A December GRAND TOUR
BBC Sky at Night Magazine|December 2023
Just like the epic journeys of the Voyager probes to our Solar System's outer planets, this tour takes you to the gas and ice giants as they line up in the night sky this month. Stuart Atkinson is your guide
Stuart Atkinson
A December GRAND TOUR

One of the greatest achievements in the history of space exploration was the Grand Tour, NASA's ambitious mission of the late 1970s and '80s to visit the Solar System's outer planets using the twin Voyager space probes. They flew from world to world in a series of fascinating fly-bys, sending back incredible images of the planets which are still iconic today.

There will never be another Grand Tour, but this month we will be able to go on our own 'Grand Tour' of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune as the four planets will be stretched out across the heavens in a long line. Observers with Go-To telescopes will be able to navigate from one world to another just by pressing a few buttons, but less experienced observers will find they have help from the Moon, which will hopscotch along the planetary parade over the course of a week in December.

The big picture

Go out on any clear night, or morning, and the chances are that there will be at least one planet in the sky for you to enjoy looking at with just your eyes or through binoculars or a telescope. Sometimes a couple of Earth's distant sister worlds come together in the same part of the sky - a grouping astronomers call a conjunction - which can be a lovely sight and very photogenic too.

Occasionally, if they align just the right way, we're treated to a veritable parade of planets spread out across the sky in a cosmic daisy chain. This is exactly what's going to happen this month: all of the outer planets will be on view in the sky after sunset, conveniently arranged in a line stretching from the southeast to the southwest.

The planets will be spread along part of an imaginary line in the sky called the ecliptic. This is a narrow band of sky which the Sun and its planets appear to move along as we, and they, orbit the Sun.

This story is from the December 2023 edition of BBC Sky at Night Magazine.

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This story is from the December 2023 edition of BBC Sky at Night Magazine.

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