FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5

■ The Moon, a day past full, shines over Gemini and Jupiter once they've all risen, as shown below.

Moon passing Jupiter, Castor and Pollux, Dec. 5-7, 2025

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6

■ Now the Moon bunches up with Jupiter, Castor and Pollux as shown above, for their journey across the sky together through the night.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7

■ Tonight the waning Moon bunches up differently with Jupiter, Castor and Pollux: in an upside-down Y through the evening, as shown above. By dawn on Monday the 8th the Y will lie on its side, and the Moon-to-Pollux segment will haven grown more elongated.

■ The December 7th sunset is the earliest sunset of the year if you live near latitude 40° north. Balancing this out, the latest sunrise will come on January 4th. These offsets from the solstice date (December 21st this year) arise from the tilt of Earth's axis and the ellipticity of Earth's orbit.

MONDAY, DECEMBER 8

■ The "Summer" Triangle is sinking low in the west to northwest, and Altair is the first of its stars to go (for mid-northern skywatchers).

Start by spotting bright Vega, magnitude zero, the brightest star in the northwest right after dark. The brightest one above Vega is Deneb. Altair, the Triangle's third star, is farther to Vega's left or lower left. How late into the night, and into the advancing season, can you keep Altair in view?

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9

■ This is the time of year when M31, the Andromeda Galaxy, passes your zenith around 7 or 8 p.m. (if you live in the world's mid-northern latitudes). The exact time will depend on your longitude. Binoculars will show M31 as a faint, fuzzy little glow just off the knee of the Andromeda constellation's stick figure. See the big evening constellation chart in the center of Sky & Telescope.

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10

■ Face southwest during evening this week, look very high up, and there's the Great Square of Pegasus tilted onto on one corner. It's a little bigger than your fist at arm's length. Its stars and 2nd and 3rd magnitude.

Brighter Saturn shines lower left of the S1uare when you face southwest.

■ Seeing any early Geminid meteors yet? The shower's peak is due in three days. If you see a meteor, trace its flight path backward far across the sky. If you come to Castor and Pollux — the heads of the Gemini stick figures — the meteor now is almost certainly a Geminid.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11

■ Last-quarter Moon (exact at 3:52 p.m. EST). The Moon rises around midnight tonight, due east below Leo. Can you see that, by then, its phase is already a trace past exact last quarter?

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12

■ Have you ever watched Sirius rise? Find an open view right down to the east-southeast horizon, and watch for this brightest star to come up about two fists at arm's length below Orion's vertical Belt. Sirius rises around 8 or 9 p.m. now, depending on your location.

About 15 minutes before Sirius-rise, a lesser star comes up barely to the right of where Sirius will appear. This is Beta Canis Majoris, or Mirzam. Its name means “the Announcer,” and what Mirzam announces is Sirius. You’re not likely to mistake them; the second-magnitude Announcer is only a twentieth as bright as the King of Stars soon to make its royal entry.

When a star is very low it tends to twinkle slowly, and often in vivid colors. Sirius is bright enough to show these effects well, especially with binoculars.

Jupiter between Pollux and Procyon, Dec. 12, 2025
In mid-evening all this week, Jupiter is up in the east-northeast nearly in line between Pollux and rising Procyon.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13

■ The Geminid meteor shower should peak late tonight. The sky is dark and free of moonlight until the medium-thick waning crescent Moon rises around 2 or 3 a.m., and even then its modest moonlight is really not a problem. The Geminids are usually the richest shower of the year. Moreover, this year the shower's broad peak, many hours long, is expected to be centered on 3 a.m. Eastern time; midnight Pacific (8:00 UT), ideal for North America. So late tonight, you might see one or two meteors a minute on average under a wide-open dark sky.

In early evening the meteors will be fewer, but those that do appear will be long, graceful Earth-grazers skimming far across the top of the atmosphere. As the hours pass and the shower's radiant (near Castor in Gemini) rises higher in the east, the meteors will become shorter and more numerous.

Layer up even more warmly than you think you'll need, and a thick blanket on top of that will help; remember about radiational cooling!

Find a dark spot with a wide-open sky and no local lights to get in your eyes. Lie back in a reclining lawn chair and gaze up into the stars. The best direction to watch is wherever your sky is darkest, probably straight up. Be patient. As your eyes adapt to the dark, you may see one or two Geminids a minute on average as night grows late.

See also Bob King's article Geminid Meteor Shower Peaks December 13-14.

■ As for that waning crescent Moon (25% illuminated) climbing up the sky before dawn, you'll find that it's accompanied by "springtime" Spica, as shown below.

Moon and Spica before dawn, Dec. 14, 2025
Early Sunday morning, the Moon and Spica will be 3° or 4° apart as seen from North America.

And as early dawn brightens, Mercury will rise some four fists lower left of the Moon. Fainter Beta Scorpii will shimmer 0.6° lower right of Mercury. Beta Sco is a wide telescopic double star: magnitudes 2.6 and 4.9, separation 13.5 arcseconds. What might Mercury and the star pair look like through a telescope in the bad seeing so near the horizon? Use your lowest power and you might get the planet and the pair in view at the same time. Even if you can't make out Beta's fainter companion, have you ever before seen anything at all of Scorpius in December?

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14

■ As we near the end of the year, brilliant Capella is already high in the northeast after dark. Look almost three fists to its right, and there's the Pleiades star cluster. A fist or so below the Pleiades shines orange Aldebaran.

Just upper right of Aldeberan are the scattered stars of the Hyades cluster, larger and dimmer than the Pleiades. The brightest Hyades plus Aldebaran form a V, which you'll always find lying on its side on December and January evenings.

■ After the Pleiades and Hyades, what's the next most noted star cluster in Taurus? Maybe it's dim, loose NGC 1647, between the horns of Taurus just a few degrees in front of Aldebaran and the Hyades. Matt Wedel, Sky & Telescope's Binocular Highlights columnist, called it "a wonderful object for binoculars" in a really dark sky. . . which most of us don't have. But you may (or may not) find the cluster to be at least detectable in good binoculars on a moonless night. It's about ½° wide, and its brightest dozen or so stars are only 9th and 10th magnitude. Averted vision helps.

Closeup of Aldebaran and the Hyades, with the faint open cluster NGC 1647 indicated
The Hyades V asterism serves as a finder for the faraway, loose open cluster NGC 1647. It's about 1,800 light-years distant, compared to 150 light-years for the Hyades.

This closeup view is 5½° tall, about the size of the view in 10x binoculars.

At least the cluster's location is easy enough to find: It forms a roughly equilateral triangle with Aldebaran and the other tip of the Hyades V. The cluster is actually 1° southeast of (currently lower left of) the point that would make the equilateral triangle perfect.

Just off the cluster's south edge you'll find a brighter "fine optical double star," Matt writes, very wide and unequal, both yellow-orange, magnitudes 6.0 and 7.5. The faint one is over the bright one during the cold evenings at this time of year.


This Week's Planet Roundup

Mercury is having a nice dawn apparition, rising right around the first hint of the coming day. Look for it low in the east-southeast as the early dawn grows. Best view might be an hour before sunrise. At magnitude –0.4 all week, Mercury far outshines any other point in that area.

Venus and Mars are hidden behind the glare of the Sun.

Jupiter (magnitude –2.6, in eastern Gemini) rises in the east-northeast around 7 or 8 p.m. It dominates the eastern sky as the evening continues, then the high southeast. Castor and Pollux shine nearby. Jupiter is highest and telescopically sharpest in the south in the early-morning hours. It will reach opposition January 10th. It's now a big 44 arcseconds wide, almost as large as it will appear at opposition (47 arcseconds).

Jupiter about as it looks visually in a 6- or 8-inch telescope at very high power on a good night. Tim Dearing of the Louisville Astronomical Society took this shot with an iPhone through the eyepiece of an 8-inch Dobsonian in early 2021. The Jovian moon at left casts its tiny shadow onto the planet's cloudtops near the lower left limb.
Jupiter with Great Red Spot and Ganymede, Dec. 9, 2025
Jupiter imaged by Christopher Go on December 9th (the "08/09" in the label is a typo). North is up, east is left. Ganymede was ending a transit across Jupiter's face. These images were taken centered 26 minutes apart; notice how much fast-spinning Jupiter turned west in that interval, and how far Ganymede orbited westward. These are stacks of the best frames from 4-minute video runs, derotated in software.

Go writes, "Conditions were perfect! Details inside the Great Red Spot are well resolved. There is a bright [white] outbreak on the wake of the GRS [just left of the Spot]. The chimney above the GRS is open," referring to the plume from the bright Red Spot Hollow that breaks through the tan belt material north of it. "The North Equatorial Belt is narrow in this region. Ganymede is also well resolved with surface details."

Go uses a 14-inch telescope from the low-latitude Philippines, a top-end planetary video camera, and state-of-the-art frame stacking and image processing drawing on many years of experience.

Saturn (magnitude +1.1, at the Aquarius-Pisces border) is the brightest dot high in the south right after dark, below the Great Square of Pegasus. It gets lower in the southwest as evening advances, then sets around midnight.

In a telescope Saturn's rings remain very close to edge on, tilted less than 1° to our line of sight. They'll remain so for the rest of December. For more goings-on at Saturn during this rare time, go to Bob King's See Saturn's Rings at Their Thinnest. He suggests using the rings' near-absence to try to add inner Mimas to your log of Saturnian moons. Or at least Enceladus, which I repeatedly glimpsed in a 6-inch reflector during a previous thin-rings season. King includes a timetable of Mimas's greatest elongations that happen when Saturn is high in the dark for North America. You can find Enceladus's greatest elongations by playing with Sky & Telescope's interactive Saturn's Moons calculator: run the hours and minutes forward and backward to see when Enceladus ("E") is farthest out at a time when Saturn will be high in darkness for you.

Saturn with edge-on rings and three moons imaged with a cellphone on a 70mm telescope
Saturn as it looked visually at very high power in a small scope when the rings were still tilted by 2.0°. Imager AstroCreo used a cellphone at the eyepiece of a 70-mm alt-azimuth refractor for this shot on Saturn's opposition night, September 21-22. Three of its moons join in: from upper right, Titan, Tethys, and Dione. (The faint parts are somewhat brightness-enhanced here.)
Saturn imaged by Christopher Go on November 1st. North is upper left. The shadow of Dione is crossing Saturn's face. Dione itself is the tiny bright point seen in front of Saturn's ring shadow at the right limb.
Saturn imaged by Christopher Go on November 17th when the ring inclination was a super-thin 0.4°, its smallest this season. Go uses a 14-inch telescope, a top-end planetary video camera, and state-of-the-art frame stacking and image processing drawing on many years of experience.

Uranus (magnitude 5.6, in Taurus 5° south of the Pleiades) is well up by 8 p.m. At high power in a telescope it's a tiny but definitely non-stellar dot, 3.8 arcseconds wide. You'll need a detailed finder chart to identify it among similar-looking faint stars; turn to the November Sky & Telescope, page 49.

Neptune is a telescopic "star" of magnitude 7.8, a dim speck just 2.3 arcseconds wide 4° northeast of show-stealing Saturn. For Neptune you'll need an even more detailed finder chart.


All descriptions that relate to your horizon — including the words up, down, right, and left — are written for the world's mid-northern latitudes. Descriptions and graphics that also depend on longitude (mainly Moon positions) are for North America. Eastern Standard Time (EST) is Universal Time minus 5 hours. UT is also known as UTC, GMT, or Z time.


Want to become a better astronomer? Learn your way around the constellations. They're the key to locating everything fainter and deeper to hunt with binoculars or a telescope.

This is an outdoor nature hobby. For a more detailed constellation guide covering the whole evening sky, use the big monthly map in the center of each issue of Sky & Telescope, the essential magazine of astronomy.

For the attitude every amateur astronomer needs, read Jennifer Willis's Modest Expectations Give Rise to Delight.

Once you get a telescope, to put it to good use you'll want a much more detailed, large-scale sky atlas (set of charts). The basic standard is the Pocket Sky Atlas, in either the original or Jumbo Edition. Both show all 30,000 stars to magnitude 7.6, and 1,500 deep-sky targets — star clusters, nebulae, and galaxies — to search out among them.

Pocket Sky Atlas cover, Jumbo edition
The Pocket Sky Atlas plots 30,796 stars to magnitude 7.6, and hundreds of telescopic galaxies, star clusters, and nebulae among them. Shown here is the Jumbo Edition, which is in hard covers and enlarged for easier reading in the dark by red flashlight. Sample charts. More about the current editions.

Next up is the larger and deeper Sky Atlas 2000.0, plotting stars to magnitude 8.5; nearly three times as many, as well as many more deep-sky objects. It's currently out of print, but maybe you can find one used.

The next up, once you know your way around well, are the even larger Interstellarum Deep-Sky Atlas (with 201,000+ stars to magnitude 9.5 and 14,000 deep-sky objects selected to be detectable by eye in very large amateur telescopes), and Uranometria 2000.0 (332,000 stars to mag 9.75, and 10,300 deep-sky objects).

And read How to Use a Star Chart with a Telescope. It applies just as much to charts on your phone or tablet, which many observers find handier and more versatile, if perhaps less carefully designed, than charts on paper.

You'll also want a good deep-sky guidebook. A beloved old classic is the three-volume Burnham's Celestial Handbook. It was my bedside reading for years. An impressive more modern one is the big Night Sky Observer's Guide set (2+ volumes) by Kepple and Sanner. The pinnacle for total astro-geeks is the new Annals of the Deep Sky series, currently at 11 volumes as it works its way forward through the constellations alphabetically. So far it's up to H.

Can computerized telescopes replace charts? Well, this is what I used to say:

"Not for beginners, I don't think, unless you prefer spending your time getting finicky technology to work rather than learning how to explore through the sky yourself. As Terence Dickinson and Alan Dyer say in their Backyard Astronomer's Guide, 'A full appreciation of the universe cannot come without developing the skills to find things in the sky and understanding how the sky works. This knowledge comes only by spending time under the stars with star maps in hand and a curious mind.' Without these, 'the sky never becomes a friendly place.' "

Well, things change. The technology has continued to improve and become more user-friendly — particularly with software that can now, amazingly, recognize any telescopic star field to determine exactly where the telescope is pointed — finally bypassing all imperfections in the mount, tripod, gears, bearings and other mechanics, or in the user's skill in setting up.

The latest revolution is the rise of small, imaging-only "smartscopes." These take advantage of not only today's pointing technology, but also the vastly better capabilities of imaging chips and processing compared to the human retina and visual cortex. The most sophisticated image stacking and processing can come built in. The result is reasonably capable deep-sky imaging from shockingly small, low-priced units. The image is viewable on your phone or computer as it builds up in real time. Small smartscopes can enable contributions to serious citizen-science projects.

These are changing the hobby at the entry level. For more on this revolution see Richard Wright's "The Rise of the Smart Telescopes" in the November 2025 Sky & Telescope. And read the magazine's review of this especially tiny one.

If you get a larger, more conventional computerized scope that allows direct visual use, do make sure that its drives can be disengaged so you can swing it around and point it readily by hand when you want to, rather than only slowly by the electric motors (which eat batteries).


Audio sky tour. Out under the evening sky with your
earbuds in place, listen to Kelly Beatty's monthly
podcast tour of the naked-eye heavens above. It's free.



"The dangers of not thinking clearly are much greater now than ever before. It's not that there's something new in our way of thinking, it's that credulous and confused thinking can be much more lethal in ways it was never before."
            — Carl Sagan, 1996

"Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence."
            John Adams, 1770


Ephemeris for Comet 3I ATLAS:

About Alan MacRobert

Alan M. MacRobert became an avid Sky & Telescope subscriber in 1966 at age 14, joined the editorial staff in 1982, and is now a senior contributing editor, semi-retired. He played a role in practically every part of the magazine and the company's other products for more than a generation, both on the amateur-observing side and the science-reporting side. In 1994 a book collection of his observing how-tos and telescopic sky tours was published as Star Hopping for Backyard Astronomers. He has produced This Week's Sky at a Glance online every week since 1989.

Comments


Image of Rfeldman

Rfeldman

December 7, 2025 at 6:24 pm

Facebook's algorithm keeps serving me posts about earliest sunsets/ latest sunrises by latitude and longitude in North America. The Earthsky website front page currently has a graphic showing the approximate number of days between earliest sunset & latest sunrise for North American latitudes from 25° to the Arctic Circle.

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Image of misha17

misha17

December 9, 2025 at 12:20 am

I forgot to post it last week, but the Pleiades occultation on Dec 3/4 is the last major occulation list for North America at lunar-occultations.com

The site will not be posting international occultations for 2026.

There are other links on the site for specific local predictions, but I have not checked to see if those pages will be continue to be maintained.

The "Bright Star occulations" page does have a link to download software so you can make predictions for your own area.

http://www.lunar-occultations.com/iota/bstar/bstar.htm

If anyone finds sites that will post 2026 occulation predictions for the entire U.S., or better yet globally, please post the info.

Thanks.

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Image of misha17

misha17

December 9, 2025 at 12:26 am

As a follow-up, this site posts occultations of star magnitude 1 or brighter, including a map of visibility,

https://in-the-sky.org/newsindex.php?feed=occultations

but it does not list timings for cities, and clusters such as the Pleiades are not listed because they are too faint.

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