Carefully check this site out it may help you:
http://ephemeris.bjmoler.org/unaided.htm
Bea, PR
The bright planet you are seeing in the early evening is Jupiter.
Saturn, Mars and Venus are visible in the east in the pre-dawn hours.
The answer is going to change depending on what time it is,
what date it is, and what year it is.
The two planets in Florida's western night sky are Venus and Jupiter, with Venus being the brighter of the two.
Venus is one of the planets that can be seen in the sky without a telescope. It does not flash or twinkle, the only planet to flash in the sky is Mercury.
No, the big dipper (or Ursa Major) is not in the area of the sky that the planets move through. All of the planets, sun and moon are more or less on the same plane, so they all move in the same east/west line across the sky. Ursa Major is more to the north.
The moving bright lights may be aircraft, satellites, or meteors. The bright points that are not stars or planets may also be galaxies, asteroids, comets, or the moons of planets.
there from 5 900 000 000 km to778 300 000km
planets stay in the sky due to the pull of gravity
Mars Venus and Saturn
Chicago Sky was created in 2006.
You can't
The planets shine because they reflect sunlight.
Chicago sky
The planets most certainly ARE visible in the northern hemisphere.
The two planets in Florida's western night sky are Venus and Jupiter, with Venus being the brighter of the two.
because some of the planets reflect lights from the sun like Venus.
By its definition, the Zodiac is where in the sky you should look for the planets.
Galaxy
No. We know what the stars are. They are not planets. They are distant suns, many of which do have undiscovered planets.