
Jupiter and Venus from Earth
2026-06-07
It was visible around the world. The sunset conjunction of Jupiter (left) and Venus (right) in 2012 was visible almost no matter where you lived on Earth. Anyone on our planet with a clear western horizon at sunset could see them. That year, a creative photographer traveled away from the town lights of Szubin, Poland to photograph a near closest approach of the two planets. The bright planets were then separated by only three degrees and his daughter struck a humorous pose. A faint red sunset still glowed in the background. Jupiter and Venus are together again this week after sunset, passing within a degree of each other about two days from today.
© Marek Nikodem (PPSAE) · via NASA APOD
(2280) Kunikov (1971 SL2; 1970 GY1) ist ein Asteroid des inneren Hauptgürtels, der am 26. September 1971 von der russischen Astronomin Tamara Michailowna Smirnowa am Krim-Observatorium in Nautschnyj (IAU-Code 095) entdeckt wurde.
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).