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Archive for December, 2014

12/31/2014 – Ephemeris – A New Year’s look at the bright planets and a comet

December 31, 2014 Comments off

Ephemeris for New Years Eve, Wednesday, December 31st.  The sun will rise at 8:19.  It’ll be up for 8 hours and 52 minutes, setting at 5:11.   The moon, 3 days past first quarter, will set at 4:42 tomorrow morning.

Lets take a last look at the bright planets for 2014.  Mercury joins Venus low in the southwest.  It will be below and right of Venus and will set at 6:07 p.m.  Venus is low in the southwest shortly after sunset.  It now sets at 6:26 p.m., an hour and 15 minutes after the sun.  It will be seen low in the southwestern twilight by 5:55 p.m.  Mars is low in the southwest at 7 p.m. and is in the constellation of Capricornus.  The Red Planet will set tonight at 8:36 p.m.  Jupiter will rise in the east at 8:33 p.m.  It’s near the sickle-shaped head of Leo.  Jupiter is now moving slowly westward.  This is an effect that happens because the Earth is passing Jupiter, a motion shared by all the planets that baffled the ancients who thought the Earth to be motionless. Early risers will be able to spot Saturn which will rise in the east-southeast at 5:10 a.m.

Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.  They may be different for your location.

Addendum

Mercury, Venus and Mars

Mercury, Venus and Mars are seen in the southwestern sky shortly after sunset. In this case 5:45 p.m. December 31, 2014, only 34 minutes after sunset. Created using Stellarium.

Jupiter, Moon

Jupiter, the Moon and the winter constellations at 9:30 p.m. December 31, 2014. Created using Stellarium.

The Moon

The Moon as it will appear in binoculars at 9:30 p.m. December 31, 2014. Created using Stellarium.

Telescopic Jupiter

Jupiter seen through a telescope at 9:30 p.m. December 31, 2014. Note that Ganymede and Europa will appear very close to each other. Created using Stellarium.

Saturn

Saturn and the late spring and early summer constellations at 7 a.m. New Year’s Day 2015. Created using Stellarium.

Comet Lovejoy

Comet Lovejoy Track

Comet Lovejoy (C/2014 Q2) plotted for 9 p.m. from 12/31/2014 to 1/06/2015. Created using Cartes du Ceil (Sky Charts).

 

2014 in review

December 30, 2014 Comments off

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2014 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

The concert hall at the Sydney Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 59,000 times in 2014. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 22 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.

Categories: Uncategorized

12/30/2014 – Ephemeris – Looking ahead at some local and space astronomical events in 2015

December 30, 2014 Comments off

Ephemeris for Tuesday, December 30th.  The sun will rise at 8:19.  It’ll be up for 8 hours and 51 minutes, setting at 5:11.   The moon, 2 days past first quarter, will set at 3:38 tomorrow morning.

Let’s look ahead at a few astronomical and space events that will take place in 2015.  Visible for us will be the partial phase of a lunar eclipse in morning twilight of April 4th,  plus there’s a total lunar eclipse visible during the evening hours of September 27th.  Out in space in the asteroid belt the Dawn spacecraft will enter orbit of Ceres, the largest asteroid and dwarf planet Ceres, a spherical world of rock and ice in April.  Further out past the last planet the New Horizons spacecraft will fly by the dwarf planet Pluto and its system of at least 5 satellites: Charon, Nix, Hydra, Styx, and Kerberos on July 14th.   It will take several months to transmit the data and images back to Earth after which the spacecraft will be redirected to a new target.

Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.  They may be different for your location.

Addendum

April 4, 2015 Lunar Eclipse

Chart for the total lunar eclipse of April 4, 2015. In Michigan we will see on;y the beginning partial phase in morning twilight. Credit: Fred Espenak, NASA/GSFC

September 28 (27), 2015 linat eclipse

Chart for the total lunar eclipse of September 28, 2015. This is the evening of the 27th, EDT in Michigan. Credit: Fred Espenak, NASA/GSFC.

Dawn Orbital Track

Dawn orbital track past Mars, stopping at Vesta and continuing to Ceres. Credit: NASA/JPL.

New Horizons

Artist conception of the New Horizons spacecraft at Pluto. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

12/29/2014 – Ephemeris – More events from 2014

December 29, 2014 Comments off

Ephemeris for Monday, December 29th.  The sun will rise at 8:19.  It’ll be up for 8 hours and 51 minutes, setting at 5:10.   The moon, 1 day past first quarter, will set at 2:32 tomorrow morning.

2014 has been a year of eclipses for northern Michigan.  A total lunar eclipse on the morning of April 15th, another on the morning of October 8th.  Plus we had a partial solar eclipse at sunset on October 23rd.  All of them were hampered by clouds, for this observer.  One of the cool events of this year was the close approach of Comet Siding Spring with Mars.  The five functioning orbiters and two rovers were not able to get any spectacular pictures of the comet, but there was one heck of a meteor shower on Mars when the planet was closest to the comet’s path.  None of the satellites could see it because they were hiding behind the planet at the time.  But later the martian atmosphere was filled with the chemical signatures of the meteors.

Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.  They may be different for your location.

Addendum

MAVEN detects metals

Metals in the atmosphere of Mars before and after the passage of Comet Siding Spring by Mars measured by the MAVEN spacecraft. Credit NASA.

12/26/2014 – Ephemeris – Tragedies and triumphs of 2014

December 26, 2014 Comments off

Ephemeris for Friday, December 26th.  The sun will rise at 8:18.  It’ll be up for 8 hours and 49 minutes, setting at 5:08.   The moon, 2 days before first quarter, will set at 11:02 this evening.

2014 was a year of personal tragedy and also tragedy and triumph in space.  The Space tragedies came in October with the destruction and loss of Orbital Science’s third supply mission to the International Space Station when the their Antares rocket blew up right after launch.  A few days later Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo disintegrated on a test flight killing a pilot.  In the Triumph department the European Space Agency’s Rosetta caught up and orbited its comet 67P, for short, in August and bounced down its lander Philae in November.  It wasn’t supposed to bounce, but stick the landing.  Bruised and battered Philae delivered its science before its batteries died.  And this month an unmanned Orion capsule made its maiden voyage into space.

Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.  They may be different for your location.

Addendum

Orbital Sciences Antares rocket explodes

Orbital Sciences Antares rocket explodes seconds after liftoff on October 28, 2014. Credit NASA.

SpaceShipTwo disintegrates

SpaceShipTwo disintegrates October 31, 2014 killing a pilot. Credit USA Today.

Between a rock and a hard place

After a second bounce on the Comet 67P the Philae lander ended up sideways apparently on the base of a cliff. Researchers were able to get data from just about all the instruments before the battery discharged. The team hopes and the comet gets closer to the sun and the sun angle changes they can revive Philae. Credit: ESA.

Delta IV Heavy rocket liftoff  carrying the Orion test article

Screen capture of Delta IV Heavy rocket liftoff carrying the Orion test article into orbit on December 4, 2014. Credit .NASA via BBC

Ride back to the earth with Orion via a camera mounted in a window.  The window is facing aft as the capsule re-enters the atmosphere heat shield first at 20,000 miles per hour.  You’ll experience everything except the G forces.  It comes with appropriate spacey music.  It’s as close as I’ll ever get to ride in one of these things.

12/25/2014 – Ephemeris – My recollections of spotting the Southern Cross for the first time.

December 25, 2014 Comments off

Merry Christmas.  This is Ephemeris for Christmas Day, Thursday, December 25th.  The sun will rise at 8:17.  It’ll be up for 8 hours and 49 minutes, setting at 5:07.   The moon, 3 days before first quarter, will set at 9:50 this evening.

My one and only sighting of the constellation the Southern Cross came two and a half years ago from a cruise ship traveling between the Hawaiian island of Maui and Hilo on the Big Island.  I had plotted it out before the trip.  Our ship would be traveling in a south-southeasterly direction and at 3 a.m., the Southern Cross would be low above the southern horizon from our latitude which I surmised would be about 20 degrees north. The southern cross would be visible from the bow of the ship.  The only really dark location to view it was on Deck 14 with an unobstructed view with some subdued lights behind me.  I easily found it, and verified it with the fifth star of the cross.  Nearby was Alpha Centauri the closest star to the sun.

Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.  They may be different for your location.

Addendum

Southern Cross

The approximate sky that I saw from the bow of the ship at 3:15 a.m. HST February 14, 2012. The moon was a slight gibbous phase. Recreated using Stellarium.

Southern Cross Annotated

The approximate sky that I saw from the bow of the ship at 3:15 a.m. HST February 14, 2012, annotated. The moon was a slight gibbous phase. Recreated using Stellarium.

Note that the star named Rigil Kent is truncated.  It’s Rigil Kentaurus, better known by its catalog name Alpha Centauri.  The fifth star of the cross, my check star, is on the right side of the cross, just below the crosspiece.  The Southern Cross’s real name is Crux, which simply means cross.  The Northern Cross is not an official constellation.  It’s part of Cygnus the swan.

I’ve heard folks say the Beta Centauri is Alpha Centauri’s companion star.  That is not true.  Beta Centauri is Hadar, seen near Alpha in the sky, but is much farther away.  There are three stars in the Alpha Centauri system:  Alpha Centauri A, Alpha Centauri B, and Proxima Centauri, a telescopic red dwarf, a bit away from the other two.  Alpha Centauri A & B are a wide double, visible in a telescope.  I saw and photographed them when on Key Largo in April 1986 for Halley’s Comet’s closest approach to the Earth.  Note it wasn’t all that close, some 40 million miles, and it had a tail disconnection that week. Bummer.

Stupid Internet posts: No, gravity won’t be canceled January 4th.

December 24, 2014 Comments off

Looks like the hoaxsters are at it again.  Seems someone dusted off Sir. Patrick Moore’s April Fool’s joke from long ago and dressed it up as a phony NASA tweet and sent it out 9 days ago.  Supposedly on January 4th, 2015 an alignment of Jupiter and Pluto will cancel gravity on the Earth for a few minutes that day.  Both Newton and Einstein would be ticked off at that.  Neither of their theories of gravity would predict anything so stupid.    Besides Jupiter and Pluto are at nearly opposite parts of the sky.  They don’t align with anything.

Don’t take my word for it as a lowly amateur astronomer.  Check out the (A real astrophysics PhD) Bad Astronomer Phil Plait’s post:  http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2014/12/24/zero_g_day_nope.html.

Here’s a post from EarthSky with the same sentiments.

However January 4th, 2014 is special.  It’s Perihelion Day, the day of the year the Earth is closest to the Sun.  So break out the sunscreen, especially if you live in the southern hemisphere, where it’s summer now.  The biggest effect we’ll see is that winter is the shortest season for us by a couple of days compared to summer, the longest season.  The Earth moves its fastest in it’s orbit of the Sun at perihelion.

12/24/2014 – Ephemeris – Twas the night before Christmas and only the planets and a comet were stirring

December 24, 2014 Comments off

Ephemeris for Christmas Eve, Wednesday, December 24th.  The sun will rise at 8:17.  It’ll be up for 8 hours and 49 minutes, setting at 5:06.   The moon, 3 days past new, will set at 8:37 this evening.

Twas the night before Christmas and only the planets were stirring.  Venus is low in the southwest shortly after sunset.  It now sets at 6:09 p.m., 63 minutes after the sun.  It will be tough to spot at all.  New Year’s Eve might be a good time to start to see it.  Mars, low in the southwest at 7 p.m. has the Moon just to the right of it tonight.  Mars will set tonight at 8:34 p.m.  Jupiter, which will be our Christmas Star this year will rise in the east at 8:59 p.m.  It’s near the sickle shaped head of Leo.  Jupiter is now moving slowly westward.  This is an effect that happens because the Earth is passing Jupiter, a motion shared by all the planets that baffled the ancients who thought the Earth to be motionless.  Saturn will rise in the east-southeast at 5:34 a.m.

Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.  They may be different for your location.

Addenda

The Planets tonight

Venus and the Moon

Venus low on the horizon, and the Moon, at 5 30 p.m. on December 24, 2014. Created using Stellarium.

The Moon through Binoculars

The crescent Moon through binoculars, at 5 30 p.m. on December 24, 2014. Created using Stellarium.

Mars and the moon

Mars and the Moon at 7:30 p.m. on December 24, 2014. Created using Stellarium.

Jupiter and the winter constellations

Jupiter and the winter constellations at 11 p.m. on December 24, 2014. Created using Stellarium.

Telescopic Jupiter

Jupiter with three hidden satellites, with only Callisto showing at 11 p.m. on December 24, 2014. See blow by blow of the satellite disappearances below. Created using Stellarium.

Jovian satellite events of the night of December 24-25, 2014

Ganymede starts eclipse (enters Jupiter’s shadow) 6:20 p.m.
Europa starts eclipse 8:27p.m.
Io’s shadow starts crossing Jupiter 9:32 p.m.
Ganymede leaves Jupiter’s shadow 10:00 p.m.
Ganymede starts being occulted by Jupiter 10:11 p.m.
Io’s transit across the face of Jupiter starts 10:29 p.m.
Io’s shadow leaves the face of Jupiter 11:50 p.m.
Io’s transit of Jupiter ends 12:46 a.m.
Europa’s occultation by Jupiter ends 1:10 a.m.
Ganymede’s occultation by Jupiter ends 1:50 a.m.

Note that Europa’s occultation by Jupiter starts before its eclipse ends, so unlike the more distant Ganymede there isn’t an interval of visibility between the two.

Jovian satellite event timings provided by Project Pluto www.projectpluto.com

Saturn

Saturn low in the east-southeast among the constellations of late spring and early summer at 6:30 a.m. on Christmas morning 2014 . Created using Stellarium.

Comet C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy)

Normally my Ephemeris program deals with celestial objects that are visible to the naked eye.  While Comet Lovejoy will, for a few weeks become brighter than 6th magnitude the normal limit for the unaided human eye, a comet is a diffuse object and always looks dimmer than a star of the same magnitude.  This comet was discovered August 17, 2014 by Australian amateur astronomer Terry Lovejoy.  He has discovered 5 comets.  His most famous find was C/2011 W3 (Lovejoy) that buzzed the Sun and survived becoming a magnificent comet for southern hemisphere observers.

Recently Comet Lovejoy became brighter than expected.  The data for the charts below are from Minor Planet Center and do not include new brightness estimates that include the outburst.  They have the comet reaching magnitude 4.9.  The aerith.net website gives the maximum brightness next month of 4.  (Magnitudes are like golf scores the lower the magnitude the brighter the object).  Each magnitude step is a brightness difference of about 2 and a half times.  To check on the comet go to http://www.aerith.net/comet/weekly/current.html.  Currently Comet Lovejoy is the brightest comet now visible and is the first comet on the list.  Clicking on the comet ‘s name will give you the comet’s page.  The last chart on the page is a chart tracking the comet’s brightness from reports vs. prediction.  That chart predicts a magnitude of 4 just after the first of the year.

Photographs of the comet show a gaseous coma (head) and a very faint ion tail, which may not be visible visually in binoculars and telescopes.  Right now the comet is highest around midnight.

The finder charts below designate the comet by month-day and the predicted magnitude

Comet Lovejoy 12/24/14 to 1/17/15

Comet C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy) at 11 p.m. at 2 day intervals from tonight 12/24/2014 to 1/17/2015. Created using Cartes du Ceil (Sky Charts).

omet Lovejoy 1/17/15 to 2/12/15

Comet C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy) at 8 p.m. at 2 day intervals from tonight 1/17/2015 to 2/12/2015. Created using Cartes du Ceil (Sky Charts).

On December 28th Comet Lovejoy will appear to pass the globular cluster M79.

Comet Lovejoy and M79

Comet Lovejoy and M79 a distant globular star cluster, in the constellation of Lepus the hare, will appear together at 11 p.m. December 28th, 2014. Note the that M79 is the unlabeled blue dot in the tail of the comet, next to the head. Created using Cartes du Ceil (Sky Charts).

12/23/2014 – Ephemeris – Is the constellation of Cetus a whale or a sea monster?

December 23, 2014 3 comments

Ephemeris for Tuesday, December 23rd.  The sun will rise at 8:17.  It’ll be up for 8 hours and 49 minutes, setting at 5:06.   The moon, 2 days past new, will set at 7:25 this evening.

The identity of the constellation Cetus is a bit mixed up.  Officially it’s a whale, but in the story of the constellations above it, (Cassiopeia, Pegasus, Andromeda, Perseus and Cepheus) it is the monster sent to ravage the Ethiopian coast, and to whom the sacrifice of Andromeda was to stop.  Either can be seen in the stars in the south at 8 p.m.  It is a large constellation of dim stars below and left of the Great Square of Pegasus and Pisces.  The whale can be seen diving, its tail of 5 stars in a squished pentagon, is seen to the upper left.  If you see the stars differently and put the head of the sea monster where the tail of whale is the dreaded Cetus of the story appears.  One of its stars is variable and will not be visible without a telescope, it’s Mira, the wonderful.

Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.  They may be different for your location.

Addendum

Cetus

Cetus with Pegasus and Orion displaying mythological images at 8 p.m. on December 23, 2014. Created using Stellarium.

 

12/22/2014 – Ephemeris Extra – New broadcast time on IPR News Radio

December 22, 2014 Comments off

As of December 1st National Public Radio has changed the format for their morning news program Morning Edition.  As a result Interlochen Public Radio has  moved my Ephemeris program to around 6:49 a.m., a half hour later.

Here’s the current schedule

Ephemeris Radio Schedule Monday – Friday
Ephemeris air times (ET)
6:49 a.m. – News stations (New as of December 1, 2104)
6:59 a.m.- Classical stations

The Stations of Interlochen Public Radio
Classical:
WIAA 88.7 FM Interlochen
94.7 FM Traverse City
WIAB 88.5 FM Mackinaw City
WICV 100.9 FM East Jordan, Charlevoix
News:
WICA 91.5, FM Traverse City
WLNM 89.7 FM Manistee
WHBP 90.1 FM Harbor Springs, Petoskey

There’s another local program on astronomy on the News stations.  It’s a 2 minute weekly program on about 6:30 a.m. Mondays.  It’s producer is Mary Stewart Adams, Program Director Headlands International Dark Sky Park, near Mackinaw City, MI.  She tends more toward folklore than science which is fun and entertaining.  On her Linked In page she lists herself as an  Astrosopher/Program Director Headlands Internat’l Dark Sky Park.  Near as I could find out astrosophy is a kind of new age astrology.  Astronomy broke the link to astrology some 400 years ago.  So as long as the program doesn’t drift into astrology, or astrosophy as being real. I’ll enjoy the program.

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