Mercury will appear at duck in the Southern Hemisphere during late August 2014. The Northern Hemisphere would not have been able to see the planet at the beginning of the month because it was too close to the Sun to observe.
In general, you can see Jupiter during most of the year. This year (2016), between August and October, Jupiter will be too close (referring to angular distance) to the Sun to be seen.When Jupiter is visible, it looks like an extremely bright star.
If you want to see the planet Jupiter, you have to know where to look -- and when. Jupiter is sometimes not visible at all. I would suggest that you buy a couple of astronomy magazines. They usually have a sky chart giving you a "heads-up" on what to look for over the next couple of months, and where to look for it. Start by learning some of the major constellations. They'll serve as your reference points. Orion, the largest winter constellation visible from the Northern Hemisphere, won't be visible for much longer, so start right away.
If you are in the UK just look to the east of your location on any clear evening over the next two weeks, at about 10 degrees above the horizon, and the bright stationary object in the dark sky is the planet Jupiter, and with a decent pair of binoculars you can even see the four Galilean moons in orbit around Jupiter.
The position of the moon Callisto is its one of Jupiter moon and its next to Jupiter
Saturn is the next furthest planet from the Sun after Jupiter. The order of planets is below.Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.
The next planet after Ceres is Jupiter.
Jupiter nor Saturn were "discovered". They are visible with the naked eye and thus were known about since humans first looked up into the night sky.
None .. You Dont have Any Signs For A Few weeks Or Months
24/7 except for eating and brushing for the first 12 months after braces and then every night for the next twelve months
It's complicated... If (say) Venus is visible in a certain month, that doesn't mean it will be visible the next year in the same month - since the movements of the other planets are not synchronized with Earth's movement.
Since there are only twelve months per year in the Gregorian calendar, the next such date is January 1st, 2101.
Venus, then Earth, then Mars.
If you want to see the planet Jupiter, you have to know where to look -- and when. Jupiter is sometimes not visible at all. I would suggest that you buy a couple of astronomy magazines. They usually have a sky chart giving you a "heads-up" on what to look for over the next couple of months, and where to look for it. Start by learning some of the major constellations. They'll serve as your reference points. Orion, the largest winter constellation visible from the Northern Hemisphere, won't be visible for much longer, so start right away.
24/7 except for eating and brushing for the first 12 months after braces and then every night for the next twelve months
Jupiter is located between Mars and Saturn.
The next one in is Earth, the next one out is Jupiter, although there is a dwarf planet in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter called Ceres.
mars
Jupiter