January’s new moon welcomes Mercury as a ‘morning star’

a green line cuts across the center a small yellow sun is bisected in the middle the large top half of a translucent centaur is seen outlined in blue within to show the constellation
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The new moon of January will be at 6:57 a.m. Eastern Time on January 11, according to the U.S. Naval Observatory, and a day later the planet Mercury will reach its greatest westward separation from the sun, showing itself as a “morning star.” 

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New moons happen when the sun and moon share the same celestial longitude, a position also called conjunction. At new phase, you can’t see the moon from Earth because the illuminated side is facing away from us. 



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