A rare astronomical phenomenon... A picture documenting seeing all the planets with the naked eye
A rare astronomical phenomenon... A picture documenting seeing all the planets with the naked eye 1-408
NASA recently shared an image that captures a rare phenomenon in which all the planets in our solar system are seen from Earth simultaneously. The phenomenon known as the "parade of planets" allows people to see Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn at once with the naked eye.
NASA shared the scene as an astronomical picture of the day, in which a group of planets such as Jupiter, Mars, Venus, Saturn and Mercury can be seen shining in a purple sky in the late evening.
appeared in the photoMars and Uranus andPurchaserAnd Neptune, Saturn, Mercury, and Venus in one frame, and the image quickly spread, as netizens admired the dazzling dusk scene. The image, taken by astronomer and photographer Tong Tezel in December 2022, also shows bright stars such as Fomalhaut and Aldebaran.

Post a new photo related to a flagastronomyEvery day, it's a decades-old NASA tradition. Every day there is a new image with a short caption written by a professional astronomer, providing the perfect mix of informative and entertaining content.
The first image of this imitation of the "largest rock in our solar system" known as the "pale blue dot" came from an image taken by NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft in 1990.

Another image, by photographer Tommy Lees, shows the amazing Kemble Star Chain, which is a constellation (a group of stars different from a constellation). The motto of this tradition, "Explore the Universe", promises that each day is a new foray into the vast and complex universe in which we live.



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