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Starwatch: Look Out for Venus Blazing Brightly in Inconspicuous Pisces

The Guardian

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Date Published
9 Feb 2025
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0
Australian
No
Created
27 Aug 2025, 03:09 pm

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Description

The evening star will serve as a handy signpost for identifying the often unnoticed constellation

Summary

The article provides an astronomical update on Venus's position in the evening sky, particularly as it appears in the constellation Pisces. It highlights Venus's visibility due to its brightness, attributed to its proximity to the Sun and Earth, and its reflective cloud cover. While informative for astronomy enthusiasts and providing clear instructions for sky-watching, the article lacks relevance to AI safety, governance, or policy discussions. Neither does it address existential or catastrophic AI risks nor contribute to global or Australian AI safety frameworks.

Body

Venus is currently situated in Pisces.Illustration: Guardian Graphics/The GuardianView image in fullscreenVenus is currently situated in Pisces.Illustration: Guardian Graphics/The GuardianThis article is more than6 months oldStarwatch: look out for Venus blazing brightly in inconspicuous PiscesThis article is more than 6 months oldThe evening star will serve as a handy signpost for identifying the often unnoticed constellationHaving reached its highest point in the evening sky last week Venus is beginning to move back towards the sun. But before it disappears from view in March, it will continue to put on a dazzling show.It will blaze brightly on 16 February at a magnitude of –4.2, the brightest of this apparition. It will also still be high enough in the sky to be well visible several hours after the sun has set, when the sky is fully dark.Perhaps part of the planet’s visual magic is that it appears to break through in the deepening twilight. Venus is so bright for three reasons. First, it is closer to the sun than we are, so receives more sunlight. Second, it is covered in highly reflective clouds that bounce some of that incident sunlight towards us. And third, it is the closest planet to Earth, so the reflected light does not dissipate as much before it reaches us.The planet is currently situated in Pisces, the fishes, and serves as a handy signpost for identifying this rather inconspicuous constellation. The chart shows the view looking west from London at 19:00 GMT on 16 February.Explore more on these topicsSpaceStarwatchAstronomyfeaturesShareReuse this content