The event has not been seen with the naked eye since 1226.
With all that winter brings to Dallas, it’s easy to forget that the sky provides some stunning celestial light shows of its own. Astronomers have been spoiled of late with the blazing fireballs of the Leonid Meteor Shower in November and the incredible Geminid Meteor Shower earlier this month.
Thanks to the paths of Jupiter and Saturn, the skies have one last remarkable astronomical event for us before the year is out, and unlike the aforementioned meteor showers, you have to roll back nearly 800 years to find the last time we were treated to such an occasion.
Jupiter and Saturn will come within 0.1 degrees of each other, forming the first visible "double planet" in 800 years https://t.co/7zTXalkfzr
— CBS News (@CBSNews) December 7, 2020
The astronomical event, known as the “Great Conjunction”, happens once every 20 years when the orbits of Earth, Jupiter, and Saturn cause the two gas giants to shine brightly as a “double planet.” According to NASA, Jupiter takes 12 years to orbit the sun while Saturn’s orbit takes 30 years and so every couple of decades, Saturn is lapped by Jupiter.
Today on Monday, December 21, the two planets will come extremely close to one another in an event that hasn’t happened since medieval times on March 4, 1226. According to the Adler Planetarium, it will be at its most spectacular on the evening of December 21.
Christmas week: Worlds will align for a spectacular heavenly sight – Jupiter & Saturn will look like a double planet for first time since the Middle Ages. https://t.co/EWWqsdVm6r pic.twitter.com/anpO5LIVcN
— UEA Physics (@UEAPhysics) December 14, 2020
For Christians observing the holiday, the event, sometimes called the ‘Christmas Star’, holds even more meaning. Jupiter and Saturn’s alignment is theorized to be the ‘Star of Bethlehem’ that the three wise men followed on Christmas Eve in the biblical text. The ancient Magi supposedly came across the newly born Jesus Christ directly below where the star stopped.
The Bible’s mention of the “Star of Bethlehem” has long obsessed astronomers and theologians but it is commonly believed to be the result of an extremely rare alignment of planets such as the one we will be treated to later this month, and one that may never happen again.
[Featured image from Shuttershock]