Sky for the month, May 2023

Winter is coming – it’s written in the stars

The Carina Nebula, NGC 3372, is an enormous cloud of gas and dust that’s home to several massive and bright stars, including at least a dozen that are 50 to 100 times the mass of our sun. With the active, unstable supergiant star Eta Carinae at its heart, the nebula is about 7500 light-years from Earth and was the target for one of the first images by the James Webb Space Telescope. Photo: MPAS member Chris Kostokanellis.

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Highlights this month

  • 2TueMercury in inferior conjunction with the Sun — lost in the glare. (9:21am)
  • 6SatEta Aquariids meteor shower peaks (up to 50/hr). A bright 100% Moon interferes badly this year.
  • 10WedUranus in superior conjunction with the Sun — lost in the glare. (6:28am)
  • 14SunThe Moon passes Saturn — 3° apart. (1:32am)
  • 14SunMercury is stationary — resumes direct (eastward) motion. (4:50pm)
  • 17WedThe Moon passes Jupiter — 0.7° apart. (10:47pm)
  • 23TueThe Moon passes Venus — 2° apart. (10:40pm)
  • 25ThuThe Moon passes Mars — 4° apart. (5:23am)
  • 29MonMercury at greatest morning elongation (25° from the Sun, mag 0.5) — best morning apparition. (3:20pm)

The Milky Way rises high in the south this month, with Sagittarius and Scorpius sitting in the east – a clue that winter is on its way in the southern hemisphere. Sitting high in the southern sky during May is the prominent constellation Crux, the Southern Cross. If you have a small telescope, be sure to point it at Crux’s brightest star Acrux, which is actually a double star made of two blue-white stars.

The large constellation Centaurus, the Centaur, sits within the stunning star fields of the Milky Way. It is home to arguably the finest globular cluster in the whole night sky – the magnificent Omega Centauri, or NGC 5139. At 10 times the size of the next-largest cluster, you can see it easily as a hazy star with the naked eye, whereas a telescope reveals many of its millions of stars in a tight ball. The constellation’s two brightest stars are Alpha and Beta Centauri, known more familiarly to astronomers as Rigil Kentaurus and Hader. Together, Alpha and Beta Centauri form the Southern Pointers, or The Pointers, as they point towards the constellation of Crux.

The annual Eta Aquariid meteor shower, which is caused by leftover dust from Halley’s Comet entering our atmosphere and vaporising, peaks about May 6-7. You can expect to see roughly 30 meteors an hour if you are very lucky. The meteors appear to be coming from a point near the star Eta Aquarii in Aquarius, and tend to be quite fast-moving.

This month’s conjunctions, which are when two astronomical objects appear close to each other in the sky, include the moon and Saturn on May 13, the moon and Venus on May 23, and the moon and Mars on May 25. Then on May 27, Mercury is at its highest altitude in the morning sky, followed by its greatest elongation west on May 29, which means it is at its farthest distance from the sun.

By Nerida Langcake
This article appeared in the May 2023 issue of the Mornington Peninsula Magazine.

The sky in detail — May 2023

Sun & twilight

DateSunriseSunsetDay lengthAstro. dark beginsends
Mon 17:01am5:33pm10h 32m7:02pm5:31am
Wed 107:09am5:23pm10h 14m6:54pm5:38am
Sat 207:18am5:15pm9h 57m6:47pm5:46am
Wed 317:26am5:08pm9h 42m6:42pm5:53am

Days shorten by about 49 minutes over the month.

The Moon

  • Full MoonSat 6, 3:37am
  • Last QuarterSat 13, 12:34am
  • New MoonSat 20, 1:56am
  • First QuarterSun 28, 1:20am

Perigee 11 May (369,600 km) · Apogee 26 May (404,900 km)

The planets

Rise/set for mid-month at The Briars.

PlanetInMagRiseTransitSetBest
MercuryAri2.15:41am11:08am4:35pmHidden
VenusGem−4.110:52am3:26pm7:59pmEvening
MarsGem1.511:59am4:46pm9:34pmEvening
JupiterAri−1.95:12am10:42am4:11pmMorning
SaturnAqr0.912:49am7:25am2:00pmMorning
UranusAri5.96:52am11:57am5:03pmHidden
NeptunePsc7.92:32am8:41am2:50pmMorning

Meteor showers

  • Eta Aquariids — peaks 6 May, radiant in Aquarius (up to 50/hr). Debris of Halley's Comet and one of the best showers of the year from the south — swift meteors in the pre-dawn eastern sky. A bright 100% Moon interferes badly this year.

Computed for The Briars, Mt Martha. Times are local (Melbourne).
Generated automatically from the MPAS sky engine on 15 July 2026.

The solar system — May 2023

Evening sky Morning sky Up much of the night Lost in the Sun’s glare