What’s Out Tonight?

A general ASTRONOMY site to get you started exploring the night sky

Optimized for desktops and laptops.
Most pages on phones and tablets will overlap.

Mars will STILL be bright this month!

observing 
MArs

WE HAVE A PARADE OF PLANETS THIS FEBRUARY
Higher in the East:  Mars
Overhead:  Jupiter
Lower in the West:  Venus

February 2025 Sky Chart

It’s Free
Just click on the image to print this 
4-page PDF doc.

Useful anywhere in the mid-latitudes of the northern hemisphere including the continental US, Hawaii, Europe, Japan, etc. 
Optimized for 1.5 hours after sunset
 but can be used for several hours after that. 

Indicates visible planets and best objects for binoculars and telescopes. Packed with facts, mythology, Moon phases, meteor showers and more. For other months, see the archive below.

February 2025 Note​s

 About 90 minutes after Sunset

Planets
Every 26 months, like clockwork, the Earth and Mars are close together and this is that time! Mars was closest to Earth on January 15/16 making it very bright which is still the case at this time. Yes, it does have a reddish cast to its color to help identify it. And because it is a planet, it does not twinkle like the stars. You need about 200x in a telescope to see any detail on its surface (the North Polar Cap is visible) and a non-turbulent sky, otherwise it will appear blurry.

Constellations
Due south and about halfway up is Orion. Orion is one of the few constellations that is composed of many bright stars—it’s an easy constellation to identify, to bite your teeth into if you have never found a constellation. The three almost equal magnitude and equal distant belt stars form a line and are thus unique in the sky. They roughly point downward to Sirius which is the brightest star in the whole sky—both hemispheres. But Jupiter and Venus are always brighter than Sirius.

Header Image
The celestial image used for this site's header is part of the Veil Nebula, a supernova remnant in the constellation Cygnus (the Swan) visible throughout most of the summer and fall. This triangular wedge is a fainter part somewhat between the two major sections that make up the Veil Nebula and it is called Pickering’s Triangle. I took this image using a 6-inch diameter refractor telescope.