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Sky Digest

Thursday, 19 March 2026 | Default Location
Showing the sky from Greenwich, London. Log in to use your own location.
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Tonight at a Glance

New Moon 1%
Dark window: 19:23 – 04:36 (9 h 12 m)

Planet Highlights

Jupiter mag -2.3 · 55° alt · Gemini Details
Next GRS transit: Fri 06:52
04:13 Europa Occultation begins

Binocular Targets

Alterf
HIP 46750; Lambda Leo; 4 Leo Variable Star
mag 4.3

At 21:00 look high in the south

Leo
M44
Beehive Cluster or Praesepe Open Cluster
mag 3.7

At 21:00 look high in the south

Cancer
M42
Great Orion Nebula Nebula
mag 4.0

At 21:00 look low in the southwest

Orion

Small Scopes (3–6 inch)

Castor
HIP 36850; Alpha Gem; 66 Gem Double Star
mag 2.0

At 21:00 look high in the southwest

Gem
NGC 2374
Open Cluster
mag 8.0

At 21:00 look low in the southwest

CMa
M97
Owl Nebula Planetary Nebula
mag 9.9

At 21:00 look high in the northeast

Ursa Major
M82
Cigar Galaxy Galaxy
mag 8.4

At 21:00 look near the zenith

Ursa Major
Iota Cnc
HIP 43103; Iota Cnc; 48 Cnc Double Star
mag 4.0

At 21:00 look high in the south

Cnc

Big Scopes (8–12 inch)

NGC 2368
Open Cluster
mag 12.0

At 21:00 look halfway up in the southwest

Mon
NGC 2440
Planetary Nebula
mag 11.0

At 21:00 look low in the south

Pup
NGC 2683
Galaxy
mag 9.7

At 21:00 look near the zenith

Lyn
C48
NGC 2775 Galaxy
mag 10.3

At 21:00 look high in the south

Cancer
NGC 2613
Galaxy
mag 10.4

At 21:00 look low in the south

Pyx

The Week Ahead

Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed
🌑 1% 🌒 4% 🌒 10% 🌒 18% 🌓 28% 🌓 39% 🌔 51%
New Moon Moon occults 17 Tau Moon occults Beta Tau

Moon phase matters

Deep sky objects are best observed during new moon or when the Moon has set. Check the moon phase in your digest!

Moon Page

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

Launch Plume: SpaceX Jellyfish

ven if you live with your head in the clouds, you won’t find a jellyfish like this one very often. The featured image shows a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch from Cape Canaveral in Florida on March 4. The launch happened 52 minutes before sunrise, and the second stage rocket exhaust plume was high enough in the sky to catch the light of the rising sun, while the photographer was still in the dark. This combination of light and shadow, possible at dawn or dusk, makes the exhaust, mostly water vapor and carbon dioxide, appear as a glowing cloud. It only looks like it's going down, as the rocket follows the curvature of the Earth on its way to space. A related effect is the twilight phenomenon, which causes colorful contrails sometimes mistaken for UFOs. But, in case you are wondering: real jellyfish were sent to space by NASA in the 1990s as part of a science experiment.

Image credit: Michael Seeley — APOD is a service of NASA and Michigan Tech. U.

View on NASA APOD

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