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  1. They are the Earth's Moon and the planet Venus. Both the Moon and Venus are bright enough to be seen during the day, and both are quite capable of showing a crescent phase. To see Venus, which appears quite small, in a crescent phase requires binoculars or a telescope. In the above dramatic daytime image taken from Budapest, Hungary in 2004 ...

  2. May 16, 2010 · Venus Moon forming a nice pair after the occultation in daytime in India. Shot with canon 450d at 18mm with various ISOs. 600 images stacked in startrails an...

  3. The evening sky facing north-west in Australia on Sunday May 16 2010 at 6:00 pm local time showing Venus and the Moon. Venus has a rather lovely encounter with the thin crescent Moon this Sunday evening. Night of the "Smiley Fritz" it is not, but with the thin Crescent Moon just below Venus, the pair between the two brightish stars that make ...

  4. May 16, 2010 · Shot from outside our house in Quezon City.

  5. The young Moon's sunlit crescent is bright, but its entire outline can be seen by Earthshine, light reflected from planet Earth itself. For well-placed skygazers, on Sunday, May 16 the Moon actually occulted (passed in front of) brilliant Venus.

  6. May 2, 2020 · The “story” appears to originate from story in a Philippines news outlet on May 16, 2010 about the very common occurrence of a crescent Moon passing Venus. The story was picked-up a decade ...

  7. There will be a planetary occultation by the Moon this coming May 16, 2010. This will be the Venus occultation by the thin crescent Moon. An occultation refers to the passage of a celestial body across a line between an observer and another celestial object.

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