2086 Sky Event Almanac
Pakistan Standard Time
The following table gives the date and time of the important astronomical events for the year. The times listed are for Pakistan Standard Time (Coordinated Universal Time + 5 hours) . This time zone may have different names in different countries. If Daylight Saving Time is in effect, add one hour to the times listed. A key to astronomical terms appears below the almanac.
2086 Sky Event Almanac | ||||||||
Pakistan Standard Time | ||||||||
January - June | July - December | |||||||
Date PKT Event (h:m) Jan 03 20 Earth at Perihelion: 0.98332 AU 04 12 Quadrantid Meteor Shower 05 15 Mercury at Superior Conjunction 05 17:32 Moon at Apogee: 405066 km 08 08:06 LAST QUARTER MOON 08 20:59 Spica 2.5°N of Moon 12 08:56 Antares 3.4°S of Moon 13 08:22 Moon at Ascending Node 13 20:01 Mars 1.1°S of Moon: Occn. 15 16:24 NEW MOON 16 09 Venus at Perihelion 17 13:10 Moon at Perigee: 361912 km 22 07:41 FIRST QUARTER MOON 24 07:36 Pleiades 2.2°N of Moon 26 01:33 Moon at Descending Node 29 22:49 FULL MOON Feb 01 16 Jupiter at Opposition 02 09:51 Moon at Apogee: 405946 km 03 18 Neptune at Opposition 05 04:28 Spica 2.3°N of Moon 06 13 Mercury at Greatest Elong: 18.3°E 07 03:30 LAST QUARTER MOON 08 18:28 Antares 3.6°S of Moon 09 01 Mercury at Perihelion 09 15:37 Moon at Ascending Node 10 19:55 Venus 3.1°N of Moon 11 20:03 Mars 3.4°S of Moon 14 03:27 NEW MOON 14 11 Uranus in Conjunction with Sun 14 21:44 Moon at Perigee: 357829 km 20 13:22 Pleiades 2.4°N of Moon 20 18:48 FIRST QUARTER MOON 21 23 Mercury at Inferior Conjunction 22 02:50 Moon at Descending Node 28 17:21 FULL MOON Mar 01 00 Venus at Greatest Elong: 46.8°W 01 15:54 Moon at Apogee: 406459 km 04 10:40 Spica 2.1°N of Moon 08 02:01 Antares 3.9°S of Moon 08 18:23 Moon at Ascending Node 08 19:30 LAST QUARTER MOON 12 06:53 Venus 1.9°S of Moon 13 19:26 Mercury 4.9°S of Moon 15 09:46 Moon at Perigee: 356789 km 15 13:04 NEW MOON 19 21:12 Pleiades 2.7°N of Moon 20 08:36 Vernal Equinox 20 18 Mercury at Greatest Elong: 27.7°W 21 04:00 Moon at Descending Node 22 08:16 FIRST QUARTER MOON 25 00 Mercury at Aphelion 28 16:54 Moon at Apogee: 406404 km 30 11:17 FULL MOON 31 16:29 Spica 2.0°N of Moon Apr 02 08 Venus 1.4°N of Mars 04 07:53 Antares 4.1°S of Moon 04 19:11 Moon at Ascending Node 07 07:22 LAST QUARTER MOON 09 12 Saturn in Conjunction with Sun 12 20:10 Moon at Perigee: 358914 km 13 21:53 NEW MOON 16 07:06 Pleiades 2.8°N of Moon 17 08:53 Moon at Descending Node 20 23:40 FIRST QUARTER MOON 23 09 Lyrid Meteor Shower 25 03:37 Moon at Apogee: 405704 km 27 22:53 Spica 2.0°N of Moon 29 03:35 FULL MOON May 01 13:31 Antares 4.2°S of Moon 01 22:00 Moon at Ascending Node 02 01 Mercury at Superior Conjunction 05 22 Eta-Aquarid Meteor Shower 06 15:26 LAST QUARTER MOON 08 00 Mercury at Perihelion 08 17 Venus at Aphelion 10 23:33 Moon at Perigee: 363362 km 13 06:41 NEW MOON 14 17:32 Moon at Descending Node 20 09 Venus 0.4°N of Saturn 20 16:19 FIRST QUARTER MOON 22 20:25 Moon at Apogee: 404729 km 25 06:14 Spica 2.1°N of Moon 28 17:35 FULL MOON 28 17:41 Partial Lunar Eclipse; mag=0.818 28 20:15 Antares 4.2°S of Moon 29 04:14 Moon at Ascending Node Jun 01 00 Mercury at Greatest Elong: 23.2°E 03 11 Mars at Perihelion: 1.38108 AU 04 20:51 LAST QUARTER MOON 07 06:37 Moon at Perigee: 368272 km 09 09:51 Venus 4.0°S of Moon 10 02:33 Pleiades 2.9°N of Moon 11 02:56 Moon at Descending Node 11 16:04 Total Solar Eclipse; mag=1.017 11 16:12 NEW MOON 13 03:18 Mercury 1.8°N of Moon 19 02 Mars 0.9°N of Saturn 19 09:33 FIRST QUARTER MOON 19 14:56 Moon at Apogee: 404212 km 21 01:11 Summer Solstice 21 14:16 Spica 2.0°N of Moon 25 04:26 Antares 4.2°S of Moon 25 12:24 Moon at Ascending Node 27 04:26 Venus 4.2°N of Aldebaran 27 05 Mercury at Inferior Conjunction 27 05:04 FULL MOON |
Date PKT Event (h:m) Jul 02 09:43 Moon at Perigee: 369036 km 04 01:10 LAST QUARTER MOON 06 02:00 Mars 4.4°S of Moon 07 07 Earth at Aphelion: 1.01667 AU 07 09:32 Pleiades 2.9°N of Moon 08 10:00 Moon at Descending Node 09 05:38 Venus 0.3°N of Moon: Occn. 09 19:06 Mercury 2.7°S of Moon 11 03:02 NEW MOON 17 09:25 Moon at Apogee: 404547 km 18 22:17 Spica 1.9°N of Moon 19 02:45 FIRST QUARTER MOON 19 07 Mercury at Greatest Elong: 20.5°W 22 13:29 Antares 4.3°S of Moon 22 19:49 Moon at Ascending Node 26 14:24 FULL MOON 27 03 Mercury 0.8°S of Venus 29 00 Delta-Aquarid Meteor Shower 29 06:59 Moon at Perigee: 364494 km Aug 02 06:01 LAST QUARTER MOON 03 14:59 Pleiades 3.1°N of Moon 03 16:06 Mars 2.2°S of Moon 03 23 Mercury at Perihelion 04 13:11 Moon at Descending Node 08 10:05 Venus 4.6°N of Moon 08 12 Neptune in Conjunction with Sun 09 15:38 NEW MOON 13 16 Perseid Meteor Shower 14 02:28 Moon at Apogee: 405496 km 14 16 Mercury at Superior Conjunction 15 05:36 Spica 1.7°N of Moon 17 19:14 FIRST QUARTER MOON 18 22:13 Antares 4.5°S of Moon 19 00:23 Moon at Ascending Node 19 15:47 Mars 4.5°N of Aldebaran 20 19 Uranus at Opposition 21 16 Jupiter in Conjunction with Sun 24 22:25 FULL MOON 26 07:04 Moon at Perigee: 359804 km 29 01 Venus at Perihelion 30 20:38 Pleiades 3.3°N of Moon 31 12:52 LAST QUARTER MOON 31 13:56 Moon at Descending Node Sep 01 04:38 Mars 0.1°N of Moon: Occn. 08 06:17 NEW MOON 10 07:43 Mercury 4.0°N of Moon 10 15:10 Moon at Apogee: 406378 km 11 12:03 Spica 1.5°N of Moon 15 02:11 Moon at Ascending Node 16 10:17 FIRST QUARTER MOON 16 23 Mercury at Aphelion 21 10:35 Mercury 0.1°N of Spica 22 17:33 Autumnal Equinox 23 06:15 FULL MOON 23 15:35 Moon at Perigee: 357038 km 27 04:14 Pleiades 3.6°N of Moon 27 16:16 Moon at Descending Node 28 09 Mercury at Greatest Elong: 26.1°E 29 14:22 Mars 2.2°N of Moon 29 22:52 LAST QUARTER MOON Oct 04 00 Venus at Superior Conjunction 07 19:11 Moon at Apogee: 406627 km 07 22:56 NEW MOON 09 21:55 Mercury 1.2°S of Moon 12 03:51 Moon at Ascending Node 15 23:18 FIRST QUARTER MOON 19 20 Saturn at Opposition 22 03:00 Moon at Perigee: 357173 km 22 08 Orionid Meteor Shower 22 14:56 FULL MOON 22 20 Mercury at Inferior Conjunction 24 14:14 Pleiades 3.7°N of Moon 24 23:12 Moon at Descending Node 25 09:04 Aldebaran 5.0°S of Moon 27 17:42 Mars 4.1°N of Moon 29 12:40 LAST QUARTER MOON 30 22 Mercury at Perihelion Nov 03 22:53 Moon at Apogee: 406226 km 05 00:13 Spica 1.4°N of Moon 06 09 S Taurid Meteor Shower 06 16:53 NEW MOON 07 15 Mercury at Greatest Elong: 18.9°W 08 08:03 Moon at Ascending Node 13 08 N Taurid Meteor Shower 14 10:11 FIRST QUARTER MOON 18 14 Leonid Meteor Shower 19 13:15 Moon at Perigee: 360374 km 21 01:12 FULL MOON 21 01:17 Partial Lunar Eclipse; mag=0.986 21 01:22 Pleiades 3.7°N of Moon 21 09:46 Moon at Descending Node 21 20:01 Aldebaran 4.9°S of Moon 28 06:17 LAST QUARTER MOON Dec 01 12:42 Moon at Apogee: 405341 km 02 07:11 Spica 1.4°N of Moon 05 14:53 Moon at Ascending Node 06 10:36 Partial Solar Eclipse; mag=0.927 06 10:48 NEW MOON 07 20:33 Venus 3.4°S of Moon 13 19:20 FIRST QUARTER MOON 15 04 Geminid Meteor Shower 15 23 Mercury at Superior Conjunction 17 14:07 Moon at Perigee: 365768 km 18 11:24 Pleiades 3.7°N of Moon 18 19:54 Moon at Descending Node 19 06:23 Aldebaran 4.9°S of Moon 20 13:19 FULL MOON 21 15:24 Winter Solstice 23 12 Ursid Meteor Shower 27 07 Mars at Opposition 28 02:58 LAST QUARTER MOON 29 08:31 Moon at Apogee: 404509 km 29 14:56 Spica 1.4°N of Moon |
Terms Used in Sky Event Almanac
- Perihelion - instant when a planet is closest to the Sun
- Aphelion - instant when a planet is furthest from the Sun
- Perigee - instant when the Moon is closest to Earth
- Apogee - instant when the Moon is furthest from Earth
- Inferior Conjunction - instant when a planet (Mercury or Venus) passes between Earth and the Sun
- Superior Conjunction - instant when a planet (Mercury or Venus) passes on the opposite side of the Sun from Earth
- Greatest Elongation - the maximum angular separation between the Sun and the planet (Mercury or Venus) as seen from Earth
- during eastern elongation (E), the planet appears as an evening star;
- during western elongation (W), the planet appears as a morning star - Opposition - instant when a planet appears opposite the Sun as seen from Earth
- Conjunction - instant when a planet appears closest the Sun as seen from Earth
- Occultation - the Moon occults or eclipses a star or planet
- Ascending Node - point where the Moon crosses from the southern to northern portion of its orbit
- Descending Node - point where the Moon crosses from the northern to the southern portion of its orbit
- Aldebaran - bright star in the constellation Taurus
- Pollux - bright star in the constellation Gemini
- Regulus - bright star in the constellation Leo
- Spica - bright star in the constellation Virgo
- Antares - bright star in the constellation Scorpius
- Pleiades - bright star cluster in the constellation Taurus
2086 Phases of the Moon
Pakistan Standard Time
The following table gives the date and time of the Moon's phases for the year. The times listed are for Pakistan Standard Time (Coordinated Universal Time + 5 hours) . This time zone may have different names in different countries. If Daylight Saving Time is in effect, add one hour to the times listed.
2086 Phases of the Moon | |||
Pakistan Standard Time | |||
New Moon | First Quarter | Full Moon | Last Quarter |
- | - | - | Jan 08 08:06 |
Jan 15 16:24 | Jan 22 07:41 | Jan 29 22:49 | Feb 07 03:30 |
Feb 14 03:27 | Feb 20 18:48 | Feb 28 17:21 | Mar 08 19:30 |
Mar 15 13:04 | Mar 22 08:16 | Mar 30 11:17 | Apr 07 07:22 |
Apr 13 21:53 | Apr 20 23:40 | Apr 29 03:35 | May 06 15:26 |
May 13 06:41 | May 20 16:19 | May 28 17:35 p | Jun 04 20:51 |
Jun 11 16:12 T | Jun 19 09:33 | Jun 27 05:04 | Jul 04 01:10 |
Jul 11 03:02 | Jul 19 02:45 | Jul 26 14:24 | Aug 02 06:01 |
Aug 09 15:38 | Aug 17 19:14 | Aug 24 22:25 | Aug 31 12:52 |
Sep 08 06:17 | Sep 16 10:17 | Sep 23 06:15 | Sep 29 22:52 |
Oct 07 22:56 | Oct 15 23:18 | Oct 22 14:56 | Oct 29 12:40 |
Nov 06 16:53 | Nov 14 10:11 | Nov 21 01:12 p | Nov 28 06:17 |
Dec 06 10:48 P | Dec 13 19:20 | Dec 20 13:19 | Dec 28 02:58 |
For a collection of images showing the Moon's phases see: Phases of the Moon Photo Gallery.
The Phases of the Moon table also shows when an eclipse takes place. An eclipse of the Sun can only occur at New Moon (see: Solar Eclipses for Beginners), while an eclipse of the Moon can only occur at Full Moon (see: Lunar Eclipses for Beginners). In any calendar year there are a minimum of two solar and two lunar eclipses.
If an eclipse of the Sun or Moon takes place on a given date, it is noted by a character next to the date in the Phases of the Moon table. Solar eclipses are indicated as: T=Total, A=Annular, H=Hybrid and P=Partial. Lunar eclipses are indicated as: t=Total, p=Partial, and n=Penumbral.
Solar Eclipses
The following table contains links to a series of web pages covering the 21st Century. Each one summarizes ten years of solar eclipses. Every eclipse has links to a global visibility map, an interactive Google map, tables, and additional information.
Decade Pages of Solar Eclipses | |||||
Decades | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2001-2010 | 2011-2020 | 2021-2030 | 2031-2040 | 2041-2050 | |
2051-2060 | 2061-2070 | 2071-2080 | 2081-2090 | 2091-2100 |
Lunar Eclipses
The following table contains links to a series of web pages covering the 21st Century. Each one summarizes ten years of lunar eclipses. Every eclipse has links to an eclipse diagram, a global visibility map, tables, and additional information.
Decade Pages of Lunar Eclipses | |||||
Decades | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2001-2010 | 2011-2020 | 2021-2030 | 2031-2040 | 2041-2050 | |
2051-2060 | 2061-2070 | 2071-2080 | 2081-2090 | 2091-2100 |
Sky Event Almanacs: 2081 to 2090
Asia & Oceania
Below are links to sky event almanacs from 2081 to 2090 for ten time zones in Asia & Oceania.
Choose a time zone and click on a year to get a sky event almanac for that year.
Sky Event Almanacs - Asia & Oceania | |||||||||||||||
PKT | 2081 | 2082 | 2083 | 2084 | 2085 | 2086 | 2087 | 2088 | 2089 | 2090 | |||||
IST | 2081 | 2082 | 2083 | 2084 | 2085 | 2086 | 2087 | 2088 | 2089 | 2090 | |||||
BST | 2081 | 2082 | 2083 | 2084 | 2085 | 2086 | 2087 | 2088 | 2089 | 2090 | |||||
ICT | 2081 | 2082 | 2083 | 2084 | 2085 | 2086 | 2087 | 2088 | 2089 | 2090 | |||||
AWST | 2081 | 2082 | 2083 | 2084 | 2085 | 2086 | 2087 | 2088 | 2089 | 2090 | |||||
JST | 2081 | 2082 | 2083 | 2084 | 2085 | 2086 | 2087 | 2088 | 2089 | 2090 | |||||
ACT | 2081 | 2082 | 2083 | 2084 | 2085 | 2086 | 2087 | 2088 | 2089 | 2090 | |||||
AEST | 2081 | 2082 | 2083 | 2084 | 2085 | 2086 | 2087 | 2088 | 2089 | 2090 | |||||
NCT | 2081 | 2082 | 2083 | 2084 | 2085 | 2086 | 2087 | 2088 | 2089 | 2090 | |||||
NZST | 2081 | 2082 | 2083 | 2084 | 2085 | 2086 | 2087 | 2088 | 2089 | 2090 |
- PKT = Pakistan Standard Time (= UTC + 5 hours)
- IST = Indian Standard Time (= UTC + 5.5 hours)
- BST = Bangladesh Standard Time (= UTC + 6 hours)
- ICT = Indochina Time (= UTC + 7 hours)
- AWST = Australian Western Standard Time (= UTC + 8 hours)
- JST = Japan Standard Time (= UTC + 9 hours)
- ACT = Australian Central Time (= UTC + 9.5 hours)
- AEST = Australian Eastern Standard Time (= UTC + 10 hours)
- NCT = New Caledonia Time (= UTC + 11 hours)
- NZST = New Zealand Standard Time (= UTC + 12 hours)
(where UTC = Coordinated Universal Time)
- Time Zones Abbreviations
A time zone may have a different name in different countries. Note the difference in hours between a given time zone and Coordinated Universal Time to help in identification.
For other years and other time zones, visit: Sky Event Almanacs.
Accuracy of the Sky Event Almanacs
The goal of the Sky Event Almanacs is to present a wide range of solar system phenomena with reasonable accuracy. In general, events listed to the nearest hour are accurate to ± 30 minutes. Events listed with a precision in hours and minutes (i.e., hh:mm) are typically accurate to ± 5 minutes or less.
The following table gives a more detailed breakdown of the accuracy of times for various astronomical events.
Accuracy of the Sky Event Almanacs | |
Solstice/Equinox (Earth) | ± 0.5 minute |
Aphelion/Perihelion (Earth) | ± 30 minutes; ± 0.00001 AU |
Solar and Lunar Eclipses | ± 0.5 minute |
Phases of the Moon | ± 0.5 minute |
Moon at Nodes | ± 2 minutes |
Apogee/Perigee of Moon | ± 5 minutes; ± 5 kilometers |
Conjunctions of Moon with Star or Planet | ± 10 minutes |
Conjunctions of Planet with Planet | ± 3 hours |
Inferior/Superior Conjunctions (Mercury & Venus) | ± 30 minutes |
Greatest Elongation (Mercury & Venus) | ± 30 minutes |
Opposition/Conjunction (Outer Planets) | ± 3 hours |
Aphelion/Perihelion of Planets | ± 30 minutes |
Acknowledgements
All calculations are by Fred Espenak and he assumes full responsibility for their accuracy. Algorithms used in predicting many of the astronomical events are based on Astronomical Algorithms by Jean Meeus (Willmann-Bell Inc. Richmond 1998).
Permission is freely granted to reproduce this data when accompanied by the acknowledgment:
- "Sky Event Almanacs Courtesy of Fred Espenak, www.AstroPixels.com".
Return to: Sky Event Almanacs
Return to: Planetary Ephemeris Data
Useful External Links
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