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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20260609T230000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20260610T033000
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UID:1978-1781046000-1781062200@astrofarm.one
SUMMARY:Venus and Jupiter Conjunction
DESCRIPTION:Venus and Jupiter Are About to Get Dangerously Close — And You Won't Need a Telescope\n\nThe Two Brightest Planets in the Sky Meet on June 9\, 2026. This Is How to See It.\n\nSometimes the sky just... simplifies itself.\n\nInstead of thousands of scattered stars and hard-to-find constellations\, everything collapses into two blazing points of light. Brighter than anything else up there. Impossible to miss. Almost confrontational in their brilliance.\n\nOn the evening of June 9\, 2026\, Venus and Jupiter — the two brightest planets visible from Earth — will appear just 1.5 degrees apart in the western sky.\n\nThat's close enough to fit within a single field of binocular view. Close enough to look like they're about to touch.\n\nClose enough to make you stop and stare.\n\nWhat's Actually Happening Here?\n\nSpoiler: They're not actually close. Not even remotely.\n\nVenus orbits inside Earth's path\, never straying far from the Sun in our sky. Jupiter sits way out beyond the asteroid belt\, taking nearly 12 years to complete a single orbit.\n\nTheir motions are completely independent. Their distances from Earth are vastly different. But occasionally\, their lines of sight converge from our perspective — and they appear to meet.\n\nThis is a conjunction. Not a collision. Not a physical encounter. Just a perfect alignment of geometry and timing.\n\nAnd it's stunning.\n\nWhy These Two Planets Look So Ridiculous\n\nVenus is the brightest object in the night sky after the Moon. Its thick cloud cover reflects about 70% of the sunlight that hits it — far more than most planets. When it's up\, you literally cannot miss it.\n\nJupiter isn't quite as reflective\, but it's massive — and close enough to still outshine every star in the sky. Through even basic binoculars\, you can spot its cloud bands. Through a small telescope\, you can see its four largest moons.\n\nPut them side by side\, and the effect is almost theatrical. Two completely different worlds — one shrouded in acid clouds\, one wrapped in storms bigger than Earth — appearing as a luminous pair in the fading twilight.\n\nHow to Watch\n\nDate: Evening of June 9\, 2026\n\nLook west after sunset. Venus will shine first\, even before the sky is fully dark. Jupiter follows shortly after.\n\nYou don't need any equipment. Just find a clear view of the western horizon and wait for twilight.\n\nIf you have binoculars\, use them. The two planets will fit in a single view\, and if the atmosphere is steady\, you might catch a glimpse of Jupiter's moons scattered around it like tiny diamonds.\n\nWhy This Matters\n\nConjunctions aren't rare. But conjunctions between the two brightest planets in the sky — close enough to fit in your fist held at arm's length — don't happen every day.\n\nAnd what makes this one special isn't the science. It's the simplicity.\n\nYou step outside. You look up. Two blazing lights dominate the western sky\, appearing closer together than you'd think possible. No telescope. No planning. No apps.\n\nJust you and the solar system\, doing its thing.\n\nWithin days\, the illusion will fade. Venus will shift position\, Jupiter will drift along its slow arc\, and the pair will separate.\n\nBut for one evening\, the sky simplifies itself. And if you're there to see it\, that's a moment worth having.\n\nSources\n\nNASA Solar System Exploration – https://solarsystem.nasa.gov\n\nEuropean Southern Observatory – https://www.eso.org/public/science/
URL:https://astrofarm.one/event/venus-and-jupiter-conjunction/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://astrofarm.one/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Venus-Jupiter.png
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20260621T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20260621T150000
DTSTAMP:20260529T224450
CREATED:20260412T155731Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260522T214052Z
UID:1979-1782039600-1782054000@astrofarm.one
SUMMARY:The Summer Solstice
DESCRIPTION:The Night That Almost Doesn't Exist: Why June 21\, 2026 Will Mess With Your Head\n\nThe Summer Solstice Is Here — And Darkness Has Left the Chat\n\nThere's a night coming when darkness basically gives up.\n\nYou won't notice it all at once. It creeps in over weeks — evenings that stretch a little longer\, skies that hold onto light a little more stubbornly. And then one night\, you step outside after sunset and realize: the darkness never fully arrives.\n\nWelcome to June 21\, 2026. The summer solstice. The longest day of the year.\n\nAnd the night that almost disappears.\n\nHere's What's Actually Happening\n\nEarth is tilted. About 23.5 degrees off vertical. This isn't dramatic enough to notice day-to-day\, but it's dramatic enough to create seasons.\n\nAt the summer solstice\, the Northern Hemisphere reaches maximum tilt toward the Sun. The Sun climbs higher in the sky than at any other time of year. It rises early. Sets late. Spends more time above the horizon than on any other day.\n\nBut here's the trippy part: even after sunset\, the Sun doesn't actually leave.\n\nIt sinks below the horizon at a shallow angle. So shallow that its light keeps interacting with the atmosphere long after it's no longer visible. Twilight stretches. Civil twilight blends into nautical twilight\, which blends into astronomical twilight.\n\nAnd in some locations? Full darkness never arrives at all.\n\nWhat It Actually Looks Like\n\nThe sky stays suspended. Not day. Not night. Something in between.\n\nStars appear late\, almost hesitant. Only the brightest ones break through the lingering glow. The faint ones — the ones that usually fill the sky — stay hidden. The Milky Way\, that defining feature of a truly dark sky\, barely makes an appearance.\n\nFor astronomers\, this is the most challenging time of year. The window of darkness shrinks to a few hours\, sometimes less. Deep-sky objects become hard to see — not because they're gone\, but because the sky itself never fully clears of sunlight.\n\nBut Here's Why It's Actually Beautiful\n\nThe solstice isn't a loss. It's a peak.\n\nA turning point.\n\nBecause after this day\, the motion reverses. Almost imperceptibly at first\, the Sun begins to lower its path. Days start to shorten. Nights begin to return.\n\nStanding outside on the evening of June 21\, you're witnessing a precise moment in a continuous cycle. The Earth is still moving. Still orbiting. Still tilted. And this exact orientation of planet and star happens only once each year.\n\nIt's not an event you watch.\n\nIt's a condition you exist inside.\n\nAnd somewhere beyond that lingering twilight glow\, the stars are still there. Waiting for darkness to return.\n\n\n\n\nSources\n\nNASA Earth Observatory – https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov\n\nEuropean Southern Observatory – https://www.eso.org/public/science/\n\nBritannica – Solstice – https://www.britannica.com/science/solstice
URL:https://astrofarm.one/event/the-summer-solstice/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://astrofarm.one/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Summer-Solstice.png
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