The planet comes closest to the earth on its opposition date when earth passes more or less between the Sun and the Jupiter.
This year, the date falls on Friday when Jupiter would be coming within 650 million km of the earth. This would be Jupiter's closest until 2019.
The Birla Industrial and Technological Museum has arranged for viewing this astronomical event through two of their telescopes - a Celestron Telescope of ten inches and a Carl Zeiss one of four inches.
Jupiter would rise in the evening hours, would be right over the head at midnight and would set in the morning.
The gas giant was the fifth planet from the Sun and orbits it every 12 years and rotates every ten hours, making it the fastest-spinning planet in the solar system.
NASA has sent a new spacecraft named Juno to Jupiter, which would arrive at the planet's orbit in 2016.
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