Spot the Morning and Evening Star: Observe Venus (2024)

The top layers of Venus’s cloud pop in this contrast-enhanced image, reprocessed with modern techniques from Mariner 10 data.
Credit & Source: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Venus is usually the brightest planet in our skies, and is called “Earth's Twin” due to its similar size to Earth and its rocky composition. However, Venus is a nightmare version of our planet, featuring a thick, crushing atmosphere of acidic clouds, greenhouse gasses, howling winds, and intense heat at its surface.

This rocky inner world’s orbit brings it closer to Earth than any of the other planets, and is the second closest to the Sun after Mercury. Like Mercury, Venus orbits between our planet and the Sun, so Earth-based observers can observe Venus in the morning before sunrise, or in the evening after sunset – but never high in the sky in the middle of the evening, unlike the outer planets. Since Venus is so striking in its twilight appearances, the planet features heavily in sky mythologies worldwide. Venus’s bright morning and evening appearances are the origin for its dual nicknames: the Morning Star, and the Evening Star. Some ancient astronomers never made the connection, and assumed the Evening Star and Morning Star were two unrelated objects! Observers can even spot Venus during the daytime, if the sky is very clear and the planet is bright enough. Venus also has phases, similar to the Moon and Mercury. Galileo’s observations of Venus’s phases helped turn the astronomy world upside down in the early 1600s, and you can see them yourself using a telescope or even a surprisingly low-power pair of binoculars. Warning: Please be very careful when observing Venus with a telescope in the early morning or daytime. Never allow the Sun to enter your instrument’s field of view, as you could be permanently blinded.

Spot the Morning and Evening Star: Observe Venus (1)Venus and Jupiter continue to move closer together in the evening sky this month. Jupiter will continue its descent towards the horizon while Venus will continue to climb and will be visible in the evenings though mid-summer of 2023. It’s a great year for Venus fans!
Image created with assistance from Stellarium

Venus’s other moniker of “Earth’s Twin” is a bit misleading. In terms of their surface temperatures and atmospheres, Venus and Earth are extremely different! The surface of Venus is warmer than that of Mercury, despite Mercury being many millions of miles closer to the Sun. While Mercury is still a scorching 800 degrees Fahrenheit (427 degrees Celsius), Venus is even hotter: 900 degrees Fahrenheit (482 degrees Celsius). The vast amount of carbon dioxide in the thick Venusian atmosphere acts as an insulating blanket that retains much of the Sun’s heat, creating the runaway greenhouse effect that dominates its present-day climate. The Venusian surface is a crushing 90 Earth atmospheres on top of its absurd temperatures. These extreme conditions mean that the mission life of any past Venusian robotic landers were measured in hours at best – and usually minutes! However, conditions in Venus’s upper atmosphere may be much more hospitable, with temperatures and pressures at 30 miles (50 km) above the surface that are much more Earth-like in temperature and pressure. Studies of the Venusian atmosphere, including seasonal appearances of dark streaks and faint signals of suggestive chemistry, intrigue researchers with the possibility that some sort of life may persist in its clouds. But far more evidence is needed to confirm such a claim, since non-biological factors like volcanism and other processes could also be the source for these signals.

Venus’s thick sulfuric acid clouds block direct visual observations of its surface from optical telescopes on Earth. Multiwavelength observations from space probes show evidence of active volcanoes and possibly some sort of plate tectonics, but followup missions will be needed to confirm the presence of active volcanism, plate tectonics, and any possible signs of life. In order to do so, NASA is sending two new missions to Venus by the end of this decade: the orbiter VERITAS, which will map the surface in high detail and study the chemistry of its rocks and volcanoes, and DAVINCI+, which will study its atmosphere and possible tectonic surface features via a “descent sphere” that will plunge into Venus’s clouds. Follow their development and discover more about Venus at NASA's dedicated Venus site, and of course, continue your exploration of the universe at nasa.gov.

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Last Updated: March 1, 2023
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Spot the Morning and Evening Star: Observe Venus (2024)

FAQs

How is Venus the morning and evening star? ›

Venus is the first celestial body to become visible in the sky at evening and is the last one to disappear from the sky at sunrise. This is why it is known as the Morning and the Evening star.

Where is Venus in the morning? ›

Venus orbits one step inward from Earth. So we always see it near the sun in our sky, and, generally speaking, after sunrise it's hard to see. But Venus is up there, every day, following or leading in the path of the sun across our sky.

Why is Venus only visible at sunrise and sunset? ›

As it orbits closer to the Sun, Venus laps the Earth every 581 days (about 83 weeks). Each time, it follows pretty much the same sequence from greatest morning elongation through disappearing behind the Sun, reappearing in the evening sky and then passing between us and the Sun to reappear in the morning sky.

How can we see Venus in the evening? ›

Venus appears either in the eastern sky before sunrise or in the western sky after sunset. When it appears after sunset in the western sky, it is called an evening star. Venus is radiantly illuminated by its relatively close neighbor, the Sun.

What is the difference between the morning star and the evening star? ›

Additionally, the planet Venus is given the name "Evening Star" when it appears in the west after sunset and "Morning Star" when it appears in the east before sunrise.

What time do we see Venus? ›

Venus always appears in the western sky after sunset or in the eastern sky before sunrise.

Is Venus the only morning star? ›

Is the morning star Mercury or Venus? Being inside orbit of earth around Sun both mercury and Venus become morning and evening stars.. So both can be seen in east before sunrise and west before sunset.

How often is Venus a morning star? ›

The entire cycle—263 as a morning star, 50 days absent, 263 days as an evening star, and finally, 8 days absent—takes 584 days, an interval also known as the synodic period of Venus .

Why is Venus called the morning? ›

Venus is the brightest of all planets. It can be seen sometimes in the eastern sky before sunrise and in the western sky just after sunset. Hence, it is called the morning or evening star.

Why is Venus so bright this morning? ›

Venus is so bright because its thick clouds reflect most of the sunlight that reaches it (about 70%) back into space, and because it is the closest planet to Earth. Venus can often be seen within a few hours after sunset or before sunrise as the brightest object in the sky (other than the moon).

What time does Venus rise this morning? ›

The Planets
RiseSet
Mercury05:2318:48
Venus08:2620:40
Mars00:5615:35
4 more rows

Where is Venus today? ›

Venus is currently in the constellation of Virgo. The current Right Ascension is 12h 25m 56s and the Declination is -01° 47' 49” .

How to spot Venus? ›

Ultimately, as Venus prepares to pass between the Earth and the sun, it appears as a thinning crescent. And since, at this point in its orbit, it is nearly six times closer to us compared to when it was on the opposite side of the sun, Venus appears much larger to us as well.

Which planet is known as the morning and evening star? ›

- Venus appears in the eastern sky before sunrise. Sometimes it appears in the western sky just after sunset. Therefore it is often called a morning or an evening star.

Why is the Venus called the Earth twins as well as the morning and evening star? ›

Venus and Earth are sometimes called twins because they're pretty much about the same size. Venus is almost as big as Earth. They also formed in the same inner part of the solar system. Venus is in fact our closest neighbor to Earth.

Why is Venus so bright in the evening sky? ›

Venus is so bright because its thick clouds reflect most of the sunlight that reaches it (about 70%) back into space, and because it is the closest planet to Earth. Venus can often be seen within a few hours after sunset or before sunrise as the brightest object in the sky (other than the moon).

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