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.

For information on celestial events like ECLIPSES or COMETS, I recommend Space.com or SpaceWeather.com

PARADE OF PLANETS • April 2026

Better in a month or two before Sunrise
Saturn & Mars are close together and very low in the eastern sky shortly before the Sun rises. You may miss them because they will quickly get lost in the glow of dawn.

EVENING
Jupiter is in Gemini and high in the western sky after sunset. It is always brighter than any other “star” except for Venus. And, it will be amongst many of the brightest winter stars—a nice sight filling the western and somewhat southern areas of the sky. Venus is up in the western sky after sunset. It can certainly look like the headlight of a jet. Venus is the brightest “star,” by far, in the whole sky.

Remember • Twinkle Factor
The planets DO NOT normally twinkle like stars unless they are very close to the horizon or the atmosphere is extremely turbulent. So, even thought Saturn is not very bright, it is easier to identify because it does not twinkle.

April 2026 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.

April 2026 Note​s

 About 90 minutes after Sunset

Constellations
The Pleiades or Seven sisters is very low in the west—this is the last month to see it before it reappears in the fall. Click here for more info.

Sirius, the very brightest star in the entire sky (both northern and southern hemispheres) is low in the southwest. Compare it to the brighter Jupiter higher up and the even brighter Venus low in the west (but it might already have set depending on when you go out and observe).

The backward Question Mark of Leo the Lion is close to the top of the sky and represents the head of the King of the Jungle. Its “period” is the bright star Regulus. Can you see a faint haze somewhat  to the right of the backward Question Mark—the whiskers of the Lion.

Facing north, the Big Dipper is high up and on the east side of due north with its Bowl facing downward. It is one of the easier constellations to recognize because its stars are brighter.

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’sTriangle. I took this image using a 6-inch diameter refractor telescope.