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public  Greenwich, UK Greenwich, UK  ⓘ
TimezoneEurope/London
Sunrise: 5:05 
Transit: 12:56 
Sunset: 20:48
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Planets Visible Tonight from Honoka‘a, United States

This page shows planetary visibility conditions for Honoka‘a, United States (51° 28' 48.0" N, 0° 0' 0.0" E). All times reported are in the Pacific/Honolulu 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 Before sunrise, difficult Rises at 05:05 -0.99 14° W
Venus End of the night Rises at 03:19 -4.57 45° W
Mars Beginning of the night Sets at 00:10 1.14 76° E
Jupiter After sunset Sets at 20:50 -1.94 27° E
Saturn End of the night Rises at 02:41 1.13 58° W
Uranus Not visible - 5.85 0° W
Neptune End of the night Rises at 02:45 7.80 56° W

Moon: Waning Gibbous, 66.3% illuminated, rises at 23:31.

Planet Visibility Details

Mercury will be difficult to observe because it rises only 1 hour and 10 minutes before the Sun. Look towards the East under very clear sky conditions and from a location with an unobstructed horizon. Mercury will appear very low on the horizon, as a small bright and light-orange star (magnitude -0.99). It will be visible to the naked eye, however small binoculars can be helpful to locate it. View sky map of Mercury at 05:25.

Venus is in excellent visibility conditions for early morning observations. It rises at 03:19, i.e. 2 hours and 55 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 -4.57). View sky map of Venus at 04:32.

Mars will be in good visibility conditions after sunset and during the first part of the night. It sets at 00:10, 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 1.14) with a distinctive reddish color. View sky map of Mars at 21:30.

Jupiter sets 1 hour and 59 minutes after the Sun. Look towards West after sunset, from a location with unobstructed horizon. It will be easily visible to the naked eye as bright and large star (magnitude -1.94) with an orange color. Small binoculars will easily show its 4 major moons. View sky map of Jupiter at 19:50.

Saturn is in good visibility conditions towards the end of the night. It rises at 02:41, i.e. 3 hours and 34 minutes before the Sun. Look towards East before sunrise, from a location with unobstructed horizon. It will be visible to the naked eye as a moderately bright star (magnitude 1.13) with an orange color. Binoculars with at least 20x magnification will show its elongated shape while a small telescope will show its rings. View sky map of Saturn at 04:13.

Uranus will not be visible tonight because of its elongation of only 0° from the Sun.

Neptune is in good visibility conditions towards the end of the night. It rises at 02:45, i.e. 3 hours and 29 minutes before the Sun. Look towards East before sunrise, from a location with unobstructed horizon. Considering its low brightness (magnitude 7.80), at least binoculars will be needed to observe it and a small telescope is recommended. View sky map of Neptune at 04:15.