Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, April 24 Venus passes 0.8° due north of Uranus at 1 A.M. EDT. After their close conjunction yesterday , the two remain within 1.5° of each other in the evening sky tonight, offering a second chance to spot them in a single field of view with your telescope. Look west an hour after sunset, and you’ll spot a bright point of light just to the left of the slowly appearing Pleiades star cluster. That light is magnitude –3.9 Venus, your guidepost to finding much fainter Uranus. Center Venus in binoculars or a telescope, and look about 1.5° southwest. You should spot a much fainter (magnitude 5.8), bluish-gray disk that looks much like a dim, “flat” star. This is Uranus. Compare the two planets’ disks — it hardly seems like a comparison! Blazing Venus stretches 11” across and appears 90 percent lit, an obvious gibbous phase. Uranus is only 3” wide and fully lit, appearing like a tiny, circular point. Sunrise: 6:09 A.M.…