
Skywatchers are in for a treat this March with a five-planet “alignment” where Jupiter, Mercury, Venus, Uranus and Mars will appear in the night sky.
NASA scientist Bill Cooke told CBS News that the planets will align in the night sky on March 28 and that the alignment will look “very pretty.”
“Wait until the sun has set and then go out and look low in that bright part of the sky where the sun has just set with binoculars, and you should see brighter Jupiter next to fainter Mercury,” Rick Fienberg, senior contributing editor at Sky & Telescope magazine, told NPR.
According to Fienberg, Venus will be high in the sky and easier to spot. But Uranus, which will appear near Venus, will appear faint and will only be visible if you have binoculars. Mars will shine relatively brighter near the Moon.
This event is not a true planetary alignment where the planets will appear in a line, but it still presents the opportunity to see five different planets in the sky at the same time.
An actual planetary alignment happened in June last year when Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn aligned in the sky. That was the first time that truly aligned in the previous eighteen years, and such an event will not actually happen for another forty years. The June event was also special for another reason–the five planets were aligned in the same order as their distance from the Sun.