
Moon Crosses the Pleiades
For instance: seen from the New York City area, Maia disappears around 9:38 p.m. EDT, Taygeta 9:43, Alcyone 10:16. Electra reappears around 9:59 p.m. EDT, Taygeta 10:00, Celaeno 10:01, Maia 10:23, Alcyone 10:36.
For predictions at many other locations, check lunar-occultations.com/iota/pleiades08/pleiades.htm.
|
|
|
||
|
|
Date:
|

Venus Meets Mars
Venus, at magnitude -3.8, currently outshines Mars (magnitude 1.7) by a factor of 150. So while Venus is visible to the unaided eye as soon as the Sun sets, you will probably need binoculars or a telescope to see Mars. And while you're there, don't forget to look for Mercury. Although it's lower in the sky than Mars, it's also much brighter (magnitude -0.9 to -0.7), making it much easier to see.
The best time to start looking for these planets is right after sunset. That will give you plenty of time to locate Venus and find the other two planets before they get too low for good telescopic views. To see the changing positions of the planets, view our 1-megabyte Quicktime movie. You can stop it at any frame and go backward or forward to the specific evening you're interested in.
Venus is getting ever higher and easier to view. See Sean Walker's article if you want to view or image this planet in detail. But Mars is sinking rapidly into the twilight glow, getting increasingly difficult both to locate and to view. This conjunction with Venus is your last good chance until Mars reappears from behind the Sun in April 2009.
I went out to view Venus, Mars, and Mercury last evening, September 8th. Venus was the only planet I could see without optical aid, but the other two showed up nicely in binoculars and my 70-mm refractor once I'd mentally adjusted for the huge discrepancy in brightness. All three planets showed tiny but gratifying disks at 60×. Although Venus's disk was biggest by far, it was also the hardest to view because of its overwhelming brightness.
Please post your own observations as comments to this blog.

Venus Returns
That series has unfortunately come to an end with Saturn and Mars both receding into the evening twilight. Jupiter now commands the evening, but for most people in the U.S., Canada, and Europe, it's just too low in the sky to produce satisfying views.
One easy project anyone can do is to see how early in the evening you can spot Venus. I've managed to see it roughly a half-hour before sunset with only my unaided eyes by placing myself in the shadow of a tree or building, then searching just to the west of the Sun about two hand-widths away, roughly at the 10-o'clock position from the Sun. Venus is so bright that it shines through daylight skies easily, but you have to know exactly where to look to find it. For help, check out our interactive sky chart to help narrow down the area of your search. Clear, transparent skies makes this much easier to do.
If you're still having troubler finding it, don't worry. Once a month the Moon glides by the area, giving you a visual cue to both focus your eye on and skip over to Venus much easier than on other days. The Moon will be about 6° southwest of Venus on September 1st.
Careful telescopic observing can reveal hints of the faint cloud bands that circulate around the planet roughly every four days. I've been able to detect these visually only a few times in the past, usually on days of excellent transparency and good seeing conditions. Observing through colored filters will enhance these features, and also dim the view enough to make these observations possible.
If you're into planetary imaging, these cloud bands can be recorded with monochrome cameras equipped with colored filters, and are easier to detect at shorter wavelengths. Due to a still poorly understood phenomena, the highest contrast features in Venuses cloud tops appear in the near-ultraviolet wavelengths around 365 nanometers. Special filters, such as the "U" filter in a UBVRI photometric filter set, will aid greatly in recording these ever-changing features.
Like all the other planets, your best photographic results will come when Venus is high in the sky, so I try to image it during daylight hours. Be extremely careful if you do this, as one glimpse of the Sun through a telescope or even a finderscope can cause permanent blindness.
Give any of these projects a try. You may just find yourself drawn back to our sister planet much more often than you expected to be.
All Hail, King Jupiter!
Before tracking down Jupiter with your telescope, grab your binoculars and find a tree or wall to brace against while pointing them toward Jupiter. If your binoculars magnify at least seven times (they'll be marked "7×35" or "7×50," for example), you'll see Jupiter as a tiny white disk. Look closely to either side for a line of tiny stars. Each of those tiny blips is a Jovian satellite at least as big as our own Moon; they only look tiny and faint because they're more than 1,500 times farther away.
Put a low-power eyepiece (the one with the highest number engraved on its barrel) in your telescope, then maneuver the tube so that Jupiter is centered in the eyepiece.
The moons are named Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto — or, collectively, the Galilean satellites — and it's difficult to tell which one is which. Callisto is usually (but not always) farthest from Jupiter, and Ganymede is a little brighter than its siblings. Fortunately, help is just a few mouse clicks away, using our online guide to identifying them.
Now turn your attention to Jupiter itself, and two things should be noticeable. First, the disk may not look perfectly round. Jupiter is a "gas giant" — it consists almost entirely of hydrogen and helium, and the "surface" you see is actually the top of a thick cloud layer floating high in an atmosphere thousands of miles deep. Jupiter spins so rapidly, rotating completely in less than 10 hours, that its equatorial midsection bulges out a bit.
The most famous cloud feature on Jupiter is the Great Red Spot, an enormous oval-shaped storm about twice the size of Earth. Astronomers have known about the Red Spot for at least 150 years, but there's still no agreement as to which chemical compounds create its distinctive color.
Be forewarned that seeing the Great Red Spot is a challenge to spot in a small telescope. Your best prospects will be when the spot is nearest the middle of Jupiter's disk, which is a snap to figure out thanks to our handy Javascript utility. The planet's rapid rotation means that these "windows of opportunity" last only about an hour, so be prepared to look for it over several consecutive nights. Also, don't expect to see a bright red blob. The spot's color is subtle — much closer to pale orange than crimson.
If I've whetted your appetite and you want to really delve into what Jupiter's disk has to offer, check out John McAnally's excellent guide to observing the planet.

Little Red Spot Gone?
Since LRS’s discovery, the currents of the STrZ have carried it inexorably toward the Great Red Spot. Jupiter watchers wondered what would happen to the small spot when it encountered the GRS and the adjacent Oval BA (Red Spot Junior). The moment of fate arrived on July 3rd, when the LRS tried to squeeze through the narrow gap between the GRS and adjacent Oval BA like dough through the rollers of a pasta machine.
Atmospheric features like the LRS provide scientists with valuable clues about the dynamics and composition of the Jovian atmosphere. Camille Carlisle’s May 28th report neatly summarizes some of the scientific interpretations.
Currently Jupiter is situated in eastern Sagittarius and visible all night long. The giant planet reaches opposition on July 9th. Under steady viewing conditions, a 4- to 6-inch telescope will show Jupiter’s Great Red Spot quite well, though larger instruments will likely be needed to detect whatever might remain of the LRS. Look on the following edge of the GRS, which is currently near Jovian System II longitude 121°. (Transit times for the GRS are given in the July issue of Sky & Telescope, page 66, and also here.)

Have You Seen Comet Boattini?
So early July is the best time for northerners to see this comet assuming that your're fanatical enough to get up at 3 or 4 a.m. Few people are likely to see the comet without optical aid, but it should be pretty easy to spot through binoculars as long as your light pollution isn't too bad. Click here to download a detailed chart. We eagerly await our first post-perihelion reader reports.

The Four-Planet Dance of 2008
Mercury (magnitude -0.5 to 0.5) joins Venus from mid-August through mid-September. Saturn (magnitude 0.8) is low at the beginning of August and disappears a couple of weeks later. Mars, the faintest by far at magnitude 1.7, starts August high to the left of Venus and ends September to Venus's lower right. Look also for Regulus and Spica, which are brighter than Mars but fainter than Saturn. And for the first three evenings of each month, a thin crescent Moon joins the show.
Click here to view a one-megabyte movie of the four-planet dance. After watching the general progression, step forward and back to see the configuration on any particular evening. You may need to install QuickTime to watch the film if you haven't already done so.

Comet Boattini: Barely Visible Now, Bright in July?
Serious comet chasers people who track faint comets with telescopes and binoculars have been aware of Comet C/2007 W1 (Boattini) for quite a while. It was forecast to become quite bright for a telescopic comet, 6th or perhaps even 5th magnitude, making it visible without optical aid to skilled observers at dark sites.
For a while, Boattini exceeded its brightness predictions by more than a magnitude. Now it has settled back to its predicted behavior. If it bumps up again and that's a very big if! it could become fairly prominent low in the east before dawn in July.
As of early June the comet is crossing southern Canis Major. If you're at the latitudes of Australia and New Zealand, start looking for it in late twilight, and continue until the Sun's afterglow has completely disappeared. Click here for a detailed, full-page, printable chart showing the comet's path south of Sirius.
The comet passes directly south of the Sun in mid-June, making it invisible to anybody north of Antarctica.
Boattini will emerge from the Sun's glow around the beginning of July as an early-morning object, low in the east, for observers in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. What it will look like then is anybody's guess. Most likely, it will be a pleasant though unspectacular little binocular target. There's a small but significant chance that it will become brighter than any comet since Holmes's spectacular outburst late last year.
And there's an even smaller chance that the comet will disintegrate entirely while it's hidden in the Sun's glow and never be seen again. It wouldn't be the first time that's happened to a comet.
Here's a light curve and chart of its future path. Stay tuned to SkyandTelescope.com, and we'll keep you posted on the developments.

Mars Meets the Beehive
But if you want to see Mars move during a single observing session, you’ll need a telescope, or at the very least binoculars.
A planet’s motion is easiest to see when there’s a bright star very nearby to provide a frame of reference. Stargazers in far-western Europe and Africa and the easternmost sections of the Americas had such an opportunity on the night of May 19–20, when Mars passed just north of the 5.3-magnitude Eta Cancri. The planet was less than 3′ from the star from 8:00 to 9:30 p.m. EDT on May 19th (0:00 to 1:30 May 20th Universal Time).
Circumstances are even better three nights later, when Mars plunges into Messier 44, the Beehive — a whole cluster of stars! A particularly close encounter is viewable low in the sky from America’s West Coast around 11:30 p.m. PDT on May 22nd, with Mars less than 1′ south of 6.4-magnitude 39 Cancri. A half hour later, the planet is directly between this star and its nearby 6.6-magnitude companion. Click here for a full-page, printable chart showing Mars's track through the Beehive.
Western Europe and Africa and the easternmost Americas are again favored for the closest approach of all, at 9:00 p.m. EDT on May 23rd (1:00 UT May 24th). That’s when you’ll find the planet’s center about 16″ — just 3 Mars diameters — north of a 6.9-magnitude star. If you look carefully, you should be able to track the planet’s motion almost continuously as it traverses 1.4″ every minute — moving its own diameter every 3½ minutes.
But wherever you’re viewing from, even if you miss these spectacularly close conjunctions, Mars’s passage through the Beehive will be an event you’ll never forget.

Pleiades Occultation Observed
Because of the haze, the cluster was completely invisible to the unaided eye, and I could see only the brightest stars through my 10×30 binoculars. But my 15×70 binoculars, 70-mm refractor, and 7-inch Dob all had enough power to show dozens of stars, so three people got to watch each occultation simultaneously. Every disappearance was greeted with little cries of delight. Overall, the 15×70 binoculars probably provided the most aesthetically satisfactory view.
Saturn and Mizar provided icing on the cake, particularly for one friend who had never seen Saturn before. Which all goes to show that even haze and heavy light pollution don't have to stop you from having a great observing experience.
If you have any stories of your own, please submit them as comments below.

Have You Seen the Zodiacal Light?
Now that I know what to look for, I see the zodiacal light quite often. I've even seen it just barely from my astronomy club's observing field in the outer Boston suburbs. But it's much more prominent if you're far from any artificial light pollution. It's well worth the trip.
The zodiacal light is brightest and broadest near the Sun. But the very brightest part of all can never be seen from Earth, because it's overwhelmed by the Sun's glare. So your best opportunities come right before the onset of morning twilight and after the end of evening twilight, when you can see the sky quite close to the Sun, but the Sun's light is blocked by our own planet.
Most people prefer to view in the evening, so late winter and early spring are the ideal time. Find spot as far as possible from any artificial lights that has a low western horizon. Go there shortly after sunset on a moonless evening and watch for the zodiacal light to appear as twilight fades.
What are you seeing? The zodiacal light is the combined glow of countless tiny particles (debris from comets and asteroid collisions) that orbit the Sun. Like the dust in an unswept room, their mass is minuscule but their combined surface area is quite large, so they reflect a lot of sunlight. In fact, if it could be condensed into a single point, the zodiacal light would handily outshine all the planets, including even Venus.
As an interesting side note, Brian May, founding member of the rock group Queen, completed his doctoral dissertation on the zodiacal light in 2007, obtaining a PhD in astrophysics from Imperial College in London. He had started the thesis in 1970, but took a 35-year break to become a rock celebrity.
Have you seen the zodiacal light? Then share your impressions below with the rest of our readers.

Help Us Help You
Moreover, any planet's visibility depends on your latitude, the clarity of the air, your level of experience, and the equipment that you use. Just what does this chart mean when it says Venus is visible?
As author of the chart, I can answer those questions. First of all, we're talking about visibility to the unaided eye. With a telescope, you can see all the bright planets just about any time they're above the horizon when the sky is clear even during broad daylight.
And unless otherwise stated, all articles and diagrams in our magazine are intended to be precisely accurate for the "S&T standard location: 40° N, 90° W, 55 miles southwest of the proverbial Peoria, Illinois.
Finally, I know perfectly well that visibility isn't an either/or situation, but I have to put down some date. I have a formula based on a planet's brightness and its altitude above the horizon at the beginning or end of civil twilight that predicts when it should be visible to an experienced observer with good-to-excellent conditions. And I'm constantly tweaking this formula based on my own and other people's observations.
The morning of Friday, April 4, is a particularly good oppoprtunity, because Venus will be right next to a thin crescent Moon.
Please submit any reports as comments to this article or e-mail them to observers@SkyandTelescope.com. Include your location, the sky conditions, and the time accurate to one minute.
For instance, I went to my local park (42.1° N, 71.1° W) on the morning of Wednesday, April 2nd. The sky was clear though slightly hazy, with a few wispy clouds to the east. I found Venus in binoculars at 6:03, and it was consistently visible to the unaided eye from 6:05-6:10 though pretty faint and subtle. I caught my last naked-eye glimpse at 6:20, just before I left, but by that time I was seeing it less than 5% of the time. It was still bright and bold in binoculars, and no doubt would have stayed that way until sunrise.
Incidentally, I was also following Jupiter, far off to the south. It was still quite obvious to the unaided eye at 6:20 as long as I looked in exactly the right spot. I lost track of Jupiter once and spent several minutes searching for it with binoculars.
And two last questions which you're also welcome to answer in e-mail or (better) as a comment to this article. Our planet-visibility chart is intentionally optimistic; it says when planets are likely to be visible even if just for a few minutes given ideal circumstances. Does this lead to unrealistic expectations? Would you prefer to know only when the planets are likely to be easy to see?
Finally, do you like the format of the planet-visibility chart? Does it tell you everything that you need to know? How would you like to see it changed, if at all?

Fun in the Sun Continues
My colleague Sean Walker also managed to see the scene from his home in New Hampshire. He stayed home a bit longer than usual this morning to capture the image above. According to his report, I wasn't the only one peering through holes in the clouds.
What do you guys think? Anyone else having as much fun with these spot groups as we are? Share your observations below, and feel free to submit images to the photo gallery.
Oh, and I can't forget to remind everyone to only look at the Sun with a safe solar filter. Us astronomy writers all take a blood oath to include that passage in every solar story we write.
It's so nice to have an active Sun again. Clear skies! (Or at least clearer than mine will be for the next 48 hours.)
P.S. These spots are not the start of the much-awaited next solar cycle. Their magnetic orientation (with south pole leading as the Sun rotates), and their very low latitude, peg them as last gasps of the old Solar Cycle 23. . . even though the first spot of Cycle 24 (at high latitude, with north pole leading) appeared in January. We're still in the minimum-activity period between the old and new solar cycles.

Go See the Sun
If you have a solar filter or another way to safely view the Sun, be sure to check out the latest group of sunspots that's popped up on the disk. The larger spot is developing and will be fun to keep tabs on over the next few days. And feel free to comment below to let us know what you think of this group.

"First Light" for Twin-Eyed Telescope
This critical step means we're not far from having another full-time telescopic giant producing incredible observations and scientific discoveries. And it poses the question: Is LBT the largest telescope in the world?
If you ask me, I say no. When the images are combined, the two LBT eyes have the light-collecting area of a single 11.8-meter mirror. And they ride on the same mount and always point in the same direction. But it still takes two separate primary mirrors and two separate optical systems to make the magic happen. The largest binoculars? Sure. The largest telescope? The purist in me still gives the title to the 10-meter Kecks. The 10.4-meter GranTeCan in the Canary Islands isn't quite up and running yet, but it should be soon. When that happens, in my book it will take the crown.
And I don't count Hobby-Eberly Telescope or the Southern African Large Telescope because they can't point all over the sky, and not all of the primary mirror is working at a given time.
So let's start the debate. Do you think the LBT should rank as the "world's largest largest optical telescope"? If you read their press release, that's what they're calling it.
What do you think?












Read comments (0)