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Zodiacal light: All you need to know

Zodiacal light: Cone of light extending from horizon to cluster of stars in night sky.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Christoph Stopka in Westcliffe, Colorado, took this gorgeous image of the zodiacal light on March 1, 2022, over the high peaks of the Sangre de Cristo mountain range, part of the Colorado Rockies. It looks like a pyramid of light on the horizon, and appears when all traces of twilight have left the evening sky. Thank you, Cristoph! Read more about this photo.

Zodiacal light around March equinox

The zodiacal light is a cone of eerie light in the sky just after evening twilight ends, or before it begins at dawn. If you’re in the Northern Hemisphere, you’ve got the best chance of seeing it in the west after nightfall during the weeks around the equinox on March 20. Some call it the false dusk. Northerners’ best chance to see it in the east before dawn is around the September equinox. Then it goes by the name false dawn.

Maybe you’ve seen the zodiacal light in the sky and not realized it. Maybe you glimpsed it while driving on a highway or country road at this time of year. Suppose you’re driving toward the west in springtime around 90 minutes after sunset. You catch sight of what you think is the lingering evening twilight, or the light of a nearby town, just over the horizon. Instead, you might be seeing the zodiacal light.

Around late February, through March, and into early April, the zodiacal light looks like a hazy pyramid of light extending up from your western horizon after evening twilight ends.

Note for Southern Hemisphere: Around late February, through March, and into early April – for you – the zodiacal light looks like a hazy pyramid of light extending up from your eastern horizon before morning twilight begins.

The 2022 lunar calendars are still available. Order yours before they’re gone!

What is this eerie light?

People used to think zodiacal light originated somehow from phenomena in Earth’s upper atmosphere. But today we understand it as sunlight reflecting off dust grains that circle the sun in the inner solar system. These grains were once thought to be left over from the process that created our Earth and the other planets of our solar system 4.5 billion years ago. In recent years, though, there’s been discussion about their possible origin in dust storms on the planet Mars. Read more: Do Mars dust storms cause the zodiacal light?

Whatever their origin, these dust grains in space spread out from the sun in the same flat disk of space inhabited by Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. This flat space around the sun – the plane of our solar system – translates on our sky to a narrow pathway called the ecliptic. This is the same pathway traveled by the sun and moon as they journey across our sky.

The pathway of the sun and moon was called the zodiac or pathway of animals by the ancients, in honor of the constellations seen beyond it. Hence the name zodiacal light.

The grains of dust are thought to range from about millimeter-sized to micron-sized, densest around the immediate vicinity of the sun and extending outward beyond the orbit of Mars. Sunlight shines on these dust grains to create the light we see.

Springtime? Autumn? What’s best?

Yes and no. For both hemispheres, springtime is the best time to see the zodiacal light in the evening. Autumn is the best time to see it before dawn. Look for the zodiacal light in the east around the time of the autumn equinox. Look for it in the west after sunset around the time of the spring equinox.

But, of course, spring and autumn fall in different months for Earth’s Northern and Southern Hemispheres. So if you’re in the Northern Hemisphere look for the zodiacal light before dawn from about late August through early November. In those same months, if you’re in the Southern Hemisphere, look for the light in the evening.

Likewise, if you’re in the Northern Hemisphere, look for the evening zodiacal light from late February through early May. During those months, from the Southern Hemisphere, look for the light in the morning.

How to see the light

The zodiacal light can be extremely bright and easy to see from latitudes like those in the southern U.S.

Meanwhile, skywatchers in the northern U.S. or Canada sometimes say, wistfully, that they’ve never seen it.

You’ll need a dark sky location to see the zodiacal light, someplace where city lights aren’t obscuring the natural lights in the sky. The zodiacal light is even milkier in appearance than the summer Milky Way. It’s most visible after dusk in spring because, as seen from the Northern Hemisphere, the ecliptic – or path of the sun and moon – stands nearly straight up in spring with respect to the western horizon after dusk. Likewise, the zodiacal light is easiest to see before dawn in autumn, because then the ecliptic is most perpendicular to the eastern horizon in the morning.

In spring, the zodiacal light can be seen for up to an hour after dusk ends. Or, in autumn, it can be seen for up to an hour before dawn. Unlike true dusk, though, there’s no rosy color to the zodiacal light. The reddish skies at dawn and dusk are caused by Earth’s atmosphere, while the zodiacal light originates far outside our atmosphere, as explained above. The darker your sky, the better your chances of seeing it. Your best bet is to pick a night when the moon is out of the sky, although it’s definitely possible, and very lovely, to see a slim crescent moon in the midst of this strange milky pyramid of light.

If you see it, let us know!

Zodiacal light photos from our community

A faint triangle of light sloping toward the upper left in a starry sky over an old barn.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Joshua Rhoades captured the zodiacal light in Mason County, Illinois, in the evening of March 7, 2021. He wrote: “The zodiacal light is visible in the northern hemisphere after sunset if you can find a dark sky location like this old farmstead. Mars and The Pleiades are right in the path of the light with Orion trailing behind to the south.”
A dark horizon and graying sky, with a lighted cone extending up from the horizon.
View larger at EarthSky Community Photos. | Our friend Mike Lewinski in Tres Piedras, New Mexico, caught the zodiacal light on an evening in late January 2019. He wrote: “I noticed it with the unaided eye.” Thank you, Mike!
Rocky landscape, dawn light on horizon, fuzzy triangle of zodiacal light upward from horizon.
Image from February 28, 2014, via EarthSky friend Ben Coffman.
Zodiacal light against star field above red observatory dome.
Zodiacal Light over the Faulkes Telescope, Haleakala, Maui. Note that it is nearly vertical this close to the equator. Photo via Wikimedia Commons.
Zodiacal light extending up into star field with orange twilight on the horizon.
View larger. | The zodiacal light is easier to see as you get closer to Earth’s equator. But it can be glimpsed from northerly latitudes, too. Here’s the zodiacal light seen by EarthSky Facebook friend Jim Peacock in 2013, over Lake Superior in northern Wisconsin. Thank you, Jim!
Mountainous horizon, trees in foreground, and zodiacal light extending upward into star field.
Here’s the zodiacal light as captured on film in Canada in 2013. This wonderful capture is from Robert Ede in Invermere, British Columbia. Note that the zodiacal light points toward the Pleiades star cluster (left of top center).

Bottom line: If you’re in the Northern Hemisphere, you can see the zodiacal light in March as a hazy pyramid of light extending up from the western horizon, beginning about an hour after sunset. Southern Hemisphere? Look east before dawn.

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The post Zodiacal light: All you need to know first appeared on EarthSky.

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