This map unfolds the entire night sky from sunset (at right) until sunrise (at left).
Arrows and colored dots show motions and locations of solar system objects during the month.
The planets
in their orbits
Arrows show the inner planets’
monthly motions and dots depict
the outer planets’ positions at mid-
month from high above their orbits.
Jupiter’s moons
Io
Europa
S
WE
N
Ganymede
Callisto
ILLUSTRATIONS BY
ASTRONOMY
: ROEN KELLY
AUR
LY N
GEM
ANT
CRT HYA
SEX
LEO
LMi
UMa
CEN
CRV
COM
CVn
BOÖ
VIR
ORI
CAE
COL
LEP ERI
CMi
CMa
MON
PUP
PYX
VEL
Objects visible in the evening
Early evening
Path
of^ th
e^ Sun
(eclip
tic)^
Path
of^ th
e^ Sun
(eclip
tic)^
Early evening
Venus appears farthest
from the Sun in early
June’s evening sky
Sun
Mars
Jupiter
Venus approaches
within 0.3° of Jupiter
on June 30
2728 26 22232425 21 20 19 18 17 16
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Europa
Callisto
Ganymede
Io
Jupiter
Venus
Greatest eastern
elongation
is June 6
Earth
Summer solstice
is June 21
Ceres
Mars
Solar conjunction
is June 14
Uranus
Saturn
Pluto
Neptune
Jupiter
Jupiter
Mercury
Greatest western
elongation is June 24
WWW.ASTRONOMY.COM 41
Dots display positions
of Galilean satellites at
11 P.M. EDT on the date
shown. South is at the
top to match
the view
through a
telescope.
To locate the Moon in the sky, draw a line from the phase shown for the day straight up to the curved blue line.
Note: Moons vary in size due to the distance from Earth and are shown at 0h Universal Time.
Arrows show the inner planets’
monthly motions and dots depict
the outer planets’ positions at mid-
month from high above their orbits.