Opposition
Mars at opposition in 2001, as seen by the Hubble Space Telescope. Image courtesy of NASA.
An astronomical body is said to be at opposition when it makes its closest approach to the point directly opposite to the Sun in the night sky.
This means that the object will appear highest in the sky at around midnight, local time, and will be above the horizon for much of the night.
For objects which orbit further out in the Solar System than the Earth – almost all bodies other than Mercury and Venus – this configuration happens when the Solar System is aligned such that the object lies in a straight line with the Earth and the Sun, the Earth being in the middle.
Consequently, this is also the time when the object makes its closest approach to the Earth, making it appear at its largest and brightest in the night sky.
List of oppositions
The table below lists the dates when objects are at opposition in 2024, computed from NASA's DE430 planetary ephemeris. To show events in other years, use the control below.
Objects at opposition in 2024
Date | Object | Declination | Full description of event |
Date | Object | Declination | Full description of event |
08 Sep 2024 00:27 EDT | Saturn at opposition | 7°39'S | More information » |
20 Sep 2024 20:08 EDT | Neptune at opposition | 1°56'S | More information » |
16 Nov 2024 21:36 EST | Uranus at opposition | 18°43'N | More information » |
07 Dec 2024 15:50 EST | Jupiter at opposition | 22°01'N | More information » |