NASA reveals skywatching treats for March

NASA has released its latest monthly update on what to look out for in the skies over the coming weeks.

From around March 18, early risers can spot Saturn moving gradually toward Mars and Venus, with the trio able to be viewed with the naked eye around 45 minutes before sunrise — weather permitting, of course.

Toward the end of the month, from about March 28, our moon will join the party, creating a striking scene low in the east.

NASA

If early mornings aren’t your thing, then peer high toward the southwest during the March evenings to locate the tall, Y-shaped constellation of Taurus, the bull. If you have trouble locating it, one of these excellent astronomy apps will do the trick.

Once you have it in your sights, look at the center of Taurus (the bull’s face) and you’ll see a grouping of stars about 15 light-years across known as the Hyades star cluster. It’s known to be the closest open star cluster to our solar system and features hundreds of stars.

“An open cluster is a group of stars that are close together in space and loosely bound together by their mutual gravity,” NASA explains on its website. “These are stars that formed together around the same time, from the same cloud of dust and gas. Over time they blow away that leftover nebula material and drift apart. Because of this and their open, or diffuse, structures, they’re called ‘open’ clusters. Our own sun formed in a cluster like this, and studying these structures helps us understand how stars form and evolve.”

Remarkably, you don’t need a telescope to spot Hyades, either. Refer to the diagram below or again, fire up one of those astronomy apps for help.

Map of the sky showing the Hyades star cluster.
NASA

Next up, how about checking out a star that’s known to have its own planets orbiting about it? “Locate these distant ‘suns’ for yourself and you’ll know you’re peering directly at another planetary system,” NASA says.

One to try for is Epsilon Tauri, the right eye of Taurus the bull. The orange dwarf star has a gas giant planet around eight times the mass of Jupiter, according to the space agency. You can also spot 7 Canis Majoris, the star at the heart of a constellation containing Sirius, the brightest star in the night sky. 7 Canis Majoris is orbited by two planets — a gas giant with almost twice the mass of Jupiter and another that’s a bit smaller than Jupiter, which, incidentally, is 11 times wider than Earth.

The location of the gas giant exoplanet 7 Canis Majoris.
NASA

For NASA’s full rundown of this month’s skywatching treats, be sure to check out the video at the top of this page.

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