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public  Greenwich, UK Greenwich, UK  ⓘ
TimezoneEurope/London
Sunrise: 4:56 
Transit: 13:05 
Sunset: 21:13
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Planets Visible Tonight from Aurora, Philippines

This page shows planetary visibility conditions for Aurora, Philippines (51° 28' 48.0" N, 0° 0' 0.0" E). All times reported are in the Asia/Manila timezone. These location and timezone settings have been set as your defaults and you can change them here.

At a Glance

Planet Visibility Notes Mag Elongation
Mercury After sunset Sets at 19:56 0.83 25° E
Venus Before sunrise Rises at 02:43 -4.09 42° W
Mars Beginning of the night Sets at 21:46 1.45 55° E
Jupiter Before sunrise, difficult Rises at 04:47 -1.89 11° W
Saturn Most of the night Transits at 04:50 0.91 106° W
Uranus End of the night Rises at 02:13 5.81 48° W
Neptune Most of the night Transits at 04:49 7.73 106° W

Moon: Full, 99.6% illuminated, rises at 18:05.

Planet Visibility Details

Mercury sets 1 hour and 30 minutes after the Sun. Look towards West after sunset, from a location with unobstructed horizon. Mercury will appear low on the horizon, as a small bright and light-orange star (magnitude 0.83). It will be visible to the naked eye, however small binoculars can be helpful to locate it. View sky map of Mercury at 19:10.

Venus is in favorable conditions for early morning observations. It rises 3 hours and 22 minutes before the Sun. Look towards East before sunrise, from a location with unobstructed horizon. Venus will be easily visible as a very bright white or slightly bluish star. It will be the brightest object visible in the sky (magnitude -4.09). View sky map of Venus at 04:10.

Mars will be in good visibility conditions after sunset and during the first part of the night. It sets at 21:46, look towards South/South West after sunset and West later in the night. It will be easily visible to the naked eye as bright star (magnitude 1.45) with a distinctive reddish color. View sky map of Mars at 20:06.

Jupiter will be difficult to observe because it rises only 1 hour and 19 minutes before the Sun. Look towards the East under very clear sky conditions and from a location with an unobstructed horizon. Jupiter will be visible very low on the horizon as a large star (magnitude -1.89) with an orange color. It will be visible to the naked eye, however small binoculars can be helpful to locate it. View sky map of Jupiter at 05:11.

Saturn will be in good visibility conditions for most part of the night. It rises at 22:53, i.e. 7 hours and 13 minutes before the Sun. Best conditions will be around the time Saturn will reach its highest altitude, at 04:50 (look towards South). It will be visible to the naked eye as a moderately bright star (magnitude 0.91) with an orange color. Binoculars with at least 20x magnification will show its elongated shape while a small telescope will show its rings.

Uranus is in good visibility conditions towards the end of the night. It rises at 02:13, i.e. 3 hours and 53 minutes before the Sun. Look towards East before sunrise, from a location with unobstructed horizon. Under ideal sky conditions Uranus would theoretically be visible to the naked eye (magnitude 5.81), binoculars will easily show it. View sky map of Uranus at 03:54.

Neptune will be in good visibility conditions for most part of the night. It rises at 22:51, i.e. 7 hours and 14 minutes before the Sun. Best conditions will be around the time Neptune will reach its highest altitude, at 04:49 (look towards South). Considering its low brightness (magnitude 7.73), at least binoculars will be needed to observe it and a small telescope is recommended.