Search In-The-Sky.org

 among  

Object type

Filter by constellation

Sort by

Distance unit

Brightness

Magnitude to

Distance

Between and kpc

Launch date

Between and

Sort by

Category

Destination

Launch site

Owner

Feed

Order

Difficulty level

Start date

End date

View


Showing results 101 to 120 of 717.

Events

101.

1 Ceres at aphelion 1 Ceres passes the furthest point along its orbit from the Sun. Sun, 05 Jun 2011 at 00:30 PDT (5,151 days ago) in Aquarius

102.

136199 Eris at solar conjunction 136199 Eris is unobservable as it passes around the far side of the Sun – marking the end of one apparition and the beginning of the next. Mon, 11 Apr 2011 at 17:45 PDT (5,206 days ago) in Cetus

103.

136108 Haumea at opposition 136108 Haumea lies in the opposite direction to the Sun in the sky, making it optimally positioned to be observable for much of the night. Thu, 07 Apr 2011 at 10:15 PDT (5,210 days ago) in Bootes

104.

136472 Makemake at opposition 136472 Makemake lies in the opposite direction to the Sun in the sky, making it optimally positioned to be observable for much of the night. Thu, 17 Mar 2011 at 11:51 PDT (5,231 days ago) in Coma Berenices

105.

1 Ceres at solar conjunction 1 Ceres is unobservable as it passes around the far side of the Sun – marking the end of one apparition and the beginning of the next. Sat, 29 Jan 2011 at 18:39 PDT (5,278 days ago) in Capricornus

106.

134340 Pluto at solar conjunction 134340 Pluto is unobservable as it passes around the far side of the Sun – marking the end of one apparition and the beginning of the next. Sun, 26 Dec 2010 at 18:31 PDT (5,312 days ago) in Sagittarius

107.

136199 Eris at opposition 136199 Eris lies in the opposite direction to the Sun in the sky, making it optimally positioned to be observable for much of the night. Thu, 14 Oct 2010 at 20:30 PDT (5,385 days ago) in Cetus

108.

136108 Haumea at solar conjunction 136108 Haumea is unobservable as it passes around the far side of the Sun – marking the end of one apparition and the beginning of the next. Sun, 10 Oct 2010 at 03:55 PDT (5,389 days ago) in Bootes

109.

136472 Makemake at solar conjunction 136472 Makemake is unobservable as it passes around the far side of the Sun – marking the end of one apparition and the beginning of the next. Sun, 19 Sep 2010 at 01:45 PDT (5,410 days ago) in Coma Berenices

110.

134340 Pluto at opposition 134340 Pluto lies in the opposite direction to the Sun in the sky, making it optimally positioned to be observable for much of the night. Fri, 25 Jun 2010 at 13:34 PDT (5,496 days ago) in Sagittarius

111.

1 Ceres at opposition 1 Ceres lies in the opposite direction to the Sun in the sky, making it closer and brighter than at other times. It is also optimally positioned to be observable for much of the night. Thu, 17 Jun 2010 at 12:36 PDT (5,504 days ago) in Sagittarius

112.

136199 Eris at solar conjunction 136199 Eris is unobservable as it passes around the far side of the Sun – marking the end of one apparition and the beginning of the next. Sun, 11 Apr 2010 at 06:23 PDT (5,571 days ago) in Cetus

113.

136108 Haumea at opposition 136108 Haumea lies in the opposite direction to the Sun in the sky, making it optimally positioned to be observable for much of the night. Tue, 06 Apr 2010 at 03:53 PDT (5,576 days ago) in Bootes

114.

136472 Makemake at opposition 136472 Makemake lies in the opposite direction to the Sun in the sky, making it optimally positioned to be observable for much of the night. Tue, 16 Mar 2010 at 05:30 PDT (5,597 days ago) in Coma Berenices

115.

134340 Pluto at solar conjunction 134340 Pluto is unobservable as it passes around the far side of the Sun – marking the end of one apparition and the beginning of the next. Thu, 24 Dec 2009 at 11:09 PDT (5,679 days ago) in Sagittarius

116.

1 Ceres at solar conjunction 1 Ceres is unobservable as it passes around the far side of the Sun – marking the end of one apparition and the beginning of the next. Fri, 30 Oct 2009 at 00:18 PDT (5,734 days ago) in Libra

117.

136199 Eris at opposition 136199 Eris lies in the opposite direction to the Sun in the sky, making it optimally positioned to be observable for much of the night. Wed, 14 Oct 2009 at 09:07 PDT (5,750 days ago) in Cetus

118.

136108 Haumea at solar conjunction 136108 Haumea is unobservable as it passes around the far side of the Sun – marking the end of one apparition and the beginning of the next. Thu, 08 Oct 2009 at 21:37 PDT (5,756 days ago) in Bootes

119.

136472 Makemake at solar conjunction 136472 Makemake is unobservable as it passes around the far side of the Sun – marking the end of one apparition and the beginning of the next. Thu, 17 Sep 2009 at 18:51 PDT (5,777 days ago) in Coma Berenices

120.

134340 Pluto at opposition 134340 Pluto lies in the opposite direction to the Sun in the sky, making it optimally positioned to be observable for much of the night. Tue, 23 Jun 2009 at 02:33 PDT (5,863 days ago) in Sagittarius

Share

South El Monte

Latitude:
Longitude:
Timezone:

34.05°N
118.05°W
PDT

Color scheme