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See ‘Shooting Stars’ And A Lingering Comet Pan-STARRS On Tuesday

Jamie Carter, Senior Contributor
3 min read

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Can you tell the difference between a meteor — also called a “shooting star” — and a comet? Before sunrise on Tuesday, April 21, is when to test your observing skill when comet C/2025 R3 (Pan-STARRS) appears low on the eastern horizon — just as the Lyrid meteor shower approaches its peak. Although an early start is required, this is one of the last opportunities to get outside and see a comet with your own eyes. Check my feed for the latest on comet Pan-STARRS.

Comet in the night sky. Summer starry sky. Stars on sky. Beautiful night landscape. Long exposure. Conceptual photography. Fog over the water. Atmospheric landscape. Morning twilight. Comet Neowise

Comet Pan-STARRS, also known as comet C/2025 R3 (Pan-STARRS), is now visible before sunrise. (Image shows 2020's Comet NEOWISE).

getty

Key Facts

Comet C/2025 R3 (Pan-STARRS) is visible from about an hour before sunrise until early next week — a very brief window. An unobstructed view of the eastern horizon is crucial.

On Tuesday, April 21, the comet is in the constellation Pisces and is getting ever lower in a brightening pre-dawn sky. The best way to find it is by locating the Great Square of Pegasus, a shape of four bright stars rising in the east.

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The Lyrid meteor shower peaks overnight on April 21-22, producing around 15-20 meteors per hour under dark skies. The Eta Aquarid meteor shower began on April 19 and will peak overnight on May 5-6.

The comet looks like a faint, diffuse glow with a tail that moves gradually night after night. By contrast, a meteor is a streak of light lasting only a second or so.

According to the Comet OBServation database , the comet is currently shining at around magnitude +4.7 — right on the cusp of being a naked-eye object in very dark skies. However, it will likely require binoculars for most observers.

It was discovered by the Pan-STARRS survey in Hawaii in September 2025 and is thought to orbit the sun roughly every 170,000 years.

How To Find Comet Pan-Starrs

Although finding the comet is becoming challenging, it should still be bright enough to see on Monday, April 20. Here’s how to see it:

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  • Go outside about an hour minutes before sunrise where you are and look low in the eastern sky.

  • Locate the Great Square of Pegasus rising due east — a large, diamond-shaped pattern of four stars of equal brightness.

  • Now look for the lowest of the square’s four corner stars, closest to the horizon. That’s Algenib. The comet will be beneath this star. If you don’t see it, wait — it will appear — though a rising dawn may make it difficult to see.

  • Look for a small misty patch of light — and hopefully a tail — using a pair of 10x50 binoculars to make it easier.

April 21 0530

The position of comet C/2025 R3 (Pan-STARRS) 60 minutes before sunrise on April 21, 2026.

Stellarium

Where Is Comet Pan-Starrs?

The comet reached perihelion on Sunday, April 19, and is now moving away from the sun at about 0.52 AU (78 million kilometers) by Tuesday, April 21. It continues to close in on Earth at around 00.53 AU (79 million kilometers), with its closest approach on Monday, April 27 (though by then it will be impossible to see from the Northern Hemisphere). Observers in the Southern Hemisphere will be able to spot the comet from late April, after the comet passes perihelion, just after sunset on the western horizon.

How To See The Lyrid Meteor Shower

The Lyrids are one of the oldest known meteor showers, caused by Earth passing through debris left behind by Comet Thatcher. The best time to watch is after midnight and in the pre-dawn hours, when the radiant point near the bright star Vega climbs higher in the sky. The best time to watch will be early on Wednesday, April 22.

Check my feed for a daily “comet tracker” with sky charts and tips for finding Comet Pan-STARRS.

Further Reading

MORE FROM FORBES ‘Comet Of The Year’ Vaporized — But Another Will Peak Late April By Jamie Carter

MORE FROM FORBES How To Photograph The Green Comets This Weekend, According To Experts By Jamie Carter

MORE FROM FORBES Astronauts Share Spectacular Earth Images From Halfway To The Moon By Jamie Carter

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MORE FROM FORBES Artemis Astronauts See Earthrise, Earthset And A Total Solar Eclipse By Jamie Carter

MORE FROM FORBES 11,000 Asteroids Have Just Been Found — 33 Are Near-Earth Objects By Jamie Carter

MORE FROM FORBES Astronauts Share Spectacular Earth Images From Halfway To The Moon By Jamie Carter

This article was originally published on Forbes.com

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