You can see Venus early in the morning when the sun is not out yet, and you can also see it in the evening, probably where the Sun is setting, you can see it when its dark enough. Venus is also called the Morning star and the Evening Star.
Yes. It is called the Morning Star when it looks like a bright star in the morning, and the Evening Star when it looks like a bright star at night. It only appears shortly after sunset or shortly before sunrise. If you use a telescope, you can see the planet, but not any detail. The thick clouds around the planet hide the surface from view.
Yes, Venus is visible in the early morning sky in the eastern part of the United States. It usually appears as the brightest object in the sky after the moon. Look for it in the eastern horizon before sunrise.
If the question is how it is possible to see both Venus and Mars in the same part of the sky on a particular night, the answer would be when Mars is at a point in its orbit that it is either about to go behind the sun from the Earth's perspective or it is emerging from "behind" the sun. Because Venus is closer to the sun than the Earth, we cannot see it late at night when the observer is peering outward in our solar system; the only times are around dusk and dawn when the observer is looking towards the sun but the sun's rays have not yet made the sky too bright to see Venus. This means that the only time we can see Mars and Venus simutaneously is if Mars is also in the direction of Sun. Therefore, if you want to see Mars and Venus at the same time, you have to find out when Mars is out during the early morning and evening and if Venus is also visible during that same time period. Hope this helps!
The "now" part of the question isn't especially useful, since WikiAnswers questions and answers remain online for years. Today is February 3, 2013, and only Jupiter and Saturn are visible. Mercury, Mars and Venus are all too close to the Sun to be visible. Jupiter is high in the sky in the evening, and is the brightest thing in the sky except the Moon. Saturn rises about 1AM.
For the most part, during the day you can only see the Sun, the Moon and a planet such as Venus or Mars turned morning/evening star at dawn or dusk. At night, you can see the the Moon, Mercury, Mars, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn easily with the naked eye. That is why these are the seven classic planets known to the ancients (Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn).
Yes. It is called the Morning Star when it looks like a bright star in the morning, and the Evening Star when it looks like a bright star at night. It only appears shortly after sunset or shortly before sunrise. If you use a telescope, you can see the planet, but not any detail. The thick clouds around the planet hide the surface from view.
As the author of this task wrote down part time evening jog, it is presumed that part time evening job is meant to be the word being sought for. One can find a part time evening job at any classified ads section of any newspaper in town.
Yes, Venus is visible in the early morning sky in the eastern part of the United States. It usually appears as the brightest object in the sky after the moon. Look for it in the eastern horizon before sunrise.
If the question is how it is possible to see both Venus and Mars in the same part of the sky on a particular night, the answer would be when Mars is at a point in its orbit that it is either about to go behind the sun from the Earth's perspective or it is emerging from "behind" the sun. Because Venus is closer to the sun than the Earth, we cannot see it late at night when the observer is peering outward in our solar system; the only times are around dusk and dawn when the observer is looking towards the sun but the sun's rays have not yet made the sky too bright to see Venus. This means that the only time we can see Mars and Venus simutaneously is if Mars is also in the direction of Sun. Therefore, if you want to see Mars and Venus at the same time, you have to find out when Mars is out during the early morning and evening and if Venus is also visible during that same time period. Hope this helps!
The bright planet in the south sky in the UK is likely to be Jupiter. Jupiter is one of the brightest planets visible from Earth and it can often be seen in the southern part of the sky during the evening hours.
No. When looking at venus through UV imaging, the clouds in the atmosphere is what is picked up, not the planets suface features.
If your Stevens is a bolt action, it is NOT a visible loader. If it has any part (perhaps the barrel) that is marked as a visible loader, that part has been replaced.
The "now" part of the question isn't especially useful, since WikiAnswers questions and answers remain online for years. Today is February 3, 2013, and only Jupiter and Saturn are visible. Mercury, Mars and Venus are all too close to the Sun to be visible. Jupiter is high in the sky in the evening, and is the brightest thing in the sky except the Moon. Saturn rises about 1AM.
visible lines are the part of clipping of object in computer graphics. if you find out the line in the figure area then this line is said to be visible line
visible lines are the part of clipping of object in computer graphics. if you find out the line in the figure area then this line is said to be visible line
Jupiter & Venus. Mercury is visible after sunset, but difficult to see. Uranus is visible, but hard to see without telescope/binoculars, Neptune is visible, but only through a telescope. _________________________ The "now" part of the question isn't all that useful; questions on WikiAnswers remain online for years. This question was originally posted on December 7, 2008. As of today's date, February 3, 2013, only Jupiter and Saturn are visible. Mercury, Mars and Venus are all too close to the Sun to be visible.
Boa tarde (usually earlier part of the evening) or boa noite (later part of the evening and/or before bed)