The Pleiades Will Dance With The Moon This Weekend

0
1كيلو بايت

The Pleiades Will Dance With The Moon This Weekend

The Pleiades Will Dance With The Moon This Weekend

On both Saturday and Sunday, the Moon will pass near the famous star cluster.

Dr. Alfredo Carpineti headshot
A telescope image of the Pleiades

The Pleiades are more than just these seven (or the six we can see with the naked eye).

Image credit: Maik Thomas/Shutterstock.com

The glorious August sky continues to deliver beauty. Not only has this week seen the peak of the Perseids meteor shower, two planetary conjunctions, and a planetary alignment, but if you wake up early or stay up late this weekend, you’ll be able to see the Moon getting close to the Pleiades – by far the most famous open cluster of stars in the sky.

The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or subscribe to access the full content.

The Moon, which is at its waning quarter, will rise close to the Taurus (the bull) constellation. In particular, it will be just a handful of degrees from the Pleiades, which are near the bull’s shoulder. The Moon is rising late in the evening (depending on your time zone). In New York, for example, this is going to happen after 11 pm local time tonight, with the Pleiades coming above the horizon soon after.

To see the event at its best, it’s better to wait for later in the night, when both the Moon and the Pleiades are visible between east and northeast. 

Tomorrow night, the same thing will happen, but reversed. The Pleiades will be the first to rise, followed by the Moon. Again, for better visibility later in the night will be better.

A super-interesting fact about the Pleiades is that in so many cultures they are associated with the number seven (the "Seven Sisters" in the Greek myth and several stories and songlines of Indigenous Australian culture, "six brothers and a princess" in Danish folklore, and even their depiction in the Nebra disc). The problem is that you can only see six stars with your naked eye, unless you have exceptional eyesight. Folklorists have suggested that the stories featuring the number seven come from at least 100,000 years ago, when two of the stars were more easily distinguishable.

If you want to maximize your options for seeing things, very early in the morning should be your goal. Not only will you get the Moon and Pleiades, but you will also get a planetary parade, with four of them visible to the naked eye (Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn) as well as the possibility of seeing Uranus and Neptune with a small telescope.

Another fun fact: the Pleiades are a very young star cluster, about 100 million years old. This means that sharks and turtles are older than these stars.


ARTICLE POSTED IN


space-icon

More Space and Physics Stories

clock-icon28 minutes ago

clock-icon42 minutes ago

clock-icon1 hour ago

البحث
الأقسام
إقرأ المزيد
Science
Humans' Hidden "Sixth Sense" To Be Mapped Following $14.2 Million Prize – What Is Interoception?
Humans' Hidden "Sixth Sense" To Be Mapped Following $14.2 Million Prize – What Is...
بواسطة test Blogger3 2025-10-14 12:00:16 0 458
Home & Garden
The Fanciful Farmstead Aesthetic Is the Easier, Breezier Version of Cottagecore You Have to Try This Summer
The Fanciful Farmstead Aesthetic Is the Easier, Breezier Version of Cottagecore You Have to Try...
بواسطة Test Blogger9 2025-07-29 10:00:45 0 1كيلو بايت
Technology
The iPhone 17 Pro Max could have the biggest iPhone battery ever
The iPhone 17 Pro Max could have the biggest iPhone battery ever...
بواسطة Test Blogger7 2025-07-04 16:00:12 0 2كيلو بايت
Technology
Save over $1,000 on this huge 77-inch LG C5 OLED TV ahead of NFL kickoff
Save over $1,000 on this huge 77-inch LG C5 OLED TV ahead of NFL kickoff...
بواسطة Test Blogger7 2025-09-02 10:00:13 0 910
Science
The Longest-Reigning Monarch In History Is Someone You’ve Never Heard Of
The Longest-Reigning Monarch In History Is Someone You’ve Never Heard OfThe Longest-Reigning...
بواسطة test Blogger3 2025-06-20 16:00:10 0 2كيلو بايت