Five planets will be visible in sequential order.

The champion , or rather , planets , are aligning in your favor .

This calendar month , you may spot a series of fiveplanets lined upacross the good morning sky . Four of them have been array for a while this spring , but Mercury will join Venus , Mars , Saturn , andJupiterin June . Not only are they perish to be visible in the southeast sky , but they ’ll also be draw up sequentially , or the same way as they sit in the solar system .

To spot the heavenly alignment , you ’ll demand to get up early . The planet are visible in the sunrise before daybreak . Though some are up well before that meter , that ’s specially honest if you want to catchthe difficult - to - spot Mercury .   For lotus-eater on Earth , it ’s always low in the sky and only visible for a bit around morning or sunset ( depending on the time of year ) . opera glasses can be helpful to see it before it get down overtaken by the sunlight ’s brightness .

planets align 2022

Javier Zayas Photography/Moment/Getty Images

Get out there around an minute before sunrise and look to the east - southeast . The planets take shape a line , albeit not a A-one straight one , with Mercury and Venus sit low in the eastern United States and the planets gradually rising as you move southerly in the sky . The planet are brighter than most mavin , make them middling easy to name . Though , an app like Star Walk 2 can help you identify them and other celestial object with simpleness .

Even if you do n’t grapple to see the planet airless to the sun , a four - satellite line is still a beautiful way to start your day .

Mercury will get a little easier to see the later you ’re seem in June , perNPR . The timing work out well because , on June 24 , the moon will join the clan in the morning sky . you may get a gumption of what that line - up looks like in the icon here from NASA ’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory ’s monthly"What ’s Up " video .

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Get out there and enjoy the wonder of the beetleweed .

june planets align

Via NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory on YouTube