Expert Voices

Celestial Snapshots of My Favorite Conjunctions (Op-Ed)

Victor Rogus is an American amateur astronomer and a fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society in London. This is the 10th in his series of exclusive Space.com posts about amateur astronomy. He contributed this article to Space.com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

The word conjunction, as you may remember from English class or Schoolhouse Rock, is a part of speech that connects words, sentences or clauses, a joining or pairing of two or more things. In astronomy, when celestial objects appear to come together, those events are called conjunctions. From the ground, conjunctions seem to show close approaches between planets, or groupings of several celestial objects, at times including the moon or a star. These apparitions are nearly always seen near the ecliptic, the plane the Earth shares with the sun, the path through the sky that is, from our perspective, traveled by the sun, the moon and the planets. That being said, conjunctions are also great photo opportunities that generally require little more than a camera on a tripod setup. What follows are a few of my favorite conjunction photos that I have collected over the years.

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