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  1. Sep 15, 2023 · Venus is often impossible to miss as it shines near the Sun in the early-morning or early-evening sky. In September 2023, Venus glows brightly in the east before sunrise. ©iStockphoto.com/PavelRodimov. The Dazzling Planet. After the Sun and the Moon, Venus is the brightest natural object in the sky.

  2. Sep 8, 2023 · When September opened, Venus was only 12-percent illuminated, but by month's end, that figure will have increased to 36-percent; but because it will have receded 17 million miles (27 million km...

    • Why is Venus hard to miss in September 2023?1
    • Why is Venus hard to miss in September 2023?2
    • Why is Venus hard to miss in September 2023?3
    • Why is Venus hard to miss in September 2023?4
  3. Sep 16, 2023 · The best time to see Venus at its brilliant best this week is between it rising about two hours before sunrise where you are, and sunrise itself. Just look east—you won’t be able to miss it.

  4. Sep 18, 2023 · September 2023 offers a great opportunity to spot the planet Venus as a bright planet early in the dark autumnal morning sky.

    • Why Is Venus So Bright?
    • Albedo = Reflectivity
    • Reflectivity Makes Venus Bright
    • When and Why Is Venus Brightest?
    • More Photos from Our Community

    Jupiter is a bright planet, and Mars is sometimes bright, too. But neither Jupiter nor Mars at their brightest can outshine Venus. Why is Venus so bright? Our neighboring world – orbiting one step inward from Earth around the sun – is the 3rd-brightest natural object in the sky, after the sun and the moon. It’s currently a brilliant light in the mo...

    As the planet next inward from Earth in orbit around the sun, Venus is relatively nearby. But its nearness isn’t the only reason Venus is bright. Consider that Mars orbits one step outward from Earth. And Mars waxes and wanes in brightness in our sky over about a two-year cycle. It’s only exceptionallybright around the time Earth passes between Mar...

    The albedo of Venus is close to 0.7, meaning it reflects about 70% of the sunlight striking it. When the moon is close to full in Earth’s sky, it can look a lot brighter than Venus. But the moon – whose surface is dark volcanic rock – reflects only about 10% of the light that hits it. The moon appears bright to us because it’s close to Earth. It’s ...

    Venus is brightest when two factors combine – the phase of its crescent, plus largest overall size of Venus’ disk – so that the greatest amount of surface area of Venus shows in our sky. Astronomers call this greatest illuminated extent. Why does it happen? Because Venus orbits the sun inside Earth’s orbit, it sometimes goes between us and the sun....

    Bottom line: You can’t miss dazzling Venus in the east before sunup now. It’s the 3rd brightest object in the sky, after the sun and moon. But why is Venus so bright? Read more: Venus before sunrise: Greatest elongation October 23, 2023

  5. Aug 31, 2023 · After brightening our evening skies for most of this year, Venus has now switched over to being a morning sky object. Look for the superheated, cloud-covered planet as a bright beacon in the eastern sky before sunrise throughout the month.

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  7. Sep 18, 2023 · Passing between Earth and the Sun in August, Venus appears large but is hard to see with its sunlit side facing away. Having now risen out of the solar glare, Venus has moved ahead of Earth,” explains astronomy expert, Glenn Dawes. “As it moves away from us, it appears to shrink, and the phase grows as its more daylight side becomes visible.”

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