Three planets in the evening sky, as seen from the mountains of southern New Mexico. (Evening of 21 February.)

See the 2nd graphic for a finder chart from planetarium sky simulation software.

These three planets are very different in brightness, but the differences in sky background surrounding each planet ends up making them all appear roughly the same brightness in the photo. Venus is brightest, followed by Mercury, with Saturn the faintest of the three.

#Astronomy #Planets #Saturn #Venus #Mercury #Photography #Astrophotography #Evening #Twilight #Pisces #Cetus

@KrajciTom Thanks for posting this - your picture motivated me to go after the planet trio really hard today from 51.5Β° North in Germany - and it all worked out: https://www.facebook.com/dan.fischer.393/posts/pfbid027a6qUBbjXPf96BtzV89HNTcEA8Z2y9gorSCns8sTzS3nTFUpngTXwagopfUAw6Ngl (after 16 - no kidding! - cloudy evenings).

@cosmos4u

Looks good!

Sometimes I photograph evening planet groupings that I can't see visually, and even on the photo I need to process it with an edge/point detection algorithm such as 'difference of two gaussians' to find them.