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Credit: Tamas Ladanyi   
(TWAN)   
   
   
Explanation:
Did you see it?   
   
The last conjunction   
of Moon and bright planets in 2008   
featured a young crescent Moon   
and brilliant Venus in the west after sunset on December 31st.   
   
Seen here in dark, clear, mountain air from Mönichkirchen,   
Austria, are the   
two celestial beacons that dominate   
planet Earth's night sky.   
   
That pair was hard to miss, but   
skygazers   
watching lower along   
the western horizon in early twilight might also have glimpsed   
a pairing of Jupiter and Mercury as they both   
wandered closer to the   
Sun in the sky at year's end.   
   
Still, while this single, 5 second long exposure seriously   
overexposes the Moon's sunlit crescent, it does capture another   
planet not visible to the unaided eye.   
   
The tiny pinprick of light just above the photographer's head   
in the picture is the distant   
planet Neptune.   
   
    
 Note :  APOD editor to speak in New York tonight. 
   
   
   
   
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January | 
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NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
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Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: conjunction - neptune
Publications with words: conjunction - neptune
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