Sky for the month, November 2024

Meteor shower among November’s astronomical highlights

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Highlights this month

  • 5TueThe Moon passes Venus — 3° apart. (10:45am)
  • 5TueSouthern Taurids meteor shower peaks (up to 5/hr). A thin 13% Moon leaves the sky dark.
  • 11MonThe Moon passes Saturn — 0.1° apart. (12:42pm)
  • 16SatSaturn is stationary — resumes direct (eastward) motion. (3:11pm)
  • 16SatMercury at greatest evening elongation (23° from the Sun, mag −0.3) — best evening apparition. (6:59pm)
  • 17SunLeonids meteor shower peaks (up to 15/hr). A bright 97% Moon interferes badly this year.
  • 17SunUranus at opposition — closest and brightest of the year, up all night in Taurus (mag 5.6). (1:54pm)
  • 21ThuThe Moon passes Mars — 2° apart. (9:28am)
  • 26TueMercury is stationary — begins retrograde (westward) motion. (3:20pm)

There is a lot to see in the southern skies this month with just the naked eye or basic equipment. Start off by looking for the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) west of the constellation Pictor, and the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) in Tucana. These are both irregular galaxies close to the Milky Way. A small telescope is all you need to explore the sparkling star clusters as well as the Tarantula Nebula (NGC 2070), nestled within the LMC. The globular cluster 47 Tucanae can be seen with the naked eye as a hazy star very close to the SMC. A large-aperture telescope shows its countless stars packed together in a dense ball. Looking towards the north-east, the Hyades and Pleiades open star clusters make excellent binocular targets. 

In the east you can locate Canis Major, which is hard to miss because it is home to the blazing star Sirius. In Canis Major, the open clusters NGC 2362 and M41 make for good small-telescope targets. Also coming into view in the east are Orion and Taurus. It is easy to identify Orion, as its brightest stars are blue-white Rigel (Beta Orionis) and red Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis).

The Leonid meteor shower is active each November, and this year the Leonids will peak overnight on November 17-18. The shower is called Leonids because its radiant, or the point in the sky where the meteors seem to emerge from, lies in the constellation Leo. The Leonids occur when the Earth passes through the debris left by Comet Tempel-Tuttle, which takes about 33 years to make one orbit of the sun.This month’s conjunctions, which is when two astronomical objects appear close to each other in the sky, include the moon with Venus on November 5, then with Saturn on November 11, with Jupiter on November 18, and with Mars on November 21.

By Nerida Langcake
This article appeared in the November 2024 issue of the Mornington Peninsula Magazine.

The sky in detail — November 2024

Sun & twilight

DateSunriseSunsetDay lengthAstro. dark beginsends
Fri 16:12am7:55pm13h 43m9:35pm4:33am
Sun 106:03am8:05pm14h 03m9:48pm4:20am
Wed 205:55am8:16pm14h 21m10:04pm4:08am
Sat 305:51am8:27pm14h 36m10:19pm3:59am

Days lengthen by about 53 minutes over the month.

The Moon

  • New MoonFri 1, 11:51pm
  • First QuarterSat 9, 5:02pm
  • Full MoonSat 16, 8:28am
  • Last QuarterSat 23, 12:28pm

Perigee 14 Nov (360,400 km) · Apogee 26 Nov (405,500 km)

The planets

Rise/set for mid-month at The Briars.

PlanetInMagRiseTransitSetBest
MercuryOph−0.37:06am2:37pm10:09pmHidden
VenusSgr−3.98:26am3:59pm11:32pmEvening
MarsCnc−0.11:15am6:06am10:57amMorning
JupiterTau−2.610:05pm2:56am7:43amMorning
SaturnAqr0.82:10pm8:39pm3:13amEvening
UranusTau5.68:11pm1:15am6:15amAll night
NeptunePsc7.83:23pm9:32pm3:45amEvening

Meteor showers

  • Southern Taurids — peaks 5 November, radiant in Taurus (up to 5/hr). Sparse but rich in slow fireballs over a long, broad maximum. A thin 13% Moon leaves the sky dark.
  • Leonids — peaks 17 November, radiant in Leo (up to 15/hr). Fast meteors; the radiant rises after midnight and is moderate from the south. A bright 97% 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 — November 2024

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