Observation Events

🔭 Sky Calendar

Observation Events — June 2026

Celestial events visible from Vadodara (22.29°N, 73.18°E)

Meteor Shower Planet Solar Deep Sky Constellation Lunar Occultation Special
Date Event Type Notes Best Time
1 Mon
Noctilucent Cloud Season
Solar High altitude ice clouds may be visible in NW sky after sunset. Twilight
2 Tue
Zero Shadow Day Register
Other The lack of shadow is beautiful too. And it happens twice a year, for places between +23.5 and -23.5 degrees latitude. The Sun is almost never exactly overhead at noon, but usually transits a bit lower in altitude, a bit to the north or a bit to the south. We have all studied in school that the Earth\'s rotation axis is inclined at 23.5 degrees to the plane of its revolution around the Sun, which is why we have seasons. This also means that the Sun, in its highest point of the day, will move from 23.5 degrees south of the celestial equator to 23.5 degrees north of the equator (Uttarayan), and back again (Dakshinayan), in a year. Of course, the northern most and southern most points are the two solstices, and the crossing of the Sun across the equator are the two equinoxes. For people living between +23.5 and -23.5 degrees latitude, the Sun\'s declination will be equal to their latitude twice - once during Uttarayan and once during Dakshinayan. On these two days, the Sun will be exactly overhead at noon and will not cast a shadow of an object on the ground. This Zero Shadow Day will clearly be different for different places on earth. 6:30 PM
21 Sun
Summer Solstice
Solar Longest day. Sun reaches northernmost point. Night sky shortest. All day