THIS WEEK'S SKY AT A GLANCE, JULY 9 – 17
MONDAY, JULY 12
■ Big, macho Venus, Goddess of Love, and wimpy little Mars, God of War, are at their closest together now, about ½° apart, low in the west-northwest in twilight. This evening the crescent Moon shines upper left of them, as shown above.
Look for Regulus a little less far to the Moon's left or lower left.
TUESDAY, JULY 13
■ Mars is now ½° under Venus. The Moon has thickened and moved farther to their upper left. Regulus is about midway between the Moon and Venus, as shown above.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 14
■ The ever-waxing Moon is now lower left of Denebola, Leo's 2nd-magnitude tail tip. They're less than a fist at arm's length apart.
The brighter star way off three fists left of the Moon is 1st-magnitude Spica.
THURSDAY, JULY 15
■ With the advance of summer, the Sagittarius Teapot, in the south-southeast lower left of Scorpius after dark, is starting to tilt and pour from its spout to the right. The Teapot will tilt farther and farther for the rest of the summer — or for much of the night if you stay out late.
FRIDAY, JULY 16
■ In late twilight, Spica shines three or four finger-widths lower left of the first-quarter Moon (it's exactly first-quarter at 6:11 a.m. EDT Saturday the 17th). High above them is brighter Arcturus, tinted with a lower color temperature: yellow-orange.
https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-news/this-weeks-sky-at-a-glance-july-9-17/