Your hands can be a useful tool for measuring the night sky. (Image credit: Created in Canva Pro)

Of the five bright naked-eye planets, the two most favorably positioned for viewing during April are in the evening sky. Dazzling Venus, low in the west-northwest for about two hours after sunset, and brilliant Jupiter, which soars high in the south-southwest at dusk and remains visible until well after midnight, accompanied by the “Twin Stars” of Gemini the Twins, Pollux and Castor.

your clenched fist held at arm’s length measures roughly 10 degrees. Here, we present a schedule below which provides some of the best planet viewing times, as well as directing you to where to look to see them.

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the sun‘s right, placing the planet quite low above the horizon. This +0.3-magnitude planet rises less than an hour before sunrise and shortly after coming above the horizon might be located with binoculars about 10 degrees south of the due east point. Only from the more southerly states is the planet likely to be visible to the naked eye. The vantage from which Mercury is best seen at this apparition is from the Southern Hemisphere. Around midmonth, Mercury will be near Mars and Saturn (see “Mars” below).

Pleiades star cluster, passing about 3½ degrees to their lower left, making for a lovely sight in binoculars. And on that same evening, Venus passes just three-quarters of a degree to the right of the sixth-magnitude Uranus; a rather close approach will serve as a convenient opportunity for identifying this greenish world in a small telescope or binoculars without the need to consult a sky map.


Approximate location of the moon and Venus on April 18. (Image credit: Created in Canva Pro.)

Castor, floating even higher above it. This, the largest of all the planets, offers telescope users fine views for several hours after sunset. On the evening of April 22, a fat crescent moon will appear about 3 degrees above and to the right of Jupiter.


Approximate location of the moon and Jupiter on April 22. (Image credit: Created in Canva Pro.)

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Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York’s Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, Sky and Telescope, The Old Farmer’s Almanac and other publications.