See the delicate crescent moon dance with the ‘Seven Sisters’ of the Pleiades tonight

by | Mar 22, 2026 | Science

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.The moon shines close to the Pleiades later this week. | Credit: Foreground: NASA Scientific Visualization Studio.Background: NASA, ESA and AURA/CaltechHeads up, stargazers! The waxing crescent moon will glide close to the Pleiades tonight and tomorrow (March 22-23), putting on a gorgeous display as its upturned crescent shines close to the ancient light of the open star cluster.Look to the western horizon after sunset on March 22 to find the Pleiades glowing 5 degrees above the 14%-lit sickle-like form of the waxing moon — roughly the width of your three middle fingers held at arm’s length against the sky.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe orange-red star Aldebaran can be found around this time, shining to the left of the Pleiades along with the “V” formation of stars that form the Hyades cluster in the constellation Taurus. Venus, meanwhile, will shine close to the horizon as a fleeting “evening star,” swiftly disappearing from sight after the sun, while Jupiter glows high overhead in Gemini.Under dark skies, the Pleiades will appear as a hazy patch of light to the naked eye but will reveal its seven brightest members — along with dozens more of its blue-white stars— through a pair of binoculars. By tomorrow night (March 23), the crescent moon will have leapt above the Pleiades on a course that will see it leapfrog Jupiter in the coming week.The Pleiades have been known to humanity since ancient times and may even have been depicted in the Nebra Sky Disk, a 3,800-year-old bronze artifact that represents the most ancient depiction of the night sky discovered to date.Thousands of years later, famed astronomer Galileo Galilei made the first observations of the open star cluster with a telescope, revealing dozens more of its blue-white stars. The Pleiades remains a spectacular sight today through a pair of 10X50 binoculars or a telescope, even the most modest of which would astound the old scientist …

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