Venus and the moon created a spectacular sight in the western sky Sunday night, appearing inches away from each other

A crescent moon sat to the right, just two degrees from Venus by mid-twilight. The view was visible with a naked eye about 30 minutes after sunset.

Some people may also have spotted Mercury sitting to the lower right of the night sky.

While peak watching was Sunday night, Venus and the moon will remain nearby for a few more nights this week. This celestial sighting does not technically mean the moon and Venus have moved inches apart. The moon, near its closest point of orbit, sits 224,000 miles from Earth and Venus is about 400 times farther away, according to Sky and Telescope .

Here are a few pictures from this weekend:

More: Weather on Venus is wacky … It actually snows metal More: NASA may have burned out of life on March by accident over 40 years ago

Follow Ashley May on Twitter: @AshleyMayTweets

Read or Share this story: https://usat.ly/2uscTJ7