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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20261125T230000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20261126T033000
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UID:2041-1795647600-1795663800@astrofarm.one
SUMMARY:See Uranus with your own eyes
DESCRIPTION:You Can Technically See Uranus With Your Naked Eyes — And Almost Nobody Ever Does\n\nNovember 25\, 2026 is your best chance to spot a planet that's 2.9 billion kilometers away. Without a telescope. Yes\, really.\n\nHere's a strange fact:\n\nYou might be able to see Uranus with your own eyes.\n\nNo telescope. No camera. No apps. Just you\, your eyeballs\, and 2.9 billion kilometers of empty space.\n\nAnd yet\, almost nobody ever does.\n\nOn November 25\, 2026\, Uranus reaches opposition — the point where it's closest to Earth\, fully illuminated\, and visible all night.\n\nThis is literally the best it gets.\n\nAnd still... most people won't see it.\n\nThe Problem: Uranus Doesn't Want To Be Found\n\nAt around magnitude 5.6\, Uranus is technically bright enough to be seen under very dark skies.\n\nBut "technically visible" and "actually noticeable" are two VERY different things.\n\nUranus doesn't stand out. It doesn't sparkle. It doesn't demand attention. It just... sits there. A tiny\, faint point\, almost indistinguishable from the surrounding stars.\n\nThis is the challenge.\n\nTo see Uranus\, you need more than just eyesight. You need intention. You need to know exactly where to look. And you need to trust that what you're seeing is actually it.\n\nJupiter Finds You. Uranus Makes You Work For It.\n\nPlanets like Jupiter and Venus are attention seekers. They're bright. They're obvious. You spot them without trying.\n\nUranus doesn't do that.\n\nYou have to go find it. And when you do\, the experience feels completely different.\n\nBecause suddenly\, you're not just looking at the sky. You're SEARCHING it. You're comparing star brightness. You're noticing patterns. You're paying attention to details you would normally ignore.\n\nAnd then\, eventually\, you see it.\n\nOr at least\, you THINK you do.\n\nThat moment — that uncertainty — is part of the experience.\n\nUranus doesn't confirm your observation. It doesn't announce itself. It just exists. Quietly. 2.9 billion kilometers away.\n\nWhat You're Actually Looking At\n\nA cold\, distant world\, tilted almost completely on its side — 98 degrees\, basically rolling around the Sun like a barrel. It rotates in a way that makes it unlike any other planet in the solar system.\n\nIt has 27 known moons\, named after characters from Shakespeare and Alexander Pope.\n\nIts atmosphere is made of hydrogen\, helium\, and methane — which gives it that faint blue-green color you'd see in photos.\n\nNone of that is visible to your eyes.\n\nWhat you see is a point. But what you understand is something much bigger.\n\nYou've crossed a threshold. You've gone from passively looking at the sky to actively engaging with it.\n\nAnd that's rare. Because most of the time\, we only notice what's easy.\n\nUranus isn't. And that's exactly why it matters.\n\nSources\n\nNASA Solar System Exploration — https://solarsystem.nasa.gov\n\nEuropean Southern Observatory — https://www.eso.org/public/science/\n\nESA Science — https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration
URL:https://astrofarm.one/event/see-uranus-with-your-own-eyes/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://astrofarm.one/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Uranus.png
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