August 13, 2023 = Venus shifting from being an evening star to being a morning star.
Morning Move
StarDate: August 13, 2023 After commanding the western sky as the “evening star” for most of the year, the planet Venus is making a move. It’s disappeared from view as it crosses between Earth and the Sun. It’ll return to view in a few days — this time as the morning star.
Venus is closer to the Sun than Earth is — like being on the inside lane of a race track. So it overtakes Earth every 584 days — about 19 and a half months. That point is called inferior conjunction, and it’s where Venus is today.
The planet is also closest to Earth — about 27 million miles away. And that means it moves across our sky in a hurry — the reason it’ll stay out of sight for only a few days, hidden in the Sun’s glare.
When Venus returns to view, it’ll be a thin crescent — like a crescent Moon. The crescent will grow thicker in a hurry, though, making the planet look brighter. But Venus will be moving away from us, which makes it fainter. When you combine those factors, Venus will reach its peak brilliance on September 18th. It’ll slowly fade through the rest of the year, but not by a whole lot. It will remain the brightest object in the night sky other than the Moon.
Depending on your location, Venus should climb into view, quite low in the east, during the dawn twilight in the next week or two. It’ll move farther from the Sun day by day after that, taking command of the morning sky — as the brilliant “morning star.
-What is the pentagram or petals of Venus?- When plotted geocentrically – from an Earth-centered perspective – there is a highly noticeable rhythm in the motion of Venus. After eight years, it returns to the same place in our sky on about the same date. This is known as the eight-year cycle of Venus, and stems from the fact that 13 Venusian orbits (13 x 224.8 days) very nearly equals eight Earth years. As a matter of fact, the cycle was known to, and of great interest to, ancient peoples such as the Maya. Today, many know it as the pentagram or petals of Venus.
The word pentagram – or five-sided figure – is because, over the eight years, each phenomenon – each relative position of Earth, Venus, and the sun – occurs five times. Then, over the next eight years, they repeat five times almost identically.
For Venus, the tight inward loops on the diagram above and animation below are the planet’s inferior conjunctions, in which Venus passes between us and the sun. And the wide swings are centered on the superior conjunctions, when Venus passes around the far side of the sun from us. So the general pattern is (as Anthony Barreiro commented): … a lovely five-petalled rose.
So the tight loops are the stamens of the rose, and the wide swings are the petals.
-Visualizing the petals of Venus- Below is an animation, showing the same thing … the orbit of Venus from an Earth-centered perspective. The smaller pale yellow dot is Venus, and the larger yellow ball is the sun.
When I tried to plot a geocentric picture over eight years (2016-2023) to show the complete rose, it was bewilderingly cluttered. In fact. it had five overlapping tracks, eight-times-twelve little Venus globes at monthly intervals – already too much without the ecliptic-plane grid and other details.
So the image at the top of this post is a more simplified version: still calculated in three dimensions, but by moving the viewpoint to the north ecliptic pole, it becomes a flat plan of Venus’ path.
Earth is in the middle; the vernal-equinox direction is to the right; the yellow spots are the sun at the beginning of each month.
The rest is the rhythmic motions of Venus.
You’ll still have trouble deciphering which part of the track is for which year (on the image at top, I’ve used white, cyan, magenta, yellow for 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, and again for 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023) but it doesn’t matter greatly. You can see the five inferior conjunctions, in their five directions.
-The Pentagram of Venus- If you trace across the circle from each loop to the next, you see that they are not adjacent to each other but 2/5 of the way around, like the five points of a pentagram.
-Past and future inferior conjunctions of Venus- The directions of the five inferior conjunctions of Venus determine their differing characters, by determining their places in Venus’ true (heliocentric) orbit, which is tilted and slightly elliptical.
Mar 25, 2017: is in Pisces; Venus passes 8 degrees north of the sun; distance from us 0.28 AU (astronomical units, aka sun-Earth distances); diameter of Venus’ (mostly dark) disk 60″ (arcseconds). Oct 26, 2018: is in Virgo; 6 degrees south of the sun; 0.27 AU; 62″. Jun 3, 2020: is in Taurus; 0.5 degree north of the sun; 0.29 AU; 58″. Jan 9, 2022: is in Sagittarius; 5 degrees north of the sun; 0.27 AU; 63″. Aug 13, 2023: is at the Cancer-Leo-Hydra border; 7 degrees south of the sun; 0.29 AU; 58″.
By the way, you can currently enjoy seeing brilliant Venus in the west for a few hours after sunset. It’s presently near the planet Saturn. And next month it will be near the planet Jupiter.
Bottom line: Learn about the eight-year cycle of Venus in our sky and the petals of Venus, a rhythmic motion of Venus when viewed from an Earth-centered perspective.