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Community photo entitled  by Ismaeel Moinuddin on 03/24/2023 at Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan

On 03/24/2023 06:30 pm by Ismaeel Moinuddin| Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan

As night fell across Lahore, Pakistan, on the evening of March 24th, we were treated with another one of many spectacular and awe-inspiring spectacles that conjunctions bring with them. In this case, Venus led the Moon low into the western horizon, both of them glimmering through the parting clouds from recent rain, until they set.

What you see here is the crescent Moon, lit up on one side by sunlight, and on the other side by 'earthshine,' which is the reflection of dwindling sunlight off the earth to the moon, off the moon and back to the earth. Hence, you're able to see the night side of the lunar surface. About 40 million kilometers further, Venus is but a speck of light, shining brilliantly as the brightest planet in our solar system.

Though conjunctions hold no scientific value or opportunity as such, they're some of the most spectacular events by far. They allow many to go back to why they started looking up at the sky in the first place - simply because it is beautiful.

Celestron 70mm Refractor
Canon 1100D DSLR at prime focus

Edited in GIMP, Snapseed and Lightroom to fix saturation, brightness, curves, highlights and contrast.