The Moon in conjunction with Venus and Jupiter, with the Very Large Telescope in the foreground. Image © Y. Beletsky, ESO, 2009.

Conjunction of Mercury and Ceres

Dominic Ford, Editor
From the Conjunctions feed

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The sky at

Mercury and 1 Ceres will share the same right ascension, with Mercury passing 9°15' to the south of 1 Ceres.

From South El Monte however, the pair will not be observable – they will reach their highest point in the sky during daytime and will be no higher than 6° above the horizon at dusk.

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Mercury will be at mag 0.3, and 1 Ceres at mag 8.7, both in the constellation Leo.

A graph of the angular separation between Mercury and 1 Ceres around the time of closest approach is available here.

The positions of the two objects at the moment of conjunction will be as follows:

Object Right Ascension Declination Constellation Magnitude Angular Size
Mercury 10h11m10s 10°07'N Leo 0.3 7"6
1 Ceres 10h11m10s 19°23'N Leo 8.7 0"0

The coordinates above are given in J2000.0. The pair will be at an angular separation of 27° from the Sun, which is in Cancer at this time of year.

The sky on 21 Mar 2026

The sky on 21 March 2026
Sunrise
06:52
Sunset
19:03
Twilight ends
20:27
Twilight begins
05:28

3-day old moon
Waxing Crescent

12%

3 days old

Planets
Rise Culm. Set
Mercury 05:51 11:33 17:14
Venus 07:44 14:04 20:25
Moon 08:15 15:14 22:24
Mars 06:16 12:00 17:44
Jupiter 12:48 19:58 03:08
Saturn 07:10 13:12 19:14
All times shown in PDT.

Source

The circumstances of this event were computed using the DE430 planetary ephemeris published by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).

This event was automatically generated by searching the ephemeris for planetary alignments which are of interest to amateur astronomers, and the text above was generated based on an estimate of your location.

Related news

07 Jan 2050  –  1 Ceres at opposition
07 May 2051  –  1 Ceres at opposition
11 Aug 2052  –  1 Ceres at opposition
08 Nov 2053  –  1 Ceres at opposition

Image credit

The Moon in conjunction with Venus and Jupiter, with the Very Large Telescope in the foreground. Image © Y. Beletsky, ESO, 2009.

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South El Monte

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Longitude:
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34.05°N
118.05°W
PDT

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