Venus and Mars
Tonight is July 9th 2009. Tonight you can see Saturn in the western sky just after sunset. Jupiter rises in the east tonight around 11:30pm and Mercury and Venus appear on the eastern horizon an hour or so BEFORE sunrise.
This question needs to include hemisphere, date, time, and direction. For example, high in the southwest in the Southern hemisphere on Sept. 2, 2009.
Venus and Mars are both visible in the hour before dawn.
On September 2, 2009, the planet Jupiter is quite near the Moon.
The Earth, same as every night.
Jupiter
Venus and mars
Venus
no planets crust does not have light of their own but the core of the earth has light of its own
we can see 6 planets mercury venus mars jupiter saturn
Neither Mercury nor Venus are visible at midnight. Both planets are closer to the Sun than the Earth is.
The five outer planets are the ones with bigger orbits than the Earth, which are Mars and the four giant planets. The outer planets can be seen at their brightest at midnight, when they are at opposition. That never happens for the inner planets Mercury and Venus.
All the planets revolve around the Sun in a counterclockwise direction, as seen from above the Earth's north pole.
Earth
They reflect light from the Sun.
They reflect the Suns light back to Earth
The constellations of the zodiac fall on the plane of the ecliptic (the plane in which the Earth orbits the Sun) and all the Sun's planets orbit also in the plane of the ecliptic. This means that ALL the planets eventually move through ALL the zodiacal constellations (as seen from Earth). It also therefore follows that the planets are never seen in the non zodiacal constellations.
The part of the Moon which receives......can be seen from the Earth.
no planets crust does not have light of their own but the core of the earth has light of its own
Venus has phases that can be seen from Earth. See related link for a pictorial.
None. The moon is closer than the other planets, so it will obstruct other planets.
Venus and Mercury
we can see 6 planets mercury venus mars jupiter saturn
Inner planets orbit inside the orbit of the Earth, can only be seen in the morning or evening sky and are never seen as full disks form the Earth. Outer planets orbit further out than the orbit of Earth and can be seen from time to time as full disks in 'opposition' or overhead at midnight.
There are 5 planets that are visible to the naked eye and can be seen without the aid of a telescope. These planets are Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.