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The most amazing sky I’ve ever seen was when I arrived in Urubichá in Guarayos region of Bolivia in 1998 before the electricity arrived in the area. I traveled by bus to visit my friend’s childhood home. The bus only went to the big city an hour away so I road in the back of a jeep the rest of the way, at night. I remember vividly not understanding what this super-bright light was in the sky. I know now it was either Venus or Jupiter, but it looked artificial because it was so much brighter than I was used to seeing.


Venus always appears near the sun (hence the "morning star" moniker).


If it's near the sun you cannot see it in the middle of the night (except in polar areas during summer). But why only morning and not evening?


Mornings and evenings.

It is because its path is closer to the Sun. So when looking towards it you are always partly looking towards the Sun.


So you are saying the morning star name is technically wrong? It should be the morning and evening star? Of course star is wrong, too...


Venus is known as either the ‘morning star’ or ‘evening star’ depending on where Venus is in its orbit relative to Earth.

It actually just recently (start of June) went behind the sun; it’s still too close to the sun in the sky to really be visible at all at the moment. As it moves further out from behind the sun it will start being visible in the evening sky in late July right after the sun sets, so it will be the ‘evening star’ again for the next eight months or so before it passes in front of the sun, disappearing from view for a bit, then comes back as the morning star next summer.


It is just so fascinated for me


You'd prefer the more accurate and historic Wandering Star?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_planet


The profound beauty of our universe when seen under the right conditions.




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