Solar eclipses are so last month. Get ready for a planetary parade'
Briefly

The real parade will occur about four weeks later, on June 29, when Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and the three-quarter moon will be visible in the morning twilight. If you went out that morning, you could actually see all of those four objects at the same time, and that's not really the same for the June 3 thing, he said.
Even under ideal conditions (a dark sky, free from light pollution) Uranus is very dim and challenging to spot. The skyglow near dawn makes matters worse. Neptune, which is six times dimmer than Uranus, requires a telescope to be seen, according to Dyches.
Read at www.mercurynews.com
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