Neptune’s time to shine

Late August nights will be the best time to see and photograph the most distant planet.
By | Published: August 14, 2012 | Last updated on May 18, 2023

Neptune_Damien-Peach
Neptune reaches opposition this month, giving it the year’s biggest and brightest appearance. The worlds shines at a relatively bright magnitude of 7.8 and should be easy to spot through binoculars or a telescope. Through an 11-inch telescope, this imager captured the most distant planet and its moon Triton.
Damian Peach
Neptune-finder-chart
Use this finder chart to spy Neptune, which lies opposite the Sun on the 24th and appears 1° east of 38 Aquarii. Astronomy: Roen Kelly
Now’s the time to search out Neptune. On August 24, this distant planet reaches opposition, meaning it lies opposite the Sun in our sky, giving it the year’s biggest and brightest appearance. It then rises in the east at sunset, remains visible all night among the stars of Aquarius the Water-bearer, and sets in the west at sunrise. The world is still too dim and distant to see with naked eyes, but it shines at a relatively bright magnitude of 7.8 and should be easy to spot through binoculars or a telescope.

“It’s a real thrill to spy the most distant planet with your own eyes,” says Astronomy Senior Editor Michael E. Bakich, “even if you need an optical device to do it.” Throughout August, Neptune appears in the same binocular field as the 5th-magnitude star 38 Aquarii; this area of the night sky has few other landmarks or bright stars, so use the finder chart to home in on the remote world. At the start of August, the planet lay 1.7° east of the star, but by the night of opposition, the 24th, the distance shrinks to just 1°. “It’ll definitely be worth your while to locate and ogle this planet,” says Bakich.

When aiming a telescope at Neptune, be sure to boost the magnification to see as much detail as possible. The planet will appear as a full 2.4”-diameter disk with a distinct blue-gray hue. Unfortunately, it’ll be virtually impossible to spot subtler details, like the planet’s wispy ring system and its atmospheric activity. However, large telescopes might reveal Neptune’s largest moon, magnitude 13.5 Triton, the seventh-largest satellite in the solar system.

“If you’ve ever wanted to spot Neptune for yourself,” says Bakich, “this is your best chance. Right now, it’s bright and beautiful. Make sure you don’t miss it.”

Fast facts

  • Neptune is the farthest planet in the solar system, lying about 30 times farther away from the Sun than Earth, on average.
  • Neptune is the most recently discovered planet, first spotted September 23, 1846.
  • Neptune’s largest moon, Triton, was discovered just 17 days after the planet itself.
  • Triton is the only large moon that orbits opposite its planet’s rotation.
  • Neptune is the third-most massive planet, but the fourth largest.
  • It takes Neptune about 165 years to orbit the Sun, but a little more than 16 hours to rotate completely.
  • Neptune is named after the Roman god of the sea.
  • Neptune’s color is a result of the abundant methane in its atmosphere.
  • Neptune is the first planet discovered by prediction: French mathematician Urbain Le Verrier calculated its expected location, and German astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle observed it less than 1° away.
  • Only one probe has visited Neptune: Voyager 2, on August 25, 1989.
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