Venus drops out of view soon after — how long can you keep track of it in the evening sky? It will reappear in the morning sky around midmonth, rising in the east about an hour before the Sun and shining at magnitude –4.3.
Venus’ visibility improves in a darker sky throughout the rest of the month, and it stands 12° high an hour before sunrise on Jan. 31. Through a telescope, Venus changes from a 1'-wide slender crescent that is 1 percent lit on Jan. 15 to a 50"-wide, 15-percent-lit disk on Jan. 31.
Meanwhile, Mercury is rising higher each evening, improving its visibility. It climbs toward Saturn and reaches greatest elongation east (19° from the Sun) Jan. 7, then shining at magnitude –0.5.
Saturn and Mercury appear closest on the evenings of Jan. 12 and 13, separated by 3.4°. Mercury has dipped in brightness to magnitude 0.4 by the 14th, and matches Saturn’s brilliance the next evening. The smaller planet fades further as it begins a brisk inward path to its Jan. 23 inferior conjunction. By Jan. 17, it has dimmed to magnitude 1.7 and become much harder to spot in bright twilight. Mercury sets within an hour of sunset.
Saturn falls in altitude each evening as well. On Jan. 4, catch the Moon and Saturn side by side, separated by about 5°. Saturn becomes lost in the solar glow a few days after Mercury and is no longer easily observable. It’s only 5° high 30 minutes after sunset on Jan. 20 and, at magnitude 0.7, it’s easily lost in twilight.
Jupiter maintains its visibility throughout the month. It’s a fine object in late twilight in the first week of January and is the brightest of the evening planets after Venus leaves the scene. On Jan. 1, Jupiter stands roughly 30° high in the southwest an hour after sunset. On Jan. 5, Jupiter is 5° north of the crescent Moon, now just over 3 days old.
Jupiter’s disk spans 35" and easily shows off its dusky orange pair of dark equatorial belts in any telescope. The four Galilean moons are on ready display — catch them this month before Jupiter leaves the evening sky in mid-February. It’s your last chance before solar conjunction to watch the changing configuration of the four moons.
Although the observing window for seeing satellite transits is narrow, don’t miss the Jan. 5 transit of Ganymede’s large shadow — the event’s long duration (3.5 hours) means most observers across the U.S. will see part of the transit as darkness falls, although you’ll need to catch it early if you’re in the Pacific time zone. It begins at 6:20 P.M. EST and ends at 9:50 P.M. EST — that’s 6:50 P.M. PST for those in the western U.S. As its shadow creeps across Jupiter’s face, Ganymede itself stands west of the planet.