, when these five naked-eye planets were visible in the vicinity of the Sun in the sky.
219:(or the same ecliptic latitude at a conjunction in ecliptic longitude), the one that is closer to the Earth will pass in front of the other. In such a case, a
1002:
On October 9, 1604, a conjunction between Mars and Jupiter took place, whereby Mars passed Jupiter 1.8 degrees southward. Only two degrees away from Jupiter
1226:
come close together in a planetary conjunction; they came approximately 1/3 a degree apart. The conjunction had been nicknamed the "Star of Bethlehem."
1937:
514:
the period used is 1.5 times that of Neptune, slightly different from the current value. The interval is then exactly thrice the period of Neptune.
251:. Occultations in which the larger body is neither the Sun nor the Moon are very rare. More frequent, however, is an occultation of a planet by the
947:
Conjunction of Mars and Jupiter on July 4, 929, for an observer at 50N 9E at 23 CET. Both planets reached nearly their greatest possible brightness
2121:
1992:
1207:
953:
Both planets were −2.8 mag bright. On August 18, 929, the −1.9 mag bright Mars stood 4.7 degrees south of Jupiter, which was −2.6 mag bright.
2026:
1141:
of Venus by the Moon was visible from some locations. The three objects appeared close together in the sky from any location on the Earth.
1895:
1862:
1006:
appeared on the same day. This was perhaps the only time in recorded history a supernova took place near a conjunction of two planets.
1524:
1418:
At this occasion Pallas had not only the lowest angular distance to Sirius in the 21st century, but also since its discovery in 1802.
1394:
2017:
17:
1977:
243:. When the nearer object appears larger than the farther one, it will completely obscure its smaller companion; this is called an
1569:
1152:
322:
as seen from Earth. However, this definition can be applied to any pair of planets, as seen from the one farther from the Sun.
1738:
1672:
1651:
2005:
264:
because of its relative closeness, but even for the Moon the time of a conjunction never differs by more than a few hours.
231:. If the visible disk of the nearer object is considerably smaller than that of the farther object, the event is called a
1924:
1798:
506:
of 365.25 days, for combinations of the nine traditional planets. Conjunctions with the Sun are also included. Since
357:, or even quintuple. Quintuple conjunctions involve Mercury, because it moves rapidly east and west of the sun, in a
404:
1430:
1133:
occurred on 1 December 2008, and several hours later both planets separately reached conjunction with the crescent
1938:
https://lightworkers.org/page/218837/earthsky-news-jan-8-awesome-venussaturn-conjunction-and-more-for-january-2016
179:
106:. Conjunctions between two bright objects close to the ecliptic, such as two bright planets, can be seen with the
81:
and a planet—this fact implies an apparent close approach between the objects as seen in the sky. A related word,
1321:(image height = 4°). At the lower edge of the picture, a bit left from the centre there is the neighbour star
1567:
1522:
319:
277:
273:
997:
View on Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and Kepler's Supernova on October 9, 1604, for an observer at 50N 9E at 19 CET
227:. For example, if the Moon passes into the shadow of Earth and disappears from view, this event is called a
494:
to the east of the Sun to maximum elongation west of the Sun and then back to east of the Sun (a so-called
171:. In the vast majority of such cases, one of the planets will appear to pass north or south of the other.
2038:
1456:
365:
59:
34:
Visual conjunction between the Moon and the planet Venus, the two brightest objects in the night sky
1949:
310:
The terms "inferior conjunction" and "superior conjunction" are used in particular for the planets
128:
1755:
1380:
Conjunction of Sirius and Pallas (marked with an arrow) on October 9, 2022, photographed with an
1360:
Conjunction of Sirius and Pallas (marked with an arrow) on October 9, 2022, photographed with an
297:
1024:
also reached inferior conjunction with the Sun. The conjunction between the Moon and the Sun at
1716:
1488:
1478:
503:
491:
127:
U+260C ☌). The conjunction symbol is not used in modern astronomy. It continues to be used in
1599:
1866:
1003:
1075:
northern locations. A similar conjunction took place on 21 May 2016 and on 8 December 2022.
916:
Meeting of all 5 bright planets on February 27, 1953, BC, for an observer at 50N 9E at 7 CET
1844:
1451:
1092:
Conjunction of Venus (left) and Jupiter (bottom), with the nearby crescent Moon, seen from
232:
188:
99:
1532:
502:
The following table gives these average intervals, between corresponding conjunctions, in
27:
When two astronomical objects have the same right ascension or the same ecliptic longitude
8:
2116:
2100:
2014:
1996:
1493:
1314:
1310:
192:
114:
47:
1848:
479:
This does not apply of course to the intervals between the individual conjunctions of a
30:
2088:
2076:
1987:
1698:
1503:
1498:
1461:
1381:
1361:
480:
354:
289:
236:
220:
164:
1813:
1577:
1794:
1734:
1483:
1340:
1293:
were in conjunction. The pair was only 0.25 degrees apart in the sky at its closest.
139:
1015:
Venus. Most of these conjunctions were not visible because of the glare of the Sun.
2052:
1724:
1466:
1317:
on 18 July 2020 21:30 UTC with an attitude von 17° above the north horizon of
1277:
were in conjunction, meaning that they appeared close together in the morning sky.
1246:
1165:
1036:
369:
311:
240:
168:
1568:
Her Majesty's Nautical Almanac Office and United States Naval Observatory (2012).
1523:
Her Majesty's Nautical Almanac Office and United States Naval Observatory (2012).
389:
taken into account, they may appear closer together shortly before or after this.
54:
appear to be close to each other in the sky. This means they have either the same
2021:
2009:
1981:
490:
As for conjunctions between Mercury and Venus, each time Venus goes from maximum
216:
156:
55:
2002:
1615:
1261:, meaning that the three planets were very close together in the evening sky.
2110:
2030:
923:
495:
358:
248:
228:
223:
takes place. If one object moves into the shadow of another, the event is an
144:
87:, is the minimum apparent separation in the sky of two astronomical objects.
2064:
1401:
1385:
1365:
255:. Several such events are visible every year from various places on Earth.
91:
1793:(1 ed.), Richmond, Virginia: Willmann-Bell, Inc., pp. 1.1–1.35,
1729:
1093:
333:) is simply said to be in conjunction, when it is in conjunction with the
1473:
1138:
974:
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn in the constellation Gemini on December 26, 1503
927:
244:
212:
1702:
1446:
1424:
1330:
304:
160:
94:
or one object in the Solar System and a more distant object, such as a
51:
926:
have suggested that this conjunction occurred at the beginning of the
1322:
377:
119:
107:
39:
102:: the two objects involved are not actually close to one another in
1671:
in the period November 4, 2005, to June 9, 2007, calculated by the
1409:
1025:
342:
326:
98:. A conjunction is an apparent phenomenon caused by the observer's
66:
267:
1789:
Meeus, Jean (1983), "Chapter 1, Planetary Phenomena, 1976–2005",
1441:
1339:
closest separation in the sky since 1623, in an event known as a
1329:). The distance between Talitha Borealis and C/2020 F3 was seven
1290:
1274:
1258:
1223:
1173:
1130:
511:
224:
204:
124:
83:
1650:
in the period January through September 2048, calculated by the
1413:
1318:
1239:
1194:
1113:
1097:
152:
70:
348:
2003:
Planets conjunctions and mutual occultations 1000BC to 3000AD
1270:
1254:
1250:
1235:
1219:
1198:
1176:
went through a series of conjunctions only a few days apart.
1169:
1126:
1117:
1040:
507:
373:
364:
There is also a so-called quasiconjunction, when a planet in
330:
315:
200:
103:
1917:"Venus and Jupiter Get Bright and Tight in This Week's Sky"
1286:
1134:
1044:
338:
252:
196:
95:
74:
2059:
1784:
1782:
1780:
1689:
and the Dates of Xia, Shang, and Zhou: A Research Note",
1193:
Moon, Jupiter (top), and Venus (right) at dusk seen from
334:
296:. In an inferior conjunction, the superior planet is "in
293:
184:
78:
1835:
Paulson, Murray D. (2007). "Mars: The 2007 Opposition".
392:
1894:. Her Majesty's Nautical Almanac Office. Archived from
1421:
stood 1.4° southwest of the brightest star in the sky.
1112:
Conjunction of the Moon, Venus, and Jupiter, seen from
1950:"Mars/Jupiter conjunction on January 7 | EarthSky.org"
1777:
2036:
407:
239:, and when Venus passes in front of the Sun, it is a
1843:(6). Royal Astronomical Society of Canada: 242–245.
1425:
Conjunctions of planets in right ascension 2005–2020
280:
planet is on the opposite side of the Sun, it is in
1837:
Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada
235:. When Mercury passes in front of the Sun, it is a
1253:were in conjunction, followed by a conjunction of
468:
1791:Astronomical Tables of the Sun, Moon, and Planets
211:However, if two celestial bodies attain the same
2108:
1675:. There is a quasiconjunction on August 9, 2006.
353:Conjunctions between two planets can be single,
2015:Conjunctions of planets with the main asteroids
1993:Image of 2001 occultation of Saturn by the Moon
1888:"Occultation of Venus 2008 December 01 16h UT1"
300:" to the Sun as seen from the inferior planet.
268:Superior and inferior conjunctions with the Sun
90:Conjunctions involve either two objects in the
1684:
518:Average interval between similar conjunctions
469:{\displaystyle {\frac {1}{|1/p_{1}-1/p_{2}|}}}
151:More generally, in the particular case of two
1988:Venus – Jupiter 2015 & 2016 conjunctions
65:When two objects always appear close to the
1816:. National Space Science Data Center – NASA
1638:
1636:
349:Multiple conjunctions and quasiconjunctions
258:
1552:
1213:Venus–Jupiter conjunction of June 30, 2015
155:, it means that they merely have the same
1728:
1574:Glossary, The Astronomical Almanac Online
1529:Glossary, The Astronomical Almanac Online
199:shines along with two bright companions:
1633:
1557:. Willman-Bell Inc., Richmond, Virginia.
178:
138:
29:
1834:
1814:"The Planetary Alignment of 5 May 2000"
1753:
1715:
1597:
1400:Venus and Jupiter on 1 March 2022 from
897:
14:
2122:Conjunctions (astronomy and astrology)
2109:
2027:Planetary Alignments: Fact or Fiction?
1999:Web Archives (archived 2008-08-01)
1591:
1153:2012 Venus Jupiter Mercury conjunction
1788:
1673:JPL Horizons On-Line Ephemeris System
1652:JPL Horizons On-Line Ephemeris System
393:Average interval between conjunctions
288:occurs when the two planets lie in a
1756:"Total Solar Eclipse of 1962 Feb 05"
1616:"Planetary Conjunction over Paranal"
24:
1765:. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
1685:Pankenier, David W. (1983–1985), "
1601:The Standard American Encyclopedia
1325:(Kappa Ursae Majoris respectively
341:is in conjunction with the Sun at
62:, usually as observed from Earth.
25:
2133:
1978:Occultations of Saturn by Jupiter
1971:
1719:(2018), Schwartz, Adam C. (ed.),
1598:Ridpath, John Clark, ed. (1897).
1285:On the early hours of January 7,
174:
2094:
2082:
2070:
2058:
2046:
1863:"NASA – Spectacular Conjunction"
1431:List of conjunctions (astronomy)
1393:
1373:
1353:
1303:
1206:
1186:
1105:
1085:
990:
967:
940:
909:
303:
215:at the time of a conjunction in
134:
118:
1942:
1931:
1909:
1892:The Astronomical Almanac Online
1880:
1855:
1828:
1806:
1747:
1269:On the morning of November 13,
1242:came together in a conjunction
1923:. 29 June 2015. Archived from
1709:
1678:
1657:
1608:
1561:
1546:
1516:
1313:in conjunction with the comet
459:
415:
272:As seen from a planet that is
13:
1:
1509:
1234:On the morning of January 9,
376:, from the point of view of
7:
1604:. Vol. 1. p. 198.
1435:
10:
2138:
2033: (archived 2011-08-24)
1984: (archived 2005-04-10)
1457:Transit of Earth from Mars
1428:
1150:
902:
337:, as seen from Earth. The
292:on the same side of the
259:Position of the observer
18:Astronomical conjunction
1620:ESO Picture of the Week
1555:Astronomical Algorithms
1346:
1296:
1280:
1264:
1229:
1179:
1159:
1144:
1078:
1069:
1060:
1051:
1031:
1018:
1009:
983:
960:
1921:nationalgeographic.com
1754:Espenak, Fred (2004).
1489:Opposition (astronomy)
1479:Elongation (astronomy)
933:
470:
368: — always either
208:
183:In the night sky over
148:
35:
1763:NASA Eclipse Web Site
1730:10.1515/9781501505393
1723:, De Gruyter Mouton,
1665:longitudes of Mercury
1644:longitudes of Mercury
510:is in resonance with
471:
191:(VLT) observatory at
182:
142:
77:and a planet, or the
33:
1452:Astronomical transit
1100:, on 1 December 2008
898:Notable conjunctions
405:
286:inferior conjunction
282:superior conjunction
189:Very Large Telescope
159:(and hence the same
48:astronomical objects
1997:Library of Congress
1849:2007JRASC.101..242P
1669:longitudes of Venus
1648:longitudes of Venus
1553:Jean Meeus (1991).
1494:Spherical astronomy
1315:C/2020 F3 (NEOWISE)
1164:At the end of May,
1120:on 1 December 2008.
519:
165:triple conjunctions
117:for conjunction is
115:astronomical symbol
2020:2007-09-16 at the
2008:2011-07-11 at the
1721:The Nivison Annals
1504:Triple conjunction
1499:Syzygy (astronomy)
1462:Transit of Mercury
1388:of 300 millimetres
1004:Kepler's Supernova
517:
481:triple conjunction
466:
237:transit of Mercury
209:
149:
60:ecliptic longitude
36:
1740:978-1-5015-1454-8
1717:Nivison, David S.
1484:Great conjunction
1368:of 75 millimetres
1341:great conjunction
1327:Talitha Australis
1201:, on 20 June 2015
1125:A conjunction of
895:
894:
464:
366:retrograde motion
284:with the Sun. An
16:(Redirected from
2129:
2099:
2098:
2097:
2087:
2086:
2085:
2075:
2074:
2073:
2063:
2062:
2051:
2050:
2049:
2042:
1965:
1964:
1962:
1961:
1956:. 6 January 2018
1946:
1940:
1935:
1929:
1928:
1927:on July 2, 2015.
1913:
1907:
1906:
1904:
1903:
1884:
1878:
1877:
1875:
1874:
1865:. Archived from
1859:
1853:
1852:
1832:
1826:
1825:
1823:
1821:
1810:
1804:
1803:
1786:
1775:
1774:
1772:
1770:
1760:
1759:(GIF image file)
1751:
1745:
1744:
1732:
1713:
1707:
1706:
1682:
1676:
1661:
1655:
1640:
1631:
1630:
1628:
1627:
1612:
1606:
1605:
1595:
1589:
1588:
1586:
1585:
1576:. Archived from
1565:
1559:
1558:
1550:
1544:
1543:
1541:
1540:
1531:. Archived from
1520:
1467:Transit of Venus
1397:
1377:
1357:
1311:Talitha Borealis
1307:
1210:
1190:
1109:
1089:
994:
971:
944:
913:
520:
516:
475:
473:
472:
467:
465:
463:
462:
457:
456:
447:
436:
435:
426:
418:
409:
320:inferior planets
307:
241:transit of Venus
169:celestial sphere
122:
46:occurs when two
21:
2137:
2136:
2132:
2131:
2130:
2128:
2127:
2126:
2107:
2106:
2105:
2095:
2093:
2083:
2081:
2071:
2069:
2057:
2047:
2045:
2037:
2022:Wayback Machine
2010:Wayback Machine
1982:Wayback Machine
1974:
1969:
1968:
1959:
1957:
1948:
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1936:
1932:
1915:
1914:
1910:
1901:
1899:
1886:
1885:
1881:
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1861:
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1856:
1833:
1829:
1819:
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1525:"Conjunction"
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19:
2101:Solar System
1958:. Retrieved
1954:earthsky.org
1953:
1944:
1933:
1925:the original
1920:
1911:
1900:. Retrieved
1896:the original
1891:
1882:
1871:. Retrieved
1867:the original
1857:
1840:
1836:
1830:
1818:. Retrieved
1808:
1790:
1767:. Retrieved
1762:
1749:
1720:
1711:
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1690:
1686:
1680:
1663:Compare the
1659:
1642:Compare the
1624:. Retrieved
1619:
1610:
1600:
1593:
1582:. Retrieved
1578:the original
1573:
1563:
1554:
1548:
1537:. Retrieved
1533:the original
1528:
1518:
1407:
1402:South Africa
1386:focal length
1366:focal length
1337:
1326:
1284:
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920:
504:Julian years
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489:
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396:
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381:
363:
352:
324:
318:, which are
309:
285:
281:
271:
262:
210:
150:
112:
92:Solar System
89:
82:
64:
58:or the same
43:
37:
2089:Outer space
2077:Spaceflight
1697:: 175–183,
1691:Early China
1474:Occultation
1331:arc minutes
1139:occultation
928:Xia dynasty
245:occultation
213:declination
100:perspective
44:conjunction
2117:Astrometry
2111:Categories
1960:2018-01-11
1902:2012-09-12
1873:2017-07-12
1626:2011-05-02
1584:2012-07-08
1539:2012-07-08
1510:References
1447:Astrometry
1408:Planetoid
1218:June 30 –
930:in China.
492:elongation
384:Venus are
298:opposition
161:hour angle
52:spacecraft
2053:Astronomy
1570:"Appulse"
1382:objective
1362:objective
1323:Alkaphrah
1094:São Paulo
438:−
378:the Earth
129:astrology
108:naked eye
40:astronomy
2018:Archived
2006:Archived
1703:23351600
1667:and the
1646:and the
1436:See also
1026:new Moon
857:494.374
823:127.277
585:247.187
343:New Moon
327:asteroid
278:inferior
276:, if an
274:superior
147:, Chile.
67:ecliptic
2039:Portals
1995:at the
1980:at the
1845:Bibcode
1769:12 June
1442:Appulse
1412:passed
1384:with a
1364:with a
1291:Jupiter
1275:Jupiter
1259:Jupiter
1247:Mercury
1224:Jupiter
1174:Jupiter
1166:Mercury
1131:Jupiter
1037:Mercury
903:1953 BC
889:494.374
886:127.277
865:247.187
852:171.406
831:164.791
828:Neptune
820:171.406
789:33.430
755:12.461
726:Jupiter
590:Mercury
582:164.791
548:Neptune
539:Jupiter
527:Mercury
512:Neptune
370:Mercury
312:Mercury
233:transit
225:eclipse
205:Jupiter
193:Paranal
153:planets
125:Unicode
84:appulse
71:planets
1797:
1737:
1701:
1414:Sirius
1410:Pallas
1319:Berlin
1240:Saturn
1195:Madrid
1114:Quzhou
1098:Brazil
883:33.430
880:12.461
849:35.855
846:12.783
815:45.338
812:13.813
797:84.017
794:Uranus
786:35.855
783:45.338
778:19.865
763:29.447
760:Saturn
752:12.783
749:13.813
746:19.865
729:11.863
721:1.895
687:1.004
653:1.004
619:1.004
601:0.1586
579:84.017
576:29.447
573:11.863
558:Period
551:Pluto
545:Uranus
542:Saturn
355:triple
221:syzygy
195:, the
73:, the
2065:Stars
1820:5 May
1699:JSTOR
1622:. ESO
1271:Venus
1255:Venus
1251:Venus
1236:Venus
1220:Venus
1199:Spain
1170:Venus
1137:. An
1127:Venus
1118:China
1041:Venus
877:1.895
874:1.004
871:1.004
868:1.004
862:Pluto
843:1.903
840:1.006
837:1.006
834:1.006
809:1.924
806:1.012
803:1.012
800:1.012
775:2.009
772:1.035
769:1.035
766:1.035
741:2.235
738:1.092
735:1.092
732:1.092
718:1.903
715:1.924
712:2.009
709:2.235
704:2.135
701:2.135
698:2.135
695:1.881
684:1.006
681:1.012
678:1.035
675:1.092
672:2.135
667:0.799
664:0.159
661:1.000
650:1.006
647:1.012
644:1.035
641:1.092
638:2.135
635:0.799
630:1.599
627:0.615
624:Venus
616:1.006
613:1.012
610:1.035
607:1.092
604:2.135
598:1.599
593:0.241
570:1.881
567:1.000
564:0.615
561:0.241
530:Venus
508:Pluto
374:Venus
331:comet
316:Venus
201:Venus
104:space
1822:2016
1795:ISBN
1771:2013
1735:ISBN
1695:9/10
1687:Mozi
1347:2022
1297:2020
1289:and
1287:Mars
1281:2018
1273:and
1265:2017
1257:and
1249:and
1238:and
1230:2016
1222:and
1180:2015
1172:and
1160:2013
1145:2012
1135:Moon
1129:and
1079:2008
1070:2007
1061:2002
1052:2000
1045:Mars
1043:and
1032:1987
1019:1962
1010:1899
984:1604
961:1503
692:Mars
536:Mars
386:both
339:Moon
314:and
290:line
253:Moon
203:and
197:Moon
113:The
96:star
75:Moon
42:, a
2029:at
1841:101
1725:doi
934:929
658:Sun
533:Sun
382:and
372:or
335:Sun
329:or
294:Sun
187:'s
185:ESO
79:Sun
50:or
38:In
2113::
1952:.
1919:.
1890:.
1839:.
1779:^
1761:.
1733:,
1693:,
1635:^
1618:.
1572:.
1527:.
1343:.
1197:,
1168:,
1116:,
1096:,
1039:,
483:.
345:.
131:.
110:.
2041::
1963:.
1905:.
1876:.
1851:.
1847::
1824:.
1773:.
1743:.
1727::
1705:.
1654:.
1629:.
1587:.
1542:.
1333:.
460:|
454:2
450:p
445:/
441:1
433:1
429:p
424:/
420:1
416:|
411:1
207:.
123:(
20:)
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