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

Conjunction of Neptune and Ceres

Dominic Ford, Editor
From the Conjunctions feed

Please wait
Loading 0/4
Click and drag to rotate
Mouse wheel to zoom in/out
Touch with mouse to dismiss
The sky at

Neptune and 1 Ceres will share the same right ascension, with Neptune passing 1°38' to the south of 1 Ceres.

From South El Monte , the pair will be visible in the dawn sky, rising at 00:12 (PDT) and reaching an altitude of 65° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 05:41.

Begin typing the name of a town near to you, and then select the town from the list of options which appear below.

Neptune will be at mag 7.9, and 1 Ceres at mag 8.6, both in the constellation Gemini.

The pair will be too widely separated to fit within the field of view of a telescope, but will be visible through a pair of binoculars.

A graph of the angular separation between Neptune 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
Neptune 07h11m20s 21°36'N Gemini 7.9 2"2
1 Ceres 07h11m20s 23°15'N Gemini 8.6 0"0

The coordinates above are given in J2000.0. The pair will be at an angular separation of 81° from the Sun, which is in Virgo at this time of year.

The sky on 25 Apr 2026

The sky on 25 April 2026
Sunrise
06:07
Sunset
19:30
Twilight ends
21:01
Twilight begins
04:36

9-day old moon
Waxing Gibbous

75%

9 days old

Planets
Rise Culm. Set
Mercury 05:26 11:40 17:54
Venus 07:30 14:33 21:37
Moon 14:04 20:48 03:24
Mars 05:09 11:22 17:35
Jupiter 10:45 17:53 01:02
Saturn 05:04 11:10 17:16
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

03 Oct 2071  –  1 Ceres at opposition
08 Jan 2073  –  1 Ceres at opposition
08 May 2074  –  1 Ceres at opposition
12 Aug 2075  –  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.

Share

South El Monte

Latitude:
Longitude:
Timezone:

34.05°N
118.05°W
PDT

Color scheme