you should tell folks about the antikytheria mechanism. ..they knew the stars and wondering stars rotates around us thousands of years ago and so do you,but youre a deciever or idiot...which one???
I just want to say thank you! I was a huge astronomy nerd back in elementary school and now have a niece that’s taking a liking to space stuff. Gotta brush up a little!
Thank you so much for all your hard work! I am new to Astronomy and Astrophotgraphy,and have never been so engrossed in a hobby in my life,until now. I am completely absorbed in it and think of little else.It really has changed my life,thanks once again. I use to have depression, but now things and I are looking up.
We call it Buddh (mercury) Shukra(Venus) Mangal(Mars) Brahaspati(Jupiter) Shani(Saturn) Nowadays Venus, Mars and mercury together are clearly visible in the mornings
Indian culture is very rich in these things, you see our week day names are named on it, for example budhwar shukrawar etc And there is a great science behind it, when you get time check it out
I used to watch a manga reviewer called tekking101 the name Uranus came up in a series and he started saying it like the "ura-nos!" And always emphasized it by saying it dramatically. Became my favorite way to refer to that planet!
Mercury: You'll need to pick a time when it's furthest from the sun as usually it's caught in the glare and wait for the appropriate sunset or sunrise (it alternates between the two). 10% of clear nights / mornings you might see it. With binoculars you might push it to 30% or 50% if you're really good. Venus: Very bright, easily spotted, alternates between sunset and sunrise. In a telescope it looks like a mini-version of the moon becasue it looks white and cresecent shaped. The phases and apparent size and brightness change a lot. When it's a thin crescent, you can spot its shape with just binoculars. Most of the time you'll need a scope. Mars: Often much smaller-looking and dimmer than Jupiter, but every 2 years it's opposition time and then it will outshine Jupiter. You'll see detail around opposition through a scope, otherwise, a small red disk. Jupiter: The King of the night skies, it looks bright and you might even notice it looks bigger than a star with your naked eye. Through binoculars you can see 4 little moons close by (although sometimes only 2 or 3 are visible since the hide behind or in front of jupiter sometimes). With a scope you will be amazed at the detail you can see. Banding, colouration, swirling clouds, the Great Red Spot and the dancing moons. Simply breathtaking. Saturn: If you thought Jupiter was beautiful through a scope, prepare to be even more amazed by the Queen of the night sky (no way is Saturn male). The yellow colour, bands of cloud and most of all, the rings are quite beautiful. With a good scope and conditions you'll see a dark gap in the middle of the rings, called Cassini's Division. With binoculars you'll probably only see a yellowish star although you might just be able to make out a difference in its shape (it looks like an egg or that it has "ears" due to its rings). Uranus: I have never seen it with my own eyes, but it is visible through binoculars or a finder scope, where it looks like a bluish star. In a big scope you will see it as a disk, but I have never seen any details or shifting clouds on it. Neptune: I have never seen it even with binoculars, but the skies were I live are big city skies, with lots of light pollution- you may have more luck. Being invisible in the finder scope from the city, it is necessary to use a telescope and star-hop with a wide-field eyepiece. With a big scope and a high-powered eyepiece it looks like a dark blue dot, but it is still faint. I couldn't ever make out its dark spot, although some claim that they have. Wonderful to see such a cold and mysterious world so far away with your own eyes!
Hello Janine. It is nice to hear you again. The Solar System is wonderful and I always see the sky at nigth. From where I live (Santiago, Chile), I can see Mars and Jupiter (I love it). Thank you for your video -:)
Ah, the planets. One has to commend our ancient ancestors who could look up at the sky and not just notice objects, but see patterns and motions, and eventually be able to predict reappearance.
First of all your voice is so very calming. I enjoy listening to it. As a seasoned amateur astronomer I still found some of your information new to me. I plan on listening to your other videos as well and think these are a great learning tool for those new to the science. Thank you so much.
Just one correction about Mars: Gravity doesn't affect how much atmosphere a planet can have, Titan, a moon of Saturn, has an atmosphere heavier than Earth's, almost double the pressure. The reason Mars hasn't got much of an atmosphere is because it's magnetic field was lost millions/billions of years ago when it's liquid core cooled down, letting the solar winds sweep Mars' atmosphere clean off
While the magnetosphere plays a vital role in protecting our atmosphere by deflecting harmful solar particles, it is primarily gravity that keeps Earth's atmosphere in place.
Loved the video. Thank you so much. I know it is easy to say thank you, but I know you are putting your complete life in these things and we people are watching a video of 25 minutes. I know it takes a lot of efforts . thanks from my depth of my heart.
"No other object has been misidentified as a flying saucer more often than the planet Venus." I can see why. When it's low on the horizon, it can appear to move, change shape and color. All kinds of crazy stuff!
Love your videos, I work outside in the early morning and used this video to identify Venus. It's even more beautiful than the pictures. Very helpful, thank you
I’ve just discovered your channel and am hooked like the tail of Scorpius! I’ve loved astronomy since opening my World Book encyclopedia as a child. Thank you so much for the wonderful pics, great content, & most of all - adoration of all things celestial! ⭐️💫
Ha! We understand why Pluto was demoted, but to my kids and I, Pluto is still the 9th Planet. Little planet with a heart on it's stomach will always be a planet to me. :) But yes, we do understand. This is a great video! I've seen them all (through Saturn, anyway) at various times of the year, and I'm sharing this vid with other friends who are interested in searching out the planets. Thank you for posting!
Nice summary of what amateur planetary astronomers can expect to see. I dabbled for a year or two when I lived in south Florida in the early 90's with an entry level refracting scope. I had much the same experiences you describe. I did score at least 2-3 good Mercury finds, but it moves very quickly and you have really a window of minutes only to get your eye on it before a cloud usually takes it. And I did after much frustration and repeated attempts over some months finally got Uranus in my sights, but because of city light pollution and the rotation of the Earth it is also exceedingly difficult to track with a basic cheapy telescope. With my very limited resolution it was no more than a bluish blur. And I never even attempted Neptune. Seemed pointless. You would need the electronically assisted large mirror jobs to even find it and keep a good stable view of it.
Happy new year Janine🥰🥰. Glad to see your videos again. Thanks for this one-as usual packed with great and extremely useful info for star gazing. One question i was hoping you would answer- is it the planets or the stars that twinkle? I have seen vids that say opposite things about this. Thanks again and have a wonderful year.
The stars twinkle because they are more distant than planets. The tiny, pinpoint light from stars are affected more by the movement of atmospheric gases. Planets are closer and have a more disk-like appearance, so they tend to shine rather than twinkle.
I find Mercury and Uranus the most challenging naked eye for different reasons, Mercury 's bright but there's generally a lot of sunlight and with Uranus due to it's faintness.With Uranus you have to be in a pretty dark area too and identify it with binoculars then look at the spot naked eye.I've seen Mercury many times but generally using binoculars or a monocular but I have caught it naked eye and it's not easy.
Magnificent video, Janine, as always. Although I do see the different appearance of Mars from the other planets, I don’t see any actual red in the appearance of Mars. The tint is definitely different, I just don’t see the redness. Maybe I’m color blind. Thank you, Janine.
Each of us sees color differently. Plus, our eyes are not great at distinguishing color is low like conditions. If I’m unsure about what I’m seeing, I will use Stellarium app to check. Thank you for sharing.
Janine. Thank you for this comprehensive, and very well done presentation, absolute fine job here. I took two semesters of ‘astrophysics’ in school as a college undergrad. And I loved the true pronunciation of planet ‘Uranus’,,,,,,,,,😊
200 years ago and beyond-- there was 0 light pollution-- or pollution. That is how they -- the Roman's and any one else could see --- even Neptune on a clear sky
This answered questions for me and has confirmed I was looking at planets. I have pictures of planets I saw and I'd love to have confirmation on what I thought each one was.
With the aid of my telescope, patience, and several websites, I have been able to see every planet in my telescope from my driveway. Mercury was the last one I saw. It wasn't hard to identify, but the window of availability to see it was incredibly limited.
I saw a video entitled "something strange just came out of Uranus" reading the comments I haven't laughed that hard in many years. I laughed so hard I was crying and my sides hurt. I went back and looked it up and I had it wrong. It actually said "something huge just came out of Uranus".
I saw Mercury this very month early after sunset with my 114mm telescope just 4 arc degrees under Venus. I saw it at 100x and it wasn't much more than a large dot. Venus on the other hand was in one of its phases and looked wonderful. My son said he didn't know Venus had phases like the Moon, was a Moonless night. I looked at Jupiter at 60x and it showed up very well, but my son was mesmerized by Saturn at 100x in my scope. I do not exceed 100x as in my scope things just get blurry. 235x capacity is nonsense. Southern New Mexico just outside the Las Cruces city light dome. I do most of my stargazing at my son's house, but if someone wants to go with me we'll go 30 miles west where the Milky Way casts shadows.
Thank you for sharing. I haven't had the opportunity to see Venus go through phases. It is definitely on my bucket list of items to see in the night sky. I love that you stargaze with your family. Thank you for watching.
@@MountainFisher Not a troll, like I said...think about it. The Earth is facing the opposite direction of the sun at night and Mercury and Venus are between the Earth and sun supposedly.
New subscriber here: I love your channel. Lately I've been enjoying observing Jupiter, Mars and Saturn with the naked eye. What do you recommend in a powerful telescope (or binoculars) that's not too expensive?
@@learnthesky I only say this because most people lack orientation(even basic north/south). Maybe you could do a future video on orientation, planetary movement and time recording.
Great, this is wonderful and really amazing, but I wonder if you would tell me why Venus does not move across the sky just as Jupitar and others do, please. Thank U very much.
Living in LA, I feel like I’ve seen Uranus before. There was a blue star in the sky and I was like that has to be Uranus or Neptune. But since you said it’s impossible to see Neptune without magnification I ruled out Neptune.
because the faster the rotation the less the sunlight falling upon any given area...? in which case the rate of rotation of the planets should increase with increasing distance from the Sun...& thus the length of their "sidereal day" should decrease yet: Mercury 1,408 hours Venus 5,832 hours Earth 24 hours Mars 25 hours Jupiter 10 hours Saturn 11 hours Uranus 17 hours Neptune 16 hours yet Venus, not Mercury, has the longest sd, Mars' sd is (marginally) longer than Earth's, & both Jupiter's & Saturn's sds are shorter than those of Uranus & Neptune...
Thanks for your videos. I am recently semi-retired and just starting astronomy. I find your videos very helpful. But, one thing. Often, you say that something or other requiiers magnification to see. Could you tell us how much magnification is requiered? How big amateur telescope? Thank you, Please :)
Pluto is too small to clear the debris in its orbit. Think of a planet like a vacuum cleaner…as it goes around the sun, it’s gravity will attract and consume smaller objects in its path. Pluto is too small for this to happen. A video on Pluto may be in the future.
I've been looking at the IAU's star charts and although there is a legend for some of the symbols I cannot find a legend for all of the symbols I see on the charts. I was thinking maybe you could do a video on what those symbols mean?
I find this topic fascinating and appreciate all who devote their time to teach. I hv a question: why do we call these masses in the sky planets, where did that word come from? And What were their original names before the romans/greeks adopted them to fit their mithos?? Ty
Very clearly explained 👍♥️👍♥️👍.I can confidently mention this is very simple and very very useful video 👌👌. If you have a picture of jupiter together with venues please up load.
I love your videos mam, your contents are awesome ❤, but most of the time I found Jupiter brighter than Mars actually, and yes I know that Mars often outshines Jupiter in term of brightness but most of the times Jupiter looks brighter than Mars. For example in the recent conjunction of Mars-Jupiter I found Jupiter (-2.05 magnitude at that time) was brighter than Mars (0.83 magnitude at that time) and I confirmed the magnitudes of both by using stellarium.
The names of the planets come from the gods of the ancient Greeks. the messenger of the gods Hermes (Mercuris). The goddess of love Aphrodite ( Venus). Ge (Earth) and ouranos (Heaven )gave birth to many children one of them was Kronos (Saturn). The father of the gods Dias (Zupiter was the son of Kronos (Saturn). Poseidon (Νεπτουν) was the brother of Dia (Zupiter-Zeus) and was the god of the sea. Ares (Mars) was the god of war.
Where I live I go out at night around 8:00-10:00pm and I can see Venues , then I go out at 5:30 -6:00am and she’s still there I’ve tried looking for that red dot but the light distracts my view I Love how BEAUTIFULL The Night Sky looks I do have a terrific view I need to invest in a telescope ❤😅😂👍🙃😉🙃🙃
Thank you so much. Your educational videos are the best on RUclips. Superb explanations. I feel as if I'm attending a lecture on astronomy in college 🪐
I have seen many of these satellites and while my geek self has enjoyed spotting them I do despair of the price we are paying to technology and development from the loss of such things as green fields, wildlife refuges, historic buildings and also our privacy I am aware that all future Starlink satellites are to be coated in a non-reflective paint following complaints and concerns from various bodies but do we really need that many satellites when I'm sure in another 10 yrs or less we will have developed a new and better system to link globally I'm very fortunate to live in an area of relatively dark skies and would hate not to be able to see the trillions of stars that I see on my midnight walks!
Thanks for watching! New to stargazing? Download my FREE Stargazing Starter Guide: www.learnthesky.com/stargazing_starter_guide
you should tell folks about the antikytheria mechanism. ..they knew the stars and wondering stars rotates around us thousands of years ago and so do you,but youre a deciever or idiot...which one???
It never fails to amaze me how people discover these planets hundreds of years ago with the instruments they had.
@HopperRox Outdoors most places are still dark enough to see. You just need to get out of your populated area. Think of all the vast oceans.
@@keepgoing1973 I think you missed the point what he was saying. And not everyone has access to getting to the "vast oceans"
@HopperRox Outdoors my sisters boyfriend and my sister and my dad are flat earthers should flat earthers go to space
@@keepgoing1973 my dad and my sisters and sisters boyfriend are flat earthers should flat earthers go to space
@@mrbinklesgames6620 I think before that they should learn basic physics about gravity.
You cannot imagine my delight when I saw this was 24 mins. We are BLESSED with your amazing content
I’m so happy to hear this! I debated putting such a long video out.
I just want to say thank you! I was a huge astronomy nerd back in elementary school and now have a niece that’s taking a liking to space stuff. Gotta brush up a little!
Thank you for setting the record straight on the proper pronunciation of URANUS👍👍
It really is such an awkward planet to pronounce. So I will gladly embrace the name Ouranus instead of the Latinized version.
@@learntheskyI have a dream to name a planet to something that is so hard to pronounce
Thank you so much for all your hard work! I am new to Astronomy and Astrophotgraphy,and have never been so engrossed in a hobby in my life,until now. I am completely absorbed in it and think of little else.It really has changed my life,thanks once again. I use to have depression, but now things and I are looking up.
Great hobby belive Me it will have you so amazed that’s all you’ll think about Thank You LORD For their healing AMEN 🙏🏼😇😘😉👍👍🥲🥲🪽🪽🪽
We call it
Buddh (mercury)
Shukra(Venus)
Mangal(Mars)
Brahaspati(Jupiter)
Shani(Saturn)
Nowadays Venus, Mars and mercury together are clearly visible in the mornings
Indian culture is very rich in these things, you see our week day names are named on it, for example budhwar shukrawar etc
And there is a great science behind it, when you get time check it out
@@YeSwagGaming yet hindus have the worst cult, absolute disturbing with dirty surroundings
I used to watch a manga reviewer called tekking101 the name Uranus came up in a series and he started saying it like the "ura-nos!" And always emphasized it by saying it dramatically. Became my favorite way to refer to that planet!
Mercury: You'll need to pick a time when it's furthest from the sun as usually it's caught in the glare and wait for the appropriate sunset or sunrise (it alternates between the two). 10% of clear nights / mornings you might see it. With binoculars you might push it to 30% or 50% if you're really good.
Venus: Very bright, easily spotted, alternates between sunset and sunrise. In a telescope it looks like a mini-version of the moon becasue it looks white and cresecent shaped. The phases and apparent size and brightness change a lot. When it's a thin crescent, you can spot its shape with just binoculars. Most of the time you'll need a scope.
Mars: Often much smaller-looking and dimmer than Jupiter, but every 2 years it's opposition time and then it will outshine Jupiter. You'll see detail around opposition through a scope, otherwise, a small red disk.
Jupiter: The King of the night skies, it looks bright and you might even notice it looks bigger than a star with your naked eye. Through binoculars you can see 4 little moons close by (although sometimes only 2 or 3 are visible since the hide behind or in front of jupiter sometimes). With a scope you will be amazed at the detail you can see. Banding, colouration, swirling clouds, the Great Red Spot and the dancing moons. Simply breathtaking.
Saturn: If you thought Jupiter was beautiful through a scope, prepare to be even more amazed by the Queen of the night sky (no way is Saturn male). The yellow colour, bands of cloud and most of all, the rings are quite beautiful. With a good scope and conditions you'll see a dark gap in the middle of the rings, called Cassini's Division. With binoculars you'll probably only see a yellowish star although you might just be able to make out a difference in its shape (it looks like an egg or that it has "ears" due to its rings).
Uranus: I have never seen it with my own eyes, but it is visible through binoculars or a finder scope, where it looks like a bluish star. In a big scope you will see it as a disk, but I have never seen any details or shifting clouds on it.
Neptune: I have never seen it even with binoculars, but the skies were I live are big city skies, with lots of light pollution- you may have more luck. Being invisible in the finder scope from the city, it is necessary to use a telescope and star-hop with a wide-field eyepiece. With a big scope and a high-powered eyepiece it looks like a dark blue dot, but it is still faint. I couldn't ever make out its dark spot, although some claim that they have. Wonderful to see such a cold and mysterious world so far away with your own eyes!
Saturn is male
Hello Janine. It is nice to hear you again. The Solar System is wonderful and I always see the sky at nigth. From where I live (Santiago, Chile), I can see Mars and Jupiter (I love it). Thank you for your video -:)
Ah, the planets. One has to commend our ancient ancestors who could look up at the sky and not just notice objects, but see patterns and motions, and eventually be able to predict reappearance.
4:46 now I feel proud that I got countless pictures of it together with Saturn, Venus and Mars.
At 5 AM i found venus , mars and saturn in the sky.
Visibility: excellent
First of all your voice is so very calming. I enjoy listening to it. As a seasoned amateur astronomer I still found some of your information new to me. I plan on listening to your other videos as well and think these are a great learning tool for those new to the science. Thank you so much.
Thank you for your message. I appreciate your kind words.
Ваше видео је одличан ! Хвала на информацији .
Поздрав из Србије .
Just one correction about Mars: Gravity doesn't affect how much atmosphere a planet can have, Titan, a moon of Saturn, has an atmosphere heavier than Earth's, almost double the pressure. The reason Mars hasn't got much of an atmosphere is because it's magnetic field was lost millions/billions of years ago when it's liquid core cooled down, letting the solar winds sweep Mars' atmosphere clean off
While the magnetosphere plays a vital role in protecting our atmosphere by deflecting harmful solar particles, it is primarily gravity that keeps Earth's atmosphere in place.
Fantastic explanation
I searched a lot on RUclips about this topic but finally today I am there
Loved the video. Thank you so much. I know it is easy to say thank you, but I know you are putting your complete life in these things and we people are watching a video of 25 minutes. I know it takes a lot of efforts . thanks from my depth of my heart.
"No other object has been misidentified as a flying saucer more often than the planet Venus." I can see why. When it's low on the horizon, it can appear to move, change shape and color. All kinds of crazy stuff!
13:54: Jupiter was actually named after the Roman Lord of Time.
In the Southern U.K, I can see Jupiter, Venus and sometimes Mars all year round.
I love your videos! I've been able to identify objects in the sky so much more easily! Thank you!
Love your videos, I work outside in the early morning and used this video to identify Venus. It's even more beautiful than the pictures. Very helpful, thank you
Very useful to beginning astronomy lovers
வணக்கம்...
i have never looked up the sky but from today i will be busy watching the stars
You have never seen the sky?
This woman is an excellent narrator. Thank you for all the information. ❤
A fine starter pack in terms of familiarizing with seeing the other planets in our solar system. Thank you.
I learn something new with every video you upload. I was cosmically lost before your channel. 👍
Great Job! and thank you for the proper pronunciation of Uranus . Please keep your videos coming!
I’ve just discovered your channel and am hooked like the tail of Scorpius! I’ve loved astronomy since opening my World Book encyclopedia as a child. Thank you so much for the wonderful pics, great content, & most of all - adoration of all things celestial! ⭐️💫
nice pun
Ha! We understand why Pluto was demoted, but to my kids and I, Pluto is still the 9th Planet. Little planet with a heart on it's stomach will always be a planet to me. :) But yes, we do understand. This is a great video! I've seen them all (through Saturn, anyway) at various times of the year, and I'm sharing this vid with other friends who are interested in searching out the planets. Thank you for posting!
U remind me of the way my older sister Shirley talks. Its pleasant and😊 informative. I am an educator so I must speak 8with a structured overtone. .😊
Nice summary of what amateur planetary astronomers can expect to see. I dabbled for a year or two when I lived in south Florida in the early 90's with an entry level refracting scope. I had much the same experiences you describe. I did score at least 2-3 good Mercury finds, but it moves very quickly and you have really a window of minutes only to get your eye on it before a cloud usually takes it. And I did after much frustration and repeated attempts over some months finally got Uranus in my sights, but because of city light pollution and the rotation of the Earth it is also exceedingly difficult to track with a basic cheapy telescope. With my very limited resolution it was no more than a bluish blur. And I never even attempted Neptune. Seemed pointless. You would need the electronically assisted large mirror jobs to even find it and keep a good stable view of it.
Your pronunciation of Uranus is so much better than the layman way
You are a great teacher! I just found your channel and I am binge watching. You explain the sky so well. Thank you.
Cheers! Thank you for your message!
@@learnthesky when i saw the blood moon years ago i also saw mars
Happy new year Janine🥰🥰. Glad to see your videos again.
Thanks for this one-as usual packed with great and extremely useful info for star gazing. One question i was hoping you would answer- is it the planets or the stars that twinkle? I have seen vids that say opposite things about this. Thanks again and have a wonderful year.
The stars twinkle because they are more distant than planets. The tiny, pinpoint light from stars are affected more by the movement of atmospheric gases. Planets are closer and have a more disk-like appearance, so they tend to shine rather than twinkle.
Color of planets depend on reflection of planets surface and position of sun
17:43, the white spec slightly up above Saturn (about 1 o'clock) disappeared 👀 🤔
I find Mercury and Uranus the most challenging naked eye for different reasons, Mercury 's bright but there's generally a lot of sunlight and with Uranus due to it's faintness.With Uranus you have to be in a pretty dark area too and identify it with binoculars then look at the spot naked eye.I've seen Mercury many times but generally using binoculars or a monocular but I have caught it naked eye and it's not easy.
Missed You . . . Welcome Back
I hope that this great channel of yours will get bigger.. Awesome content!!!
Thank you very much for the education. Learned a lot today. 👍
Amazing video 😍😍😍. I was waiting eagerly for this video.
Magnificent video, Janine, as always. Although I do see the different appearance of Mars from the other planets, I don’t see any actual red in the appearance of Mars. The tint is definitely different, I just don’t see the redness. Maybe I’m color blind. Thank you, Janine.
Each of us sees color differently. Plus, our eyes are not great at distinguishing color is low like conditions. If I’m unsure about what I’m seeing, I will use Stellarium app to check. Thank you for sharing.
Beautifull videos full of information ! Thank you 🙏
Janine. Thank you for this comprehensive, and very well done presentation, absolute fine job here. I took two semesters of ‘astrophysics’ in school as a college undergrad. And I loved the true pronunciation of planet ‘Uranus’,,,,,,,,,😊
200 years ago and beyond-- there was 0 light pollution-- or pollution. That is how they -- the Roman's and any one else could see --- even Neptune on a clear sky
I love you so much mam.. I have no words... from India...
thank you so much, just what I am looking for now
I saw Venus this morning it was so cool
This answered questions for me and has confirmed I was looking at planets. I have pictures of planets I saw and I'd love to have confirmation on what I thought each one was.
Thanks so much for the video with detailed explanation.
Thanks for the vid! Hope all have a blessed year 😊 John 3:16-21
With the aid of my telescope, patience, and several websites, I have been able to see every planet in my telescope from my driveway.
Mercury was the last one I saw. It wasn't hard to identify, but the window of availability to see it was incredibly limited.
I fantasize daily about what it would be like to go thousands of years into history and teach people these things.
I saw a video entitled "something strange just came out of Uranus" reading the comments I haven't laughed that hard in many years. I laughed so hard I was crying and my sides hurt.
I went back and looked it up and I had it wrong. It actually said "something huge just came out of Uranus".
I bet those comments are good! Sometimes I really live for the comments sections on sites!
I saw Mercury this very month early after sunset with my 114mm telescope just 4 arc degrees under Venus. I saw it at 100x and it wasn't much more than a large dot. Venus on the other hand was in one of its phases and looked wonderful. My son said he didn't know Venus had phases like the Moon, was a Moonless night. I looked at Jupiter at 60x and it showed up very well, but my son was mesmerized by Saturn at 100x in my scope. I do not exceed 100x as in my scope things just get blurry. 235x capacity is nonsense.
Southern New Mexico just outside the Las Cruces city light dome. I do most of my stargazing at my son's house, but if someone wants to go with me we'll go 30 miles west where the Milky Way casts shadows.
Thank you for sharing. I haven't had the opportunity to see Venus go through phases. It is definitely on my bucket list of items to see in the night sky. I love that you stargaze with your family. Thank you for watching.
It should be impossible to see Mercury and Venus after sunset just fyi. Think about it. Heliocentrism is a lie.
@@LumieX Sure, now go away troll.
@@MountainFisher Not a troll, like I said...think about it. The Earth is facing the opposite direction of the sun at night and Mercury and Venus are between the Earth and sun supposedly.
This was a great video, thank you for making this. I will enjoy showing my son. This one video made me subscribe, cheers!
New subscriber here: I love your channel. Lately I've been enjoying observing Jupiter, Mars and Saturn with the naked eye. What do you recommend in a powerful telescope (or binoculars) that's not too expensive?
Finally a video that didn’t leave out Pluto
While I do understand the reclassification of Pluto...it will always be a planet to me 😁
Magnificent. So very well done. Thank you.
You are why earth is special.
You too, mate.
Well explained liked it alot😊
lovely presentation!!!
Thank you ma'am you teach me about the planets!
How are we able to see Venus and Mars close together but one is in front of the earth and the other behind the earth coming from the sun🤔…
Thanks
Happy New Year!! I was surprised you didn't start with the ecliptic plane as orientation.
Good point. I should have mentioned the ecliptic. I was focusing more on visual appearance when compared to each other.
@@learnthesky I only say this because most people lack orientation(even basic north/south). Maybe you could do a future video on orientation, planetary movement and time recording.
Why do planets "wander"?
I use your videos to trick people into thinking I'm smart during late night walks.
Great, this is wonderful and really amazing, but I wonder if you would tell me why Venus does not move across the sky just as Jupitar and others do, please. Thank U very much.
Living in LA, I feel like I’ve seen Uranus before. There was a blue star in the sky and I was like that has to be Uranus or Neptune. But since you said it’s impossible to see Neptune without magnification I ruled out Neptune.
Eaily-understandable explanation! Thank you :)
Thanks!
Thank you!
Temperature of planets depend upon the surface and rotation of planets not distance
because the faster the rotation the less the sunlight falling upon any given area...?
in which case the rate of rotation of the planets should increase with increasing distance from the Sun...& thus the length of their "sidereal day" should decrease
yet:
Mercury 1,408 hours
Venus 5,832 hours
Earth 24 hours
Mars 25 hours
Jupiter 10 hours
Saturn 11 hours
Uranus 17 hours
Neptune 16 hours
yet Venus, not Mercury, has the longest sd, Mars' sd is (marginally) longer than Earth's, & both Jupiter's & Saturn's sds are shorter than those of Uranus & Neptune...
Thank You
Thank you very much I love this video a lot
So awesome video love it 💖💖💖👍👍👍👌❤️🌕🌍🌍🌗
Thanks for your videos. I am recently semi-retired and just starting astronomy.
I find your videos very helpful. But, one thing. Often, you say that something or other requiiers magnification to see.
Could you tell us how much magnification is requiered? How big amateur telescope?
Thank you, Please :)
I will try my best. Thank you for the suggestion.
What do you mean by Pluto "has not cleared out its orbital path"?
Maybe there is enough material to do a video on Pluto?
Pluto is too small to clear the debris in its orbit. Think of a planet like a vacuum cleaner…as it goes around the sun, it’s gravity will attract and consume smaller objects in its path. Pluto is too small for this to happen. A video on Pluto may be in the future.
@@learnthesky OK I understand now. Thanks !
Happy New Year Jeanine
Imagine they had actual photos of these planets instead of computer generated images. Planets are all actually stars.
I've been looking at the IAU's star charts and although there is a legend for some of the symbols I cannot find a legend for all of the symbols I see on the charts. I was thinking maybe you could do a video on what those symbols mean?
Hello. That is a great idea for a video. I will add it to the list.
I find this topic fascinating and appreciate all who devote their time to teach.
I hv a question: why do we call these masses in the sky planets, where did that word come from? And What were their original names before the romans/greeks adopted them to fit their mithos?? Ty
Does Venus move through the sky in a different direction than the other planets?
Good job love looking at the Planets nice video
If a native takes you for a boat ride in the dark how does he find his way? He looks up at the tops of the trees and follows their pattern.
You're very easy to listen to. That was great.
Thank you for watching. I appreciate your support.
Very clearly explained 👍♥️👍♥️👍.I can confidently mention this is very simple and very very useful video 👌👌. If you have a picture of jupiter together with venues please up load.
Hello, I do not have a pic of both of them. I can keep searching though.
Good video subscribed 👍
I love stars and planets
Yes yes thank you
I love your videos mam, your contents are awesome ❤, but most of the time I found Jupiter brighter than Mars actually, and yes I know that Mars often outshines Jupiter in term of brightness but most of the times Jupiter looks brighter than Mars. For example in the recent conjunction of Mars-Jupiter I found Jupiter (-2.05 magnitude at that time) was brighter than Mars (0.83 magnitude at that time) and I confirmed the magnitudes of both by using stellarium.
The names of the planets come from the gods of the ancient Greeks. the messenger of the gods Hermes (Mercuris). The goddess of love Aphrodite ( Venus). Ge (Earth) and ouranos (Heaven )gave birth to many children one of them was Kronos (Saturn). The father of the gods Dias (Zupiter was the son of Kronos (Saturn). Poseidon (Νεπτουν) was the brother of Dia (Zupiter-Zeus) and was the god of the sea. Ares (Mars) was the god of war.
Where I live I go out at night around 8:00-10:00pm and I can see Venues , then I go out at 5:30 -6:00am and she’s still there I’ve tried looking for that red dot but the light distracts my view I Love how BEAUTIFULL The Night Sky looks I do have a terrific view I need to invest in a telescope ❤😅😂👍🙃😉🙃🙃
Thank you so much. Your educational videos are the best on RUclips. Superb explanations. I feel as if I'm attending a lecture on astronomy in college 🪐
Such an amazing and informative video
I have seen many of these satellites and while my geek self has enjoyed spotting them I do despair of the price we are paying to technology and development from the loss of such things as green fields, wildlife refuges, historic buildings and also our privacy
I am aware that all future Starlink satellites are to be coated in a non-reflective paint following complaints and concerns from various bodies but do we really need that many satellites when I'm sure in another 10 yrs or less we will have developed a new and better system to link globally
I'm very fortunate to live in an area of relatively dark skies and would hate not to be able to see the trillions of stars that I see on my midnight walks!
astronomy class!
Thanks soo much❤
Be blessed
I can see Jupiter and Saturn at the same time