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Astronomy a Go Go! September Sky Tour



This tool displays the approximate Moon phases for a given month(images are close approximations). For official phase times and dates for this month and past months are available from the U.S. Naval Observatory.

Astronomical Online Glossary

Download this month's sky map!

Skymaps.com is our favorite monthly skymap provider. Download either the Northern hemisphere, Equatorial, or Southern Hemisphere sky map so you can follow along with our viewing sessions.
Creator: Kym Thalassoudis

 

Southern Hemisphere Additional Information

As Astronomy a Go Go! finds its home in the higher Northern latitudes those of you who live south of the equator will benefit from these two Southern Hemisphere sites: Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand's Southern Hemisphere Calendar RASNZ site (absolutely outstanding) and
Southern Sky Watch.

 

Great Astronomy Activities!

Citizen Sky

For those in Northern Hemisphere, Capella, the "She Goat" in Aurigae, is circumpolar. At my 47 deg North, Capella disappears behind the tree line, and into the light polluted horizon, but she pops up in a few hours and is easy to find. Also easy to find are epsilon Aurigae (al Maaz the Billy Goat) and "The Kids" which make a small, long, triangle of stars just to the Southwest of Capella.

For the next 21 months Epsilon Aurigae, usually the brightest of the trio, will start behaving quite differently than it has for the past 27 years. Epsilon Aurigae is a type of variable star called an eclipsing binary. Epsilon Aurigae and some unknown dark partner, rotate around a common center of mass and every 27 years that dark companion eclipses the giant F-type star. August marks the anticipated beginning for that eclipse which will last for 714 days, dimming from 3.0 mag to about half of its brightness.

So why am I calling this a great astronomy activity? Epsilon Aurigae has some definite quirks and more eyes are needed to help scientist figure out what Epsilon Aurigae's invisible partner really is! We need help...WE NEED YOU!! Anyone can participate; we need people to observe epsilon Aurigae, folks to look at the data for quirks, patterns, or voids, artist to help present the data to the public, friends willing to get the word out to others! To find out more visit:

NASA's MicroObservatories

Another fantastic project, that AAGG is supporting all through the month of September, it the "Capture the Colorful Cosmos" project using the NASA MicroObservatories. This project gives you the opportunity to direct a robotic telescope and then manipulate the resulting images!

I had the opportunity to help school age kids, and some kid-like adults, through the project at the Tacoma Astronomical Society's annual Astronomy Fair in August and we had a wonderful time! They were using filter, shifting and stacking images, and turning out images like the pros!


Sweet and innocent "A", and the postcard of M51 he created (Blasters of Death -- go figure), and his sister's Orion composite image (ahhhhhh!)

LCROSS Impact

Astronomers, amateur and professional a like, who have access to dark skies and large aperture scopes are encouraged to participate in imaging and video taping the impact of the Centaur impactor and the LCROSS satellite with the Moon. The primary objective of the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) is to confirm the presence or absence of water ice in the Moon's polar region. But the amazing bit will be the five body choreography between the Moon, the Centaur rocket/impactor, the Shepherding craft/research vessel/impactor, and LRO (who was launched with LCROSS) who will also observe the action, and YOU, on Earth!

I mean... what other impactor mission has its own music video!

More information can be found at the LCROSS Citizen Observing Campaign Site.


Images courtesy of: New Mexico State Univ

Planets for September 2009

September Morning Planets
(click images to enlarge)

 


Beginning of the month


End of the month

  • Mercury- Starts September headed for the Sun in the early evening sky, best observed by lower and southern latitudes. By the end of the month Mercury will join Venus, Mars, and Saturn in the morning sky. 0.5 mag (1st) to 5.5 mag (21st)
  • Venus- Beautiful in the morning sky and is heading eastward towards Regulus. Venus will be half a degree north of Regulus on the 20th of the month as she heads back towards the Sun. She will pair up with Mercury and Saturn in the early October sky so make sure you spend some time pre-sunrise time around the 5th of October with Venus and Saturn making a Mercury breakfast sandwich! -3.8 mag (1st) to -3.8 mag (21st)
  • Mars- Spends the month in Gemini so you'll need to get up early for this one too! 1.00 (1st) to 0.9 mag (21st)
  • Jupiter- AAGG missed Jupiter's vanishing moons due to bad weather but John Chumack, of The Chumack Observatories, captured the event and has a movie posted at his site! -2.8 mag (1st) to -2.7 mag (21st)
  • Saturn- In conjunction with the Sun on the 17th, moving into the morning sky. Look for the return of Saturn in October. 1.1 mag (1st) to 1.1 mag (21st)
  • Uranus- At opposition in Pisces on the 17th. 5.7 mag (1st) to 5.7 mag (21st)
  • Neptune- In Capricorn 7.8 mag (1st) to 7.8 mag (21st)
  • Ceresand Eta - Finder chart from the New Zealand RAS (RASNZ) great charts! Northern Hemisphere observers this time you get to flip the chart or stand on your head!
    Vesta chart temporarily missing...use this one until site is corrected

Key Dates for September 2009

Days and Times in UT: (help with time)
Observations are for 10 pm for Northern Hemisphere and 8pm for the Southern Hemisphere.
Today's sunrise and sunset times or plan ahead using the US Naval Observatory Website

Occultation information can be found at the IOTA website!

Astronomical Highlights - September 2009

1 - Venus 1.2 deg SSW of Beehive cluster (M44) early morning sky
2 - Moon near Jupiter in the evening sky
2-3 - Jupiter's moons line up in front of and behind Jupiter such that Jupiter has no moons. See www.spaceweather.com for more details
4 - Full Moon 16:03 UT
- Saturn's rings edge on as seen from Earth
6 - Mercury stationary beginning retrograde motion
9 - September Perseids
10 - Moon near Pleiades in the morning sky
9-16 - Astronomy A Go Go! at the Afterschool Universe training, the AANC Annual Meeting, and the ASP conference in San Francisco!
12 - Last Quarter Moon
13 - Moon very near Mars in the morning sky possible occultation check the IOTA website for more information
15 - Moon near Beehive cluster (m44) in the morning sky
16 - Moon at perigee (closest to Earth) 364,053km)
- Zodiacal Lights vis in N latitudes before sunrise in the East next two weeks (example image, the reflection of sunlight off interplanetary dust in the plane of the ecliptic)
17 - Moon near Regulus
- Saturn in conjunction with the Sun moving into the morning sky
- Uranus at opposition
18 - New Moon at 18:44 UT
20 - Mercury at inferior conjunction with the Sun as it moves into the morning sky
- Venus 1/2 degree NNE from Regulus
- Moon near Spica
22 - September equinox 21:22 UT Point in the year where the Sun passes along the ecliptic into the Southern Hemisphere
24 - Moon near Antares in the evening sky possible occultation check the IOTA website for more information
26 - First Quarter Moon
28 - Moon at apogee (furtherest from the Earth) 404,432
29 - Moon near Jupiter in the evening sky
October
4 - Full Moon
16 - In the pre-dawn sky; Arcturus is to the north, the crescent Moon to the south, and stacked in between, from the horizon, Mercury, Venus, and Saturn.

Date information courtesy of: RASC Observer's Handbook, Skymaps.com, Astronomical Calendar 2009, CalSky, Skymaps.com. sunrise and sunset times for your home*
Comparative lengths of day and night

    Monthly Messier*

    This month our monthly Messier hits some big easy targets, eight more globular clusters, all are possible in binoculars, and two of these are the finest globulars which can be seen from northern locations.

    Sagittarius is the home of many globular clusters which surround the center of the Milky Way Galaxy. Seven of the these globulars appear in the Messier catalog, we will be visiting five of them this month. When you complete the search for these objects be sure to spend some time scanning this region with binoculars or a telescope and see what other sights you can discover. I guarantee you will not be disappointed.

    • M13 - The great globular cluster in Hercules is bright enough to be seen with naked eye and typically the first GC found by amateur astronomers in the NH. Binoculars easily show this cluster as a bright fuzzy ball. M13 is partially resolvable in small aperture telescopes and becomes a fantastic swarm of tightly packed individual stars through large scopes.
    • M92 - Another globular cluster in Hercules, M92 is easy to find in binoculars appearing slightly dimmer and smaller than M13. As with M13 it is partially resolvable in small scopes and is a fine sight in large instruments.
    • M14 - A small, bright globular cluster in Ophiuchus. It is a difficult binocular object, look for a small fuzzy patch of light. Through a telescope M14 is an even patch of light, the stars not resolvable except through large scopes.
    • M22 - This is the other great globular in our tour this month. Located just above the teapot asterism in Sagittarius, M22 can be seen with no optical aid. M22 is easy to find in binoculars, and easy to resolve in telescopes, with about the same impressiveness as M13.
    • M28 - Located near M22 in Sagittarius, this is a small bright globular. A tough binocular object, look for a small fuzzy patch. Easily seen in a telescope, but requires large aperture to resolve individual stars.
    • M69, M70, M54 All of these are small bright globular clusters laying along the bottom of the teapot in Sagittarius. Very similar in appearance to M28, these are all tough binocular objects requiring dark skies and possibly averted vision to see. M54 is slightly brighter and appears more star like through binoculars than the other globulars. These are all easily seen in telescopes, though not easily resolvable.

    From the Astronomical Connection and the Moncton Center in Canada

    From the Tony Cecce, Corning, NY - Twelve Month Tour of The Messier Catalog

    Comets for September 2009

    More comet information at Seiichi Yoshida's comet website. Also checkout Gary Kronk's comet and meteor pages
    Skyhound Comet pages

    Historical and Current Events

    ...Did you know?

    Mark has developed his own website so let's all trot on over and see the pages of wonderful history he has for us this month!

    Help us out by leaving a donation in the ol' PayPal hat

    or write us a favorable review in iTunes of Podcast Pickle or iPodder!

     

    Music Scottish Guitar Quartet -"Romance Within You"
    Black Lab- "See the Sun"
    Anne Farnsworth- "Saturday Morning"

     



    Earth's major motions for 2009

    Perihelion
    Jan 4 15(UT)
    First Cross Quarter Day
    Feb 2-6
    Equinox
    Mar 20 11:44(UT)
    Second Cross Quarter Day
    May 4-7
    Solstice
    June 21 05:45(UT)
    Aphelion
    July 4 02h (UT)
    Third Cross Quarter Day
    Aug 5-8
    Equinox
    Sept 22 21:18(UT)
    Fourth Cross Quarter Day
    Nov 5-8
    Solstice
    Dec 21 17:47(UT)

    Planet Positions for 2009


    2009 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
    Venus Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Tau Gem Cnc Vir Vir Sco Sgr Cap
    Mars Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Psc Ari Tau Tau Gem Cnc Cnc Leo
    Jupiter Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap
    Saturn Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Vir Vir Vir Vir

     

    Interesting Planet Pairing for 2009

    • December 31, 2008 - Jupiter and Mercury - After sunset a little more than one degree apart in Sagittarius. Pull out the binos and telescopes because Mercury will be a mere 15 arcminutes from the globular cluster M75. All three will be together in one field of view in most home binoculars.
    • January 22nd - Venus and Uranus - After sunset 1.3 degrees apart a few days later on the 29th they are joined by a waxing crescent moon.
    • February 23rd - Jupiter, Mars and Mercury - In the early morning sky just before sunrise the trio are in a space about 2 degrees wide. Binoculars will be helpful but beware the quickly rising Sun. The Moon, almost invisible, will be between Mars and the Sun.
    • March 23rd - Mars, Moon, Neptune, and Jupiter - Makes a nice line-up in the morning sky with Neptune just off the tip of the waning crescent moon.
    • April 21st - Venus, Mars, Uranus, waning crescent Moon, Neptune and Jupiter - all in the pre-dawn sky together. First the right triangle of Venus, Mars, and Uranus followed by the waning crescent Moon and then finally by Neptune and Jupiter. Mars will be a faint 1.41 mag so binoculars will be helpful. The next day, possible occultation of Venus by the Moon. Check the IOTA website for occultations in your area.
    • May 25th - Jupiter and Neptune - Jupiter is less than 1/2 degree South of Neptune in the morning sky. If you have ever had problems finding Neptune this would be a good time to try, between now and June.
    • June 19th - Venus and Mars - In the pre-dawn sky just south of a waning crescent Moon. Closer to the Sun is Mercury and the Pleiades.
    • August 17th - Saturn and Mercury - Very close to the Sun low in the evening sky. Much better view for Southern viewers.
    • September 3rd UT 4:43 - Jupiter hides its Galilean moons. Not until 2019 will all of Jupiter's Galilean moons orbit in such a way.
    • September 4th - Saturn - Not exactly a pairing but the Earth will cross the plane of the rings from south to north making the rings invisible
    • October 16th - Mercury, Venus, and Saturn - All lined up in the pre-dawn sky close to the horizon. A faint waning crescent is just south of the trio.
    • December 24th - Jupiter and Neptune - Just after sunset Jupiter and Neptune sit side-by-side just north of delta Capricornus and east of the "42,44,45 Cap Wall"

    Phases of the Moon 2009


    (click to enlarge)

    Universal Time

          NEW MOON    FIRST QUARTER       FULL MOON     LAST QUARTER
    
           d  h  m          d  h  m         d  h  m          d  h  m
           
                     JAN.   4 11 56   JAN. 11  3 27   JAN.  18  2 46
    JAN.  26  7 55   FEB.   2 23 13   FEB.  9 14 49   FEB.  16 21 37
    FEB.  25  1 35   MAR.   4  7 46   MAR. 11  2 38   MAR.  18 17 47 
    MAR.  26 16 06   APR.   2 14 34   APR.  9 14 56   APR.  17 13 36  
    APR.  25  3 23   MAY    1 20 44   MAY   9  4 01   MAY   17  7 26
    MAY   24 12 11   MAY   31  3 22   JUNE  7 18 12   JUNE  15 22 15
    JUNE  22 19 35   JUNE  29 11 28   JULY  7  9 21   JULY  15  9 53  
    JULY  22  2 35   JULY  28 22 00   AUG.  6  0 55   AUG.  13 18 55  
    AUG.  20 10 02   AUG.  27 11 42   SEPT. 4 16 03   SEPT. 12  2 16
    SEPT. 18 18 44   SEPT. 26  4 50   OCT.  4  6 10   OCT.  11  8 56  
    OCT.  18  5 33   OCT.  26  0 42   NOV.  2 19 14   NOV.   9 15 56  
    NOV.  16 19 14   NOV.  24 21 39   DEC.  2  7 30   DEC.   9  0 13  
    DEC.  16 12 02   DEC.  24 17 36   DEC. 31 19 13
    
    

    Eclipses for 2009

     

    2009 January 26
    [ Solar: Annular ]
    2009 February 09
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 07
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 21-22
    [ Solar: Total ]
    2009 August 05-06
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 December 31
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]

     

    January 26 - Annular Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): The first solar eclipse of 2009 occurs at the Moon's ascending node in western Capricornus. An annular eclipse will be visible from a wide track that traverses the Indian Ocean and western Indonesia. A partial eclipse will be seen within the much larger path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes the southern third of Africa, Madagascar, Australia except Tasmania, southeast India, Southeast Asia and Indonesia.

     

    February 09 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The first lunar eclipse of 2009 is one of four such events during the year. The first three eclipses are penumbral while the last (on Dec. 31) is partial. The Feb 09 event is the deepest penumbral eclipse of the year with a penumbral magnitude of 0.899. It will be easily visible to the naked eye as a dusky shading in the northern half of the Moon. The times of the major phases are listed below.

    July 07 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times.): July's penumbral eclipse is only of academic interest since the magnitude is just 0.156. Although the Moon will be above the horizon from most of Canada, the eclipse is so minor as to be completely invisible to the naked eye.

    July 21-22 - Total Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): To make up for the anemic lunar eclipse earlier in the month, a major total eclipse of the Sun occurs two weeks later. The path of the Moon's umbral shadow extends across India, China, a handful of Japanese islands and the South Pacific Ocean (Espenak and Anderson, 2008). A partial eclipse is seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes most of eastern Asia, Indonesia, and the Pacific Ocean.

    August 05-06 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): A shallow penumbral eclipse occurs 15 days after the total solar eclipse. Since its magnitude is only 0.402, it will not be visible to the naked eye.

    December 31 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The last eclipse of 2009 occurs on New Year's Eve. This minor partial lunar eclipse takes place in Gemini, and is visible primarily from the Eastern Hemisphere (Figure 8). Greatest eclipse takes place at 19:23 UT when the eclipse magnitude will reach 0.0763.

    Eclipse information from: NASA Eclipse Homepage, Eclipses Online (HM Nautical Almanac Office, UK in coordination with the U.S. Naval Observatory)

    2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower Activity Period Maximum Radiant Velocity r ZHR Class Moon
        Date S. L. R.A. Dec. km/s        
    Antihelion Source (ANT) Dec 14-Sep 07 - - - - 30 3.0 3 II -
    Quadrantids (QUA) Dec 26-Jan 13 Jan 03 283°16 15:20 +49° 42 2.1 120 I 6
    Alpha Centaurids (ACE) Jan 28-Feb 21 Feb 07 319°2 14:00 -59° 56 2.0 5 II 12
    Delta Leonids (DLE) Feb 15-Mar 10 Feb 25 336° 11:12 +16° 23 3.0 2 II 0
    Gamma Normids (GNO) Feb 25-Mar 22 Mar 13 353° 16:36 -51° 56 2.4 4 II 16
    Lyrids (LYR) Apr 16-Apr 27 Apr 23 033° 18:12 +33° 46 2.1 18 I 27
    Pi Puppids (PPU) Apr 15-Apr 28 Apr 23 033°5 07:20 -45° 18 2.0 var III 27
    Eta Aquarids (ETA) Apr 27-May 23 May 07 047° 22:36 -01° 68 2.4 60 I 12
    Eta Lyrids (ELY) May 06-May 14 May 10 050° 19:22 +43° 43 3.0 3 II 15
    June Bootids (JBO) Jun 22-Jul 02 Jun 27 095°7 14:56 +48° 18 2.2 var III 5
    Piscis Austrinids (PAU) Jul 15-Aug 10 Jul 28 125° 22:44 -30° 35 3.2 5 II 7
    Alpha Capricornids (CAP) Jul 12-Aug 08 Jul 28 125° 20:20 -10° 24 2.5 4 II 7
    Delta Aquarids (SDA) Jul 21-Aug 30 Jul 30 127° 22:42 -17° 43 3.2 20 I 9
    Perseids (PER) Jul 13-Aug 26 Aug 12 140° 03:12 +58° 59 2.6 100 I 20
    Kappa Cygnids (KCG) Aug 03-Aug 25 Aug 17 145° 19:04 +59° 25 3.0 3 II 25
    Alpha Aurigids (AUR) Aug 28-Sep 03 Sep 01 158°6 06:06 +39° 65 2.6 7 II 11
    September Perseids (SPR) Sep 06-Sep 13 Sep 10 168° 03:12 +40° 65 2.9 5 II 19
    Delta Aurigids (DAU) Sep 18-Oct 10 Sep 29 186° 05:52 +49° 64 2.9 2 II 13
    Draconids (GIA) Oct 06-Oct 10 Oct 08 195°4 17:28 +54° 20 2.6 var III 18
    Southern Taurids (STA) Sep 18-Nov 26 Oct 11 198° 02:18 +09° 29 2.3 5 II 21
    Epsilon Geminids (EGE) Oct 18-Oct 21 Oct 20 207° 06:48 +28° 71 3.0 2 II 2
    Orionids (ORI) Sep 28-Nov 10 Oct 21 208° 06:22 +16° 68 2.5 23 I 3
    Leo Minorids (LMI) Oct 17-Oct 27 Oct 23 209° 10:40 +37° 61 2.7 2 II 4
    Northern Taurids (NTA) Oct 20-Nov 29 Nov 13 231° 03:52 +22° 29 2.3 5 II 25
    Leonids (LEO) Nov 07-Nov 28 Nov 18 236° 10:16 +22° 71 2.5 var III 1
    Alpha Monocerotids (AMO) Nov 15-Nov 25 Nov 21 239°32 07:48 +01° 65 2.4 var III 4
    Dec Phoenicids (PHO) Nov 28-Dec 09 Dec 06 254°25 01:12 -53° 18 2.8 var III 18
    Puppid/Velids (PUP) Dec 01-Dec 15 Dec 07 255° 08:12 -45° 40 2.9 10 I 19
    Monocerotids (MON) Dec 06-Dec 20 Dec 07 255° 06:32 +09° 41 3.0 2 II 10
    Sigma Hydrids (HYD) Nov 22-Dec 23 Dec 09 257° 08:24 +03° 60 3.0 3 II 21
    Geminids (GEM) Dec 05-Dec 19 Dec 14 262°2 07:36 +32° 35 2.6 120 I 26
    Coma Berenicids (COM) Dec 10-Jan 25 Dec 19 268° 11:40 +25° 64 3.0 5 II 3
    Ursids (URS) Dec 16-Dec 25 Dec 22 270°7 14:34 +75° 32 3.0 10 I 5

    Information and Table Template Courtesy The American Meteor Society, International Meteor Organization, and Meteors Online.

    Explanation of the 2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower: named for the constellation or closest star within a constellation where the radiant is located at maximum activity.

    Activity Period: the dates when the ZHR (Zenith Hourly Rates) are equal to or greater than one.

    Maximum: the date on which the maximum activity is expected to occur.

    S.L.: the equivalent solar longitude of the date of maximum activity. Solar longitude is measured in degrees (0-359) with 0 occurring at the exact moment of the spring equinox, 90 at the summer solstice, 180 at the autumnal equinox, and 270 at the winter solstice.

    Radiant: the area in the sky where shower meteors seem to appear from. This position is given in right ascension (celestial longitude) and declination (celestial latitude).

    Velocity: the velocity at which shower meteors strike the Earth's atmosphere. The velocity depends on the angle meteoroids (meteors in space) intersect the Earth. Meteoroids orbiting in the opposite direction of the Earth and striking the atmosphere head-on are much faster than those orbiting in the same direction as the Earth. This velocity is measured in kilometers per second.

    r: The Population Index, An estimate of the ratio of the number of meteors in subsequent magnitude classes. Simply stated: the lower the "r" value, the resulting overall mean magnitude of each shower will be brighter. "r" usually ranges from 2.0 (bright) to 3.5 (faint).

    ZHR: Zenith Hourly Rate, the average maximum number of shower meteors visible per hour if the radiant is located exactly overhead and the limiting magnitude equals +6.5. Actual counts rarely reach this figure as the zenith angle of the radiant is usually less and the limiting magnitude is usually lower. ZHR is a useful tool when comparing the actual observed rates between individual observers as it sets observing conditions for all to the same standards.

    Class: A scale developed by Robert Lunsford to group meteor showers by their intensity:

    Class I: the strongest annual showers with ZHR's normally ten or better.

    Class II: reliable minor showers with ZHR's normally three or better.

    Class III: showers with widely variable rates. They may be strong one year and totally inactive the next.

    Class IV: weak minor showers with ZHR's rarely exceeding three. The study of these showers is best left to experienced observers who use plotting and angular velocity estimates to determine shower association. Observers with less experience are urged to limit their shower associations to showers with a rating of I to III. These showers are also good targets for video and photographic work.

    Moon: the age of the moon in days where 0 is new, 7 is first quarter, 14 is full, and 21 is last quarter. Meteor activity is best seen in the absence of moonlight so showers reaching maximum activity when the moon is less than 10 days old or more than 25 are much more favorably observed than those situated closer to the full moon.

    Information from the "Observer's Handbook 2009" RASC



    Direct download: AAGG_sky_tour_Sept_09.mp3
    Category: Sky Tours -- posted at: 4:46 AM
    Comments[0]

    I am still in Chicago at the Citizen Sky Conference (we introduced Citizen Sky last month)

    I'm finding that recording in Chicago means you have trains interrupting the podcast about every 4 minutes so I have decided to wait until I get back home to finish the podcast.

    I appreciate your patience...and as a reward here is a little treat for you!

    Lite-Bright Episilon Aurigae

    Enjoy and I will talk to you soon!
    Category: News Updates -- posted at: 11:28 AM
    Comments[0]

    Astronomy a Go Go! July Sky Tour



    This tool displays the approximate Moon phases for a given month(images are close approximations). For official phase times and dates for this month and past months are available from the U.S. Naval Observatory.

    Astronomical Online Glossary

    Download this month's sky map!

    Skymaps.com is our favorite monthly skymap provider. Download either the Northern hemisphere, Equatorial, or Southern Hemisphere sky map so you can follow along with our viewing sessions.
    Creator: Kym Thalassoudis

     

    Southern Hemisphere Additional Information

    As Astronomy a Go Go! finds its home in the higher Northern latitudes those of you who live south of the equator will benefit from these two Southern Hemisphere sites: Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand's Southern Hemisphere Calendar RASNZ site (absolutely outstanding) and
    Southern Sky Watch.

     

    Planets for July 2009

     


    July Morning Planets
    (click images to enlarge)

     


    Beginning of the month


    Pre-dawn, July 18th

    • Mercury-in superior conjunction on the 14th. If you are on the path of the Total Solar Eclipse then look for Mercury 9 degrees NE of the Sun. At the end of the month, Southern viewers can catch Mercury in the early evening. -0.9 mag (1st) to -1.3 mag (21st)
    • Venus- still fantastic in the morning pre-dawn sky. Since Venus is moving towards the North, as the Sun heads South, her placement it spectacular for N. Hemisphere viewers. On the 14th she will be just 3 degrees from Aldebaran and the Hyades -4.0 mag (1st) to -3.9 mag (21st)
    • Mars- moves into Taurus on the 2nd. Mars, Venus, the waning crescent Moon, and the Hyades make a lovely cluster on the 18th. Compare Mars, and its color, to that of Aldebaran. 1.1 (1st) to 1.1 mag (21st)
    • Jupiter- will be ~ .5 degree from Neptune on the 13th! Jupiter will be at opposition on August 14th. -2.7 mag (1st) to -2.7 mag (21st)
    • Saturn- strangely faint low in the west after sunset! The combination of the rings near edge on and the receding gas giant decrease the apparent magnitude. 1.0 mag (1st) to 1.0 mag (21st)
    • Uranus- In Aquarius 5.9 mag (1st) to 5.9 mag (21st)
    • Neptune- In Capricorn 8.0 mag (1st) to 7.9 mag (21st)
    • Ceresand Eta - Finder chart from the New Zealand RAS (RASNZ) great charts! Northern Hemisphere observers this time you get to flip the chart or stand on your head!
      Vesta chart temporarily missing...use this one until site is corrected


    Jupiter, Neptune, Uranus Mid-month

    Key Dates for July 2009

    Days and Times in UT: (help with time)
    Observations are for 10 pm for Northern Hemisphere and 8pm for the Southern Hemisphere.
    Today's sunrise and sunset times or plan ahead using the US Naval Observatory Website

    Occultation information can be found at the IOTA website!

    Astronomical Highlights - July 2009

    3 - Venus 7 deg S of the Pleiades
    4 - Earth at Aphelion (farthest from the Sun)(2:00 UT) Sun-Earth distance 1.01668 AU or 152.1 million km

    - Antares 0.5 deg S of Moon, check the IOTA website for occultations information for your area.

    - Beginning of intense International Space Station fly-by for N.America see Science@NASA and Heavens Above for more information and flyby times in your area.
    6 - One month away from the beginning of the Epsilon Aurigae eclipse...see more below
    7 - Full Moon (smallest in 2009) Penumbral Lunar eclipse (see links, below, in the annual section) The Moon just kisses the penumbral shadow, not a good naked eye candidate.

    - Moon at apogee (406232)
    10 - Mars 5 deg S of Pleiades, Jupiter 4 deg S of the Moon
    13 - Jupiter 0.6 deg S of Neptune
    15 - Last Quarter Moon
    16-19 - Astronomy a Go Go! at the TAS Summer Star Party!
    21 - Moon at perigee (357463 km) Total Solar Eclipse (July 21-22)(see links, below, in the annual section) Large tides
    22 - New Moon (2:35 UT)
    24 - Astronomy A Go Go! and TAS at the Mt. Rainier Star Party! Paradise Visitor Center (Friday Night Only)
    28 - First Quarter (22:00 UT)
    29 - Peak of the S. delta Aquarid meteor shower
    31 - Antares 0.5 deg S of Moon, check the IOTA website for occultations information for your area.

    Date information courtesy of: RASC Observer's Handbook, Skymaps.com, Astronomical Calendar 2009, CalSky, Skymaps.com. sunrise and sunset times for your home*
    Comparative lengths of day and night

    Great Amateur Activity

    For those in the high Northern Hemisphere, Capella, the "she goat" in Aurigae, is circumpolar. At my 47 deg North, Capella disappears behind the treeline, and into the light polluted horizon, but she pops up in a few hours and is easy to find. Also easy to find are "The Kids" the small, long, triangle of stars just to the Southwest of Capella. However, this summer one of those kids, Epsilon Aurigae, usually the brightest of the trio, will drop in brightness....for about two years. Epsilon Aurigae, or Almaaz, is an eclipsing binary and beginning in Aug it will be eclipsed by its invisible companion for 714 days! Brightest of the three "Kids" Epsilon Aurigae will dim from 3.0 mag to about half of its brightness, a little trick it performs every 27.1 years. Epsilon Aurigae has some definite quirks and more eyes are needed to help scientist figure out what Epsilon Aurigae's invisible partner really is! To find out more visit:

    Monthly Messier*

    Not as many objects as wait for the summer Milkyway to rise into better view later this summer, but much of what there is to see can be accomplished with binoculars. (This is, in fact, my favorite time of the year for bino viewing.) Our quarry will consist of six globular clusters and one very bright galaxy. Small scope and bino heaven.
    M3
    This globular cluster in Canes Venatici is one of the brightest objects in the sky. In binoculars this object is definitely not star like, but more of a bright, small snowball easy to see. Small telescopes will begin to resolve M3 into individual stars. The hardest part of this object is locating it in a portion of sky that contains few bright landmarks.
    M53
    Another globular cluster in Canes Venatici. While not quite as big or bright as M3 it is still an obvious binocular object. Resolvable in small telescopes, it as easy object to find sharing the same low power telescope field as fifth magnitude Alpha Coma Berenices.
    M5
    A big, bright globular cluster located in Serpens Caput. M5 is as nice as M3 but lies near a fifth magnitude naked eye star (5 Serpentis) making it an easy object to find.
    M68
    An eighth magnitude globular cluster in Hydra, M68 is a difficult binocular object for Northern observers. It appears as a faint fuzz spot in binoculars, you may need to use averted vision or large binoculars to find this one. Appearing as a round fuzzy patch in a 8" telescope, you will need a much larger aperature to really resolve it.
    M83
    A face on spiral in Hydra. M83 is fairly easy in binoculars as a faint, fuzzy patch of light. In a telescope look for a large patch of light with a bright center.
    M4
    A big bright globular in Scorpius, easily located near Antares. This is an easy binocular object appearing as a round snowball. Partially resolvable in a telescope, the trade mark of this globular is a line of bright stars crossing the center.
    M80
    This is the smallest and faintest globular cluster this month. Located in Scopius, M80 is a very tough binocular object appearing as a faint star with slight fuzziness around the edges. This is confirmed with a telescope, M80 has a bright central condensation in the middle of faint fuzz. It is one of the Messier objects that even through a medium telescope still looks like a comet.

    From the Tony Cecce, Corning, NY - Twelve Month Tour of The Messier Catalog

    Comets for July 2009

    More comet information at Seiichi Yoshida's comet website. Also checkout Gary Kronk's comet and meteor pages
    Skyhound Comet pages

    Historical and Current Events

    ...Did you know?

    Mark has developed his own website so let's all trot on over and see the pages of wonderful history he has for us this month!

    Help us out by leaving a donation in the ol' PayPal hat

    or write us a favorable review in iTunes of Podcast Pickle or iPodder!

     

    Music Scottish Guitar Quartet -"Romance Within You"
    Black Lab- "See the Sun"
    Anne Farnsworth- "Saturday Morning"

     



    Earth's major motions for 2009

    Perihelion
    Jan 4 15(UT)
    First Cross Quarter Day
    Feb 2-6
    Equinox
    Mar 20 11:44(UT)
    Second Cross Quarter Day
    May 4-7
    Solstice
    June 21 05:45(UT)
    Aphelion
    July 4 02h (UT)
    Third Cross Quarter Day
    Aug 5-8
    Equinox
    Sept 22 21:18(UT)
    Fourth Cross Quarter Day
    Nov 5-8
    Solstice
    Dec 21 17:47(UT)

    Planet Positions for 2009


    2009 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
    Venus Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Tau Gem Cnc Vir Vir Sco Sgr Cap
    Mars Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Psc Ari Tau Tau Gem Cnc Cnc Leo
    Jupiter Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap
    Saturn Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Vir Vir Vir Vir

     

    Interesting Planet Pairing for 2009

    • December 31, 2008 - Jupiter and Mercury - After sunset a little more than one degree apart in Sagittarius. Pull out the binos and telescopes because Mercury will be a mere 15 arcminutes from the globular cluster M75. All three will be together in one field of view in most home binoculars.
    • January 22nd - Venus and Uranus - After sunset 1.3 degrees apart a few days later on the 29th they are joined by a waxing crescent moon.
    • February 23rd - Jupiter, Mars and Mercury - In the early morning sky just before sunrise the trio are in a space about 2 degrees wide. Binoculars will be helpful but beware the quickly rising Sun. The Moon, almost invisible, will be between Mars and the Sun.
    • March 23rd - Mars, Moon, Neptune, and Jupiter - Makes a nice line-up in the morning sky with Neptune just off the tip of the waning crescent moon.
    • April 21st - Venus, Mars, Uranus, waning crescent Moon, Neptune and Jupiter - all in the pre-dawn sky together. First the right triangle of Venus, Mars, and Uranus followed by the waning crescent Moon and then finally by Neptune and Jupiter. Mars will be a faint 1.41 mag so binoculars will be helpful. The next day, possible occultation of Venus by the Moon. Check the IOTA website for occultations in your area.
    • May 25th - Jupiter and Neptune - Jupiter is less than 1/2 degree South of Neptune in the morning sky. If you have ever had problems finding Neptune this would be a good time to try, between now and June.
    • June 19th - Venus and Mars - In the pre-dawn sky just south of a waning crescent Moon. Closer to the Sun is Mercury and the Pleiades.
    • August 17th - Saturn and Mercury - Very close to the Sun low in the evening sky. Much better view for Southern viewers.
    • September 3rd UT 4:43 - Jupiter hides its Galilean moons. Not until 2019 will all of Jupiter's Galilean moons orbit in such a way.
    • September 4th - Saturn - Not exactly a pairing but the Earth will cross the plane of the rings from south to north making the rings invisible
    • October 16th - Mercury, Venus, and Saturn - All lined up in the pre-dawn sky close to the horizon. A faint waning crescent is just south of the trio.
    • December 24th - Jupiter and Neptune - Just after sunset Jupiter and Neptune sit side-by-side just north of delta Capricornus and east of the "42,44,45 Cap Wall"

    Phases of the Moon 2009


    (click to enlarge)

    Universal Time

          NEW MOON    FIRST QUARTER       FULL MOON     LAST QUARTER

    d h m d h m d h m d h m

    JAN. 4 11 56 JAN. 11 3 27 JAN. 18 2 46
    JAN. 26 7 55 FEB. 2 23 13 FEB. 9 14 49 FEB. 16 21 37
    FEB. 25 1 35 MAR. 4 7 46 MAR. 11 2 38 MAR. 18 17 47
    MAR. 26 16 06 APR. 2 14 34 APR. 9 14 56 APR. 17 13 36
    APR. 25 3 23 MAY 1 20 44 MAY 9 4 01 MAY 17 7 26
    MAY 24 12 11 MAY 31 3 22 JUNE 7 18 12 JUNE 15 22 15
    JUNE 22 19 35 JUNE 29 11 28 JULY 7 9 21 JULY 15 9 53
    JULY 22 2 35 JULY 28 22 00 AUG. 6 0 55 AUG. 13 18 55
    AUG. 20 10 02 AUG. 27 11 42 SEPT. 4 16 03 SEPT. 12 2 16
    SEPT. 18 18 44 SEPT. 26 4 50 OCT. 4 6 10 OCT. 11 8 56
    OCT. 18 5 33 OCT. 26 0 42 NOV. 2 19 14 NOV. 9 15 56
    NOV. 16 19 14 NOV. 24 21 39 DEC. 2 7 30 DEC. 9 0 13
    DEC. 16 12 02 DEC. 24 17 36 DEC. 31 19 13

    Eclipses for 2009

     

    2009 January 26
    [ Solar: Annular ]
    2009 February 09
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 07
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 21-22
    [ Solar: Total ]
    2009 August 05-06
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 December 31
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]

     

    January 26 - Annular Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): The first solar eclipse of 2009 occurs at the Moon's ascending node in western Capricornus. An annular eclipse will be visible from a wide track that traverses the Indian Ocean and western Indonesia. A partial eclipse will be seen within the much larger path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes the southern third of Africa, Madagascar, Australia except Tasmania, southeast India, Southeast Asia and Indonesia.

     

    February 09 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The first lunar eclipse of 2009 is one of four such events during the year. The first three eclipses are penumbral while the last (on Dec. 31) is partial. The Feb 09 event is the deepest penumbral eclipse of the year with a penumbral magnitude of 0.899. It will be easily visible to the naked eye as a dusky shading in the northern half of the Moon. The times of the major phases are listed below.

    July 07 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times.): July's penumbral eclipse is only of academic interest since the magnitude is just 0.156. Although the Moon will be above the horizon from most of Canada, the eclipse is so minor as to be completely invisible to the naked eye.

    July 21-22 - Total Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): To make up for the anemic lunar eclipse earlier in the month, a major total eclipse of the Sun occurs two weeks later. The path of the Moon's umbral shadow extends across India, China, a handful of Japanese islands and the South Pacific Ocean (Espenak and Anderson, 2008). A partial eclipse is seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes most of eastern Asia, Indonesia, and the Pacific Ocean.

    August 05-06 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): A shallow penumbral eclipse occurs 15 days after the total solar eclipse. Since its magnitude is only 0.402, it will not be visible to the naked eye.

    December 31 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The last eclipse of 2009 occurs on New Year's Eve. This minor partial lunar eclipse takes place in Gemini, and is visible primarily from the Eastern Hemisphere (Figure 8). Greatest eclipse takes place at 19:23 UT when the eclipse magnitude will reach 0.0763.

    Eclipse information from: NASA Eclipse Homepage, Eclipses Online (HM Nautical Almanac Office, UK in coordination with the U.S. Naval Observatory)

    2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower Activity Period Maximum Radiant Velocity r ZHR Class Moon
        Date S. L. R.A. Dec. km/s        
    Antihelion Source (ANT) Dec 14-Sep 07 - - - - 30 3.0 3 II -
    Quadrantids (QUA) Dec 26-Jan 13 Jan 03 283°16 15:20 +49° 42 2.1 120 I 6
    Alpha Centaurids (ACE) Jan 28-Feb 21 Feb 07 319°2 14:00 -59° 56 2.0 5 II 12
    Delta Leonids (DLE) Feb 15-Mar 10 Feb 25 336° 11:12 +16° 23 3.0 2 II 0
    Gamma Normids (GNO) Feb 25-Mar 22 Mar 13 353° 16:36 -51° 56 2.4 4 II 16
    Lyrids (LYR) Apr 16-Apr 27 Apr 23 033° 18:12 +33° 46 2.1 18 I 27
    Pi Puppids (PPU) Apr 15-Apr 28 Apr 23 033°5 07:20 -45° 18 2.0 var III 27
    Eta Aquarids (ETA) Apr 27-May 23 May 07 047° 22:36 -01° 68 2.4 60 I 12
    Eta Lyrids (ELY) May 06-May 14 May 10 050° 19:22 +43° 43 3.0 3 II 15
    June Bootids (JBO) Jun 22-Jul 02 Jun 27 095°7 14:56 +48° 18 2.2 var III 5
    Piscis Austrinids (PAU) Jul 15-Aug 10 Jul 28 125° 22:44 -30° 35 3.2 5 II 7
    Alpha Capricornids (CAP) Jul 12-Aug 08 Jul 28 125° 20:20 -10° 24 2.5 4 II 7
    Delta Aquarids (SDA) Jul 21-Aug 30 Jul 30 127° 22:42 -17° 43 3.2 20 I 9
    Perseids (PER) Jul 13-Aug 26 Aug 12 140° 03:12 +58° 59 2.6 100 I 20
    Kappa Cygnids (KCG) Aug 03-Aug 25 Aug 17 145° 19:04 +59° 25 3.0 3 II 25
    Alpha Aurigids (AUR) Aug 28-Sep 03 Sep 01 158°6 06:06 +39° 65 2.6 7 II 11
    September Perseids (SPR) Sep 06-Sep 13 Sep 10 168° 03:12 +40° 65 2.9 5 II 19
    Delta Aurigids (DAU) Sep 18-Oct 10 Sep 29 186° 05:52 +49° 64 2.9 2 II 13
    Draconids (GIA) Oct 06-Oct 10 Oct 08 195°4 17:28 +54° 20 2.6 var III 18
    Southern Taurids (STA) Sep 18-Nov 26 Oct 11 198° 02:18 +09° 29 2.3 5 II 21
    Epsilon Geminids (EGE) Oct 18-Oct 21 Oct 20 207° 06:48 +28° 71 3.0 2 II 2
    Orionids (ORI) Sep 28-Nov 10 Oct 21 208° 06:22 +16° 68 2.5 23 I 3
    Leo Minorids (LMI) Oct 17-Oct 27 Oct 23 209° 10:40 +37° 61 2.7 2 II 4
    Northern Taurids (NTA) Oct 20-Nov 29 Nov 13 231° 03:52 +22° 29 2.3 5 II 25
    Leonids (LEO) Nov 07-Nov 28 Nov 18 236° 10:16 +22° 71 2.5 var III 1
    Alpha Monocerotids (AMO) Nov 15-Nov 25 Nov 21 239°32 07:48 +01° 65 2.4 var III 4
    Dec Phoenicids (PHO) Nov 28-Dec 09 Dec 06 254°25 01:12 -53° 18 2.8 var III 18
    Puppid/Velids (PUP) Dec 01-Dec 15 Dec 07 255° 08:12 -45° 40 2.9 10 I 19
    Monocerotids (MON) Dec 06-Dec 20 Dec 07 255° 06:32 +09° 41 3.0 2 II 10
    Sigma Hydrids (HYD) Nov 22-Dec 23 Dec 09 257° 08:24 +03° 60 3.0 3 II 21
    Geminids (GEM) Dec 05-Dec 19 Dec 14 262°2 07:36 +32° 35 2.6 120 I 26
    Coma Berenicids (COM) Dec 10-Jan 25 Dec 19 268° 11:40 +25° 64 3.0 5 II 3
    Ursids (URS) Dec 16-Dec 25 Dec 22 270°7 14:34 +75° 32 3.0 10 I 5

    Information and Table Template Courtesy The American Meteor Society, International Meteor Organization, and Meteors Online.

    Explanation of the 2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower: named for the constellation or closest star within a constellation where the radiant is located at maximum activity.

    Activity Period: the dates when the ZHR (Zenith Hourly Rates) are equal to or greater than one.

    Maximum: the date on which the maximum activity is expected to occur.

    S.L.: the equivalent solar longitude of the date of maximum activity. Solar longitude is measured in degrees (0-359) with 0 occurring at the exact moment of the spring equinox, 90 at the summer solstice, 180 at the autumnal equinox, and 270 at the winter solstice.

    Radiant: the area in the sky where shower meteors seem to appear from. This position is given in right ascension (celestial longitude) and declination (celestial latitude).

    Velocity: the velocity at which shower meteors strike the Earth's atmosphere. The velocity depends on the angle meteoroids (meteors in space) intersect the Earth. Meteoroids orbiting in the opposite direction of the Earth and striking the atmosphere head-on are much faster than those orbiting in the same direction as the Earth. This velocity is measured in kilometers per second.

    r: The Population Index, An estimate of the ratio of the number of meteors in subsequent magnitude classes. Simply stated: the lower the "r" value, the resulting overall mean magnitude of each shower will be brighter. "r" usually ranges from 2.0 (bright) to 3.5 (faint).

    ZHR: Zenith Hourly Rate, the average maximum number of shower meteors visible per hour if the radiant is located exactly overhead and the limiting magnitude equals +6.5. Actual counts rarely reach this figure as the zenith angle of the radiant is usually less and the limiting magnitude is usually lower. ZHR is a useful tool when comparing the actual observed rates between individual observers as it sets observing conditions for all to the same standards.

    Class: A scale developed by Robert Lunsford to group meteor showers by their intensity:

    Class I: the strongest annual showers with ZHR's normally ten or better.

    Class II: reliable minor showers with ZHR's normally three or better.

    Class III: showers with widely variable rates. They may be strong one year and totally inactive the next.

    Class IV: weak minor showers with ZHR's rarely exceeding three. The study of these showers is best left to experienced observers who use plotting and angular velocity estimates to determine shower association. Observers with less experience are urged to limit their shower associations to showers with a rating of I to III. These showers are also good targets for video and photographic work.

    Moon: the age of the moon in days where 0 is new, 7 is first quarter, 14 is full, and 21 is last quarter. Meteor activity is best seen in the absence of moonlight so showers reaching maximum activity when the moon is less than 10 days old or more than 25 are much more favorably observed than those situated closer to the full moon.

    Information from the "Observer's Handbook 2009" RASC



    Direct download: AAGG_sky_tour_July_2009.mp3
    Category: Sky Tours -- posted at: 12:57 AM
    Comments[2]

    I had forgotten just how much time finals, graduations, weddings, and final paper consume!  The podcast is running behind all of these...expect it around the 9th.

    Sorry everyone...life does get complicated.

    Alice

    Category: Problems -- posted at: 4:32 PM
    Comments[1]

    Astronomy a Go Go! May Sky Tour



    This tool displays the approximate Moon phases for a given month(images are close approximations). For official phase times and dates for this month and past months are available from the U.S. Naval Observatory.

    Astronomical Online Glossary

    Download this month's sky map!

    Skymaps.com is our favorite monthly skymap provider. Download either the

    Northern hemisphere sky map or theSouthern hemisphere sky map so you can follow along with our viewing sessions.
    Creator: Kym Thalassoudis

    Southern Hemisphere Additional Information

    As Astronomy a Go Go! finds its home in the higher Northern latitudes those of you who live south of the equator will benefit from these two Southern Hemisphere sites: Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand's Southern Hemisphere Calendar RASNZ site (absolutely outstanding) and
    Southern Sky Watch.

     

    Planets for May 2009

    April will be a morning viewing month for planets with a lovely lunar meet and greet with Jupiter and Mars and an occultation of Venus. Saturn is available for evening viewers!


    May Morning Planets
    (click images to enlarge)

     


    Beginning of the month


    End of the month

    • Mercury- Quickly receding back towards the Sun and will be in inferior conjunction on May 18th moving into the early morning sky along with Venus, Mars and Jupiter 1.0 mag (1st) to 5.6 mag (21st)
    • Venus- The brightest object low in the morning sky as she moves towards greatest western elongation in June -4.7 mag (1st) to -4.4 mag (21st)
    • Mars- Plays little game of tag with Venus within Pisces this month, Venus trail about 6 degrees behind Mars. 1.2 (1st) to 1.2 mag (21st)
    • Jupiter- Beautiful close to the meridian in the morning sky, rising at midnight for southern observers this month, in June for northern observers. (unless you are in Seattle and we have our perpetual planet zapping cloud banks) -2.2 mag (1st) to -2.2 mag (21st)
    • Saturn- In eastern Leo Saturn's were rings were seemingly flat at the end of April and beginning of May. The rings will open to 4.2 degrees by the 15th, the widest they will be until late November. Saturn begins the month in retrograde motion, becoming stationary on the 17th before resuming eastward motion 0.7 mag (1st) to 0.8 mag (21st)
    • Uranus- In Aquarius 5.9 mag (1st) to 5.9 mag (21st)
    • Neptune- In Capricorn 8.0 mag (1st) to 7.9 mag (21st)
    • Ceresand Eta - Finder chart from the New Zealand RAS (RASNZ) great charts! Northern Hemisphere observers this time you get to flip the chart or stand on your head!
      Vesta chart temporarily missing...use this one until site is corrected

    Key Dates for May 2009

    Days and Times in UT: (help with time)
    Observations are for 10 pm for Northern Hemisphere and 8pm for the Southern Hemisphere.
    Today's sunrise and sunset times or plan ahead using the US Naval Observatory Website

    Occultation information can be found at the IOTA website!

    Astronomical Highlights - May 2009

    1-3 - AAGG will be judging the Astronomy section of the Cascade Challenge!! Go Girl Scouts!
    1 - First Quarter Moon (4 UT)
    6 - Peak of the Eta Aquarid Meteor shower, debris left behind from Halley's Comet
    9 - Full Moon (4:01 UT)
    10 - Moon near Antares (21h UT) Occultation visible from SE Europe, NE Africa and S.Asia, check the IOTA website for occultation information for your area.
    14 - Moon at apogee (404,915 km)
    15 - Shadow transit of Titan on Saturn 5:30-10:35 UT You will need a 8" or better aperture
    17 - Last Quarter Moon (7:26 UT)
    18 - Mercury at inferior conjunction with the Sun passing into the morning sky to join Venus, Mars and Jupiter
    21 - Venus 7 deg S of Moon
    21 - Mars 7 deg S of Moon
    24 - New Moon (12:11 UT)
    25 - Jupiter 0.4 deg S of Neptune
    26 - Moon at perigee (361,153 km)
    27 - Jupiter 0.39 deg SSE of Neptune at 10 UT mag -2.4 and +7.19
    31 - First Quarter Moon 3:22 UT

    Date information courtesy of: RASC Observer's Handbook, Skymaps.com, Astronomical Calendar 2009, CalSky, Skymaps.com. sunrise and sunset times for your home*
    Comparative lengths of day and night

    More sites to help with Virgo hunting

    Start by listening to show 39 from 2007, I take you through one path of 49 galaxies step by step...with pictures too!
    Helpful free maps 7 and 7a
    Alan M. MacRobert's "Mastering the Virgo Cluster" Sky and Telescope, May 1994 pg 42
    -This is the one I carry in my notebook because I love the route and the map.
    Tom Trusock's Cloudy Nights Article
    Steve Gottlieb's Virgo Mainline Article
    A great set of hopping lists from SEDS

    Galaxy hopping in Leo

    Alan MacRobert's Leo hopping article in Sky and Telescope

    Monthly Messier*

    This month we continue our tour of our nearby neighbors outside the Milky May galaxy. Our observing will take in 10 more galaxies. Be ready to look for very faint and small objects. Most are possible to see in binoculars, but you will need a telescope and dark skies to really enjoy the sights. This is the final warm up to prepare us for next month's challenge, navigating the Virgo Cluster of galaxies. When you are done with these objects and give yourself a treat, skip ahead to the summer globular clusters of M3 or M13. While they are not an official part of this month's tour they should never be missed whenever they are available. Besides these bright and spectacular objects are a treat to tired eyes after a night of galaxy hunting. Be careful, these are so bright after the other objects that you might want to wear shades.
    M51
    The famous Whirlpool galaxy in Canes Venatici is a bright face on spiral with a smaller elliptical companion, NGC 5195. Look for a pair of fuzzy patches of light. The slightly larger and brighter one is M51. Make sure to spend some time here as there is almost always some spiral structure to be seen, on good nights the detail possible is unbelievable. This is a difficult but very possible object in binoculars appearing as a hazy patch of light.
    M63
    Another spiral galaxy in Canes Venatici smaller and fainter than M51, but seen more edge on so the galaxy appears as an elongated patch of light with a bright star at one end. Further inspection will show a faint halo around this patch. A difficult object in binoculars.
    M94
    Just past M63 is another galaxy in Canes Vanitici. Look for a bright fuzzy star to find the core of M94, surrounded by a faint haze. A tough binocular object.
    M101
    I consider this face on spiral galaxy in Ursa Major one of the most difficult Messier objects to find in a telescope. This is a large faint patch of light almost as big as the full moon. There are no real condensations so use low power and look for a brighter part of the sky, more of a change in contrast than an object at first glance, which is the galaxy. Dark skies really help in the search of this one and are a to find M101 in binoculars.
    M102
    Not an official Messier object in most references, we will look for the galaxy NGC 5866 which is a somewhat standard insertion. Look for a small, faint patch light that looks like a short fuzzy line.
    M64
    In a telescope this galaxy in Coma Berenices is a fairly bright, slightly oval shaped patch of light. Look for the dark lane which gives this galaxy the common name Black Eye. The galaxy appears as a faint fuzzy patch in binoculars.
    M85
    This elliptical galaxy lies in Coma Berenices just north of the Virgo Cluster of galaxies. This appears as a bright, but small, patch of light with a bright stellar core.
    M49
    This is an elliptical galaxy in Virgo just south of the main cluster of galaxies. M49 is round patch of light with bright center gradually fading to a round halo. M49 looks like a faint fuzzy star in binoculars.
    M61
    This is a face on spiral galaxy just south of M49 in Virgo, but much fainter. Look for a faint, round fuzzy patch of light.
    M104
    This is the well known Sombrero galaxy in Virgo. It is bright edge on spiral galaxy which looks like a bright, elongated streak. It is very possible to see in binoculars.

    From the Tony Cecce, Corning, NY - Twelve Month Tour of The Messier Catalog

    Comets for May 2009

    More comet information at Seiichi Yoshida's comet website. Also checkout Gary Kronk's comet and meteor pages
    Skyhound Comet pages

    Historical and Current Events

    ...Did you know?

    Mark has developed his own website so let's all trot on over and see the pages of wonderful history he has for us this month!

    Help us out by leaving a donation in the ol' PayPal hat

    or write us a favorable review in iTunes of Podcast Pickle or iPodder!

     

    Music Scottish Guitar Quartet -"Romance Within You"
    Angelique Kidjo- "Salala"
    Antonin Bastian- "Tu Cha Cha Cha"

     



    Earth's major motions for 2009

    Perihelion
    Jan 4 15(UT)
    First Cross Quarter Day
    Feb 2-6
    Equinox
    Mar 20 11:44(UT)
    Second Cross Quarter Day
    May 4-7
    Solstice
    June 21 05:45(UT)
    Aphelion
    July 4 02h (UT)
    Third Cross Quarter Day
    Aug 5-8
    Equinox
    Sept 22 21:18(UT)
    Fourth Cross Quarter Day
    Nov 5-8
    Solstice
    Dec 21 17:47(UT)

    Planet Positions for 2009


    2009 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
    Venus Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Tau Gem Cnc Vir Vir Sco Sgr Cap
    Mars Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Psc Ari Tau Tau Gem Cnc Cnc Leo
    Jupiter Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap
    Saturn Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Vir Vir Vir Vir

     

    Interesting Planet Pairing for 2009

    • December 31, 2008 - Jupiter and Mercury - After sunset a little more than one degree apart in Sagittarius. Pull out the binos and telescopes because Mercury will be a mere 15 arcminutes from the globular cluster M75. All three will be together in one field of view in most home binoculars.
    • January 22nd - Venus and Uranus - After sunset 1.3 degrees apart a few days later on the 29th they are joined by a waxing crescent moon.
    • February 23rd - Jupiter, Mars and Mercury - In the early morning sky just before sunrise the trio are in a space about 2 degrees wide. Binoculars will be helpful but beware the quickly rising Sun. The Moon, almost invisible, will be between Mars and the Sun.
    • March 23rd - Mars, Moon, Neptune, and Jupiter - Makes a nice line-up in the morning sky with Neptune just off the tip of the waning crescent moon.
    • April 21st - Venus, Mars, Uranus, waning crescent Moon, Neptune and Jupiter - all in the pre-dawn sky together. First the right triangle of Venus, Mars, and Uranus followed by the waning crescent Moon and then finally by Neptune and Jupiter. Mars will be a faint 1.41 mag so binoculars will be helpful. The next day, possible occultation of Venus by the Moon. Check the IOTA website for occultations in your area.
    • May 25th - Jupiter and Neptune - Jupiter is less than 1/2 degree South of Neptune in the morning sky. If you have ever had problems finding Neptune this would be a good time to try, between now and June.
    • June 19th - Venus and Mars - In the pre-dawn sky just south of a waning crescent Moon. Closer to the Sun is Mercury and the Pleiades.
    • August 17th - Saturn and Mercury - Very close to the Sun low in the evening sky. Much better view for Southern viewers.
    • September 3rd UT 4:43 - Jupiter hides its Galilean moons. Not until 2019 will all of Jupiter's Galilean moons orbit in such a way.
    • September 4th - Saturn - Not exactly a pairing but the Earth will cross the plane of the rings from south to north making the rings invisible
    • October 16th - Mercury, Venus, and Saturn - All lined up in the pre-dawn sky close to the horizon. A faint waning crescent is just south of the trio.
    • December 24th - Jupiter and Neptune - Just after sunset Jupiter and Neptune sit side-by-side just north of delta Capricornus and east of the "42,44,45 Cap Wall"

    Phases of the Moon 2009


    (click to enlarge)

    Universal Time

          NEW MOON    FIRST QUARTER       FULL MOON     LAST QUARTER
    
           d  h  m          d  h  m         d  h  m          d  h  m
           
                     JAN.   4 11 56   JAN. 11  3 27   JAN.  18  2 46
    JAN.  26  7 55   FEB.   2 23 13   FEB.  9 14 49   FEB.  16 21 37
    FEB.  25  1 35   MAR.   4  7 46   MAR. 11  2 38   MAR.  18 17 47 
    MAR.  26 16 06   APR.   2 14 34   APR.  9 14 56   APR.  17 13 36  
    APR.  25  3 23   MAY    1 20 44   MAY   9  4 01   MAY   17  7 26
    MAY   24 12 11   MAY   31  3 22   JUNE  7 18 12   JUNE  15 22 15
    JUNE  22 19 35   JUNE  29 11 28   JULY  7  9 21   JULY  15  9 53  
    JULY  22  2 35   JULY  28 22 00   AUG.  6  0 55   AUG.  13 18 55  
    AUG.  20 10 02   AUG.  27 11 42   SEPT. 4 16 03   SEPT. 12  2 16
    SEPT. 18 18 44   SEPT. 26  4 50   OCT.  4  6 10   OCT.  11  8 56  
    OCT.  18  5 33   OCT.  26  0 42   NOV.  2 19 14   NOV.   9 15 56  
    NOV.  16 19 14   NOV.  24 21 39   DEC.  2  7 30   DEC.   9  0 13  
    DEC.  16 12 02   DEC.  24 17 36   DEC. 31 19 13
    
    

    Eclipses for 2009

     

    2009 January 26
    [ Solar: Annular ]
    2009 February 09
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 07
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 21-22
    [ Solar: Total ]
    2009 August 05-06
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 December 31
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]

     

    January 26 - Annular Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): The first solar eclipse of 2009 occurs at the Moon's ascending node in western Capricornus. An annular eclipse will be visible from a wide track that traverses the Indian Ocean and western Indonesia. A partial eclipse will be seen within the much larger path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes the southern third of Africa, Madagascar, Australia except Tasmania, southeast India, Southeast Asia and Indonesia.

     

    February 09 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The first lunar eclipse of 2009 is one of four such events during the year. The first three eclipses are penumbral while the last (on Dec. 31) is partial. The Feb 09 event is the deepest penumbral eclipse of the year with a penumbral magnitude of 0.899. It will be easily visible to the naked eye as a dusky shading in the northern half of the Moon. The times of the major phases are listed below.

    July 07 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times.): July's penumbral eclipse is only of academic interest since the magnitude is just 0.156. Although the Moon will be above the horizon from most of Canada, the eclipse is so minor as to be completely invisible to the naked eye.

    July 21-22 - Total Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): To make up for the anemic lunar eclipse earlier in the month, a major total eclipse of the Sun occurs two weeks later. The path of the Moon's umbral shadow extends across India, China, a handful of Japanese islands and the South Pacific Ocean (Espenak and Anderson, 2008). A partial eclipse is seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes most of eastern Asia, Indonesia, and the Pacific Ocean.

    August 05-06 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): A shallow penumbral eclipse occurs 15 days after the total solar eclipse. Since its magnitude is only 0.402, it will not be visible to the naked eye.

    December 31 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The last eclipse of 2009 occurs on New Year's Eve. This minor partial lunar eclipse takes place in Gemini, and is visible primarily from the Eastern Hemisphere (Figure 8). Greatest eclipse takes place at 19:23 UT when the eclipse magnitude will reach 0.0763.

    Eclipse information from: NASA Eclipse Homepage, Eclipses Online (HM Nautical Almanac Office, UK in coordination with the U.S. Naval Observatory)

    2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower Activity Period Maximum Radiant Velocity r ZHR Class Moon
        Date S. L. R.A. Dec. km/s        
    Antihelion Source (ANT) Dec 14-Sep 07 - - - - 30 3.0 3 II -
    Quadrantids (QUA) Dec 26-Jan 13 Jan 03 283°16 15:20 +49° 42 2.1 120 I 6
    Alpha Centaurids (ACE) Jan 28-Feb 21 Feb 07 319°2 14:00 -59° 56 2.0 5 II 12
    Delta Leonids (DLE) Feb 15-Mar 10 Feb 25 336° 11:12 +16° 23 3.0 2 II 0
    Gamma Normids (GNO) Feb 25-Mar 22 Mar 13 353° 16:36 -51° 56 2.4 4 II 16
    Lyrids (LYR) Apr 16-Apr 27 Apr 23 033° 18:12 +33° 46 2.1 18 I 27
    Pi Puppids (PPU) Apr 15-Apr 28 Apr 23 033°5 07:20 -45° 18 2.0 var III 27
    Eta Aquarids (ETA) Apr 27-May 23 May 07 047° 22:36 -01° 68 2.4 60 I 12
    Eta Lyrids (ELY) May 06-May 14 May 10 050° 19:22 +43° 43 3.0 3 II 15
    June Bootids (JBO) Jun 22-Jul 02 Jun 27 095°7 14:56 +48° 18 2.2 var III 5
    Piscis Austrinids (PAU) Jul 15-Aug 10 Jul 28 125° 22:44 -30° 35 3.2 5 II 7
    Alpha Capricornids (CAP) Jul 12-Aug 08 Jul 28 125° 20:20 -10° 24 2.5 4 II 7
    Delta Aquarids (SDA) Jul 21-Aug 30 Jul 30 127° 22:42 -17° 43 3.2 20 I 9
    Perseids (PER) Jul 13-Aug 26 Aug 12 140° 03:12 +58° 59 2.6 100 I 20
    Kappa Cygnids (KCG) Aug 03-Aug 25 Aug 17 145° 19:04 +59° 25 3.0 3 II 25
    Alpha Aurigids (AUR) Aug 28-Sep 03 Sep 01 158°6 06:06 +39° 65 2.6 7 II 11
    September Perseids (SPR) Sep 06-Sep 13 Sep 10 168° 03:12 +40° 65 2.9 5 II 19
    Delta Aurigids (DAU) Sep 18-Oct 10 Sep 29 186° 05:52 +49° 64 2.9 2 II 13
    Draconids (GIA) Oct 06-Oct 10 Oct 08 195°4 17:28 +54° 20 2.6 var III 18
    Southern Taurids (STA) Sep 18-Nov 26 Oct 11 198° 02:18 +09° 29 2.3 5 II 21
    Epsilon Geminids (EGE) Oct 18-Oct 21 Oct 20 207° 06:48 +28° 71 3.0 2 II 2
    Orionids (ORI) Sep 28-Nov 10 Oct 21 208° 06:22 +16° 68 2.5 23 I 3
    Leo Minorids (LMI) Oct 17-Oct 27 Oct 23 209° 10:40 +37° 61 2.7 2 II 4
    Northern Taurids (NTA) Oct 20-Nov 29 Nov 13 231° 03:52 +22° 29 2.3 5 II 25
    Leonids (LEO) Nov 07-Nov 28 Nov 18 236° 10:16 +22° 71 2.5 var III 1
    Alpha Monocerotids (AMO) Nov 15-Nov 25 Nov 21 239°32 07:48 +01° 65 2.4 var III 4
    Dec Phoenicids (PHO) Nov 28-Dec 09 Dec 06 254°25 01:12 -53° 18 2.8 var III 18
    Puppid/Velids (PUP) Dec 01-Dec 15 Dec 07 255° 08:12 -45° 40 2.9 10 I 19
    Monocerotids (MON) Dec 06-Dec 20 Dec 07 255° 06:32 +09° 41 3.0 2 II 10
    Sigma Hydrids (HYD) Nov 22-Dec 23 Dec 09 257° 08:24 +03° 60 3.0 3 II 21
    Geminids (GEM) Dec 05-Dec 19 Dec 14 262°2 07:36 +32° 35 2.6 120 I 26
    Coma Berenicids (COM) Dec 10-Jan 25 Dec 19 268° 11:40 +25° 64 3.0 5 II 3
    Ursids (URS) Dec 16-Dec 25 Dec 22 270°7 14:34 +75° 32 3.0 10 I 5

    Information and Table Template Courtesy The American Meteor Society, International Meteor Organization, and Meteors Online.

    Explanation of the 2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower: named for the constellation or closest star within a constellation where the radiant is located at maximum activity.

    Activity Period: the dates when the ZHR (Zenith Hourly Rates) are equal to or greater than one.

    Maximum: the date on which the maximum activity is expected to occur.

    S.L.: the equivalent solar longitude of the date of maximum activity. Solar longitude is measured in degrees (0-359) with 0 occurring at the exact moment of the spring equinox, 90 at the summer solstice, 180 at the autumnal equinox, and 270 at the winter solstice.

    Radiant: the area in the sky where shower meteors seem to appear from. This position is given in right ascension (celestial longitude) and declination (celestial latitude).

    Velocity: the velocity at which shower meteors strike the Earth's atmosphere. The velocity depends on the angle meteoroids (meteors in space) intersect the Earth. Meteoroids orbiting in the opposite direction of the Earth and striking the atmosphere head-on are much faster than those orbiting in the same direction as the Earth. This velocity is measured in kilometers per second.

    r: The Population Index, An estimate of the ratio of the number of meteors in subsequent magnitude classes. Simply stated: the lower the "r" value, the resulting overall mean magnitude of each shower will be brighter. "r" usually ranges from 2.0 (bright) to 3.5 (faint).

    ZHR: Zenith Hourly Rate, the average maximum number of shower meteors visible per hour if the radiant is located exactly overhead and the limiting magnitude equals +6.5. Actual counts rarely reach this figure as the zenith angle of the radiant is usually less and the limiting magnitude is usually lower. ZHR is a useful tool when comparing the actual observed rates between individual observers as it sets observing conditions for all to the same standards.

    Class: A scale developed by Robert Lunsford to group meteor showers by their intensity:

    Class I: the strongest annual showers with ZHR's normally ten or better.

    Class II: reliable minor showers with ZHR's normally three or better.

    Class III: showers with widely variable rates. They may be strong one year and totally inactive the next.

    Class IV: weak minor showers with ZHR's rarely exceeding three. The study of these showers is best left to experienced observers who use plotting and angular velocity estimates to determine shower association. Observers with less experience are urged to limit their shower associations to showers with a rating of I to III. These showers are also good targets for video and photographic work.

    Moon: the age of the moon in days where 0 is new, 7 is first quarter, 14 is full, and 21 is last quarter. Meteor activity is best seen in the absence of moonlight so showers reaching maximum activity when the moon is less than 10 days old or more than 25 are much more favorably observed than those situated closer to the full moon.

    Information from the "Observer's Handbook 2009" RASC



    Direct download: AAGG_sky_tour_May_2009.mp3
    Category: Sky Tours -- posted at: 1:22 AM
    Comments[1]

    Just got back from a weekend starparty and judging event, club general meeting and hubbie's birthday.  Podcast will be edited tonight and up by tomorrow!
    Category: general -- posted at: 1:47 PM
    Comments[2]

    Astronomy a Go Go! Don't Miss the Planets

    Don't forget to step out side for evening and morning planet parade!

    The occultation of VENUS by the MOON Wednesday April 22 check the IOTA website! For occultation information for your area

    Extra special is that Venus and the Moon will be in matching crescent phases! What a treat! Get out the binos and telescope for this one set the alarm!



    Mercury has been great in the evening, a real rare site for those in the high northern latitudes. What starting tonight and for the next week as it creeps towards the Pleiades, the new waxing crecent moon catches the group and then he heads back down to the Sun.



    Information from the "Observer's Handbook 2009" RASC



    Category: Solar system -- posted at: 1:39 PM
    Comments[0]

    I"m not sure what happened to March and April kept reverting to February but I think April is now fixed.  So very sorry.

    The main thing to look for in April is next week so take a look at the calendar.

    Sorry....again.

    Alice

    Category: Problems -- posted at: 1:16 AM
    Comments[0]



    This tool displays the approximate Moon phases for a given month(images are close approximations). For official phase times and dates for this month and past months are available from the U.S. Naval Observatory.

    Astronomical Online Glossary

    Download this month's sky map!

    Skymaps.com is our favorite monthly skymap provider. Download either the

    Northern hemisphere sky map or theSouthern hemisphere sky map so you can follow along with our viewing sessions.
    Creator: Kym Thalassoudis

    Southern Hemisphere Additional Information

    As Astronomy a Go Go! finds its home in the higher Northern latitudes those of you who live south of the equator will benefit from these two Southern Hemisphere sites: Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand's Southern Hemisphere Calendar RASNZ site (absolutely outstanding) and
    Southern Sky Watch.

     

    Planets for April 2009

    April will be a morning viewing month for planets with a lovely lunar meet and greet with Jupiter and Mars and an occultation of Venus. Saturn is available for evening viewers!


    April Morning Planets
    (click images to enlarge)

     


    Beginning of the month

     


    April 21st

     

    • Mercury- In superior conjunction on March 31st look for Mercury at its greatest elongation east on April 26th. This will be the Northern H. best view all year. Look just between the waxing crescent Moon and the horizon just after sunset -2.1 mag (1st) to -0.4 mag (21st)


      April 26th

       

    • Venus- Just stunning in the morning sky growing to -4.7 after mid month. Watch for the lunar occultation starting just around sunrise and ending about an hour later! Large binos and small telescope should catch the action! -3.9 mag (1st) to -4.4 mag (21st)


      Venus just before sunrise passing behind the Moon....and later, after sunrise, reappearing

       

    • Mars- Finally starts to get brighter and over the next few months Mars will run (almost) a circle around Venus as their positions change in relation to Earth. This little game of tag within the constellations will be fun to watch for the next several months. 1.2 (1st) to 1.2 mag (21st)
    • Jupiter- Should be high enough in the morning to be seen. (unless you are in Seattle and we have our perpetual planet zapping cloud banks) Look for Jupiter during the day on the 19th as the Moon passes close by. On the 26th pull out the telescope and see if you can catch the "fake moon" mag 5.9 44 Capricorni -1.9 mag (1st) to -1.9 mag (21st)
    • Saturn- In eastern Leo Saturn's rings are inclined 3.8 deg towards Earth. Definitely a dramatic difference from last year! 0.6 mag (1st) to 0.6 mag (21st)

       

    • Uranus- In Aquarius 5.9 mag (1st) to 5.9 mag (21st)
    • Neptune- In Capricorn 8.0 mag (1st) to 7.9 mag (21st)
    • Ceresand Eta - Finder chart from the New Zealand RAS (RASNZ) great charts! Northern Hemisphere observers this time you get to flip the chart or stand on your head!
      Vesta chart temporarily missing...use this one until site is corrected

    Key Dates for April 2009

    Days and Times in UT: (help with time)
    Observations are for 9 pm for everyone!
    Today's sunrise and sunset times or plan ahead using the US Naval Observatory Website

    Occultation information can be found at the IOTA website!

    Astronomical Highlights - April 2009

    2-5- 100 Hours of Astronomy! AAGG will be at the Museum of Flight in Seattle (look for the TAS Student booth). To find an event near you go to the 100 Hours of Astronomy Website!
    2- First Quarter Moon (14:34 UT)
    4- Moon 1.7 deg S of Beehive (M44) in Cancer
    6,22- Saturn lunar transit event - Mimus eclipses Enceladus (get custom times for your viewing site from SkyCal (also Enceladus and Tethys on the 17th) (use the Saturn applet to find Enceladus)
    7- Moon 6 deg N of Saturn in Leo
    9- Full Moon (14:56 UT)
    10-18- Zodiacal light possible low on the north-northwest horizon (NH)
    13- Antares 0.4 deg S of Moon possible occultation in your area.

    - Double shadow transit on Jupiter (16:56 UT)
    15- Mars 0.5 deg S of Uranus
    16- Moon at apogee (404232 km)
    17- Last Quarter Moon (13:36 UT)
    18- Venus 6 deg N of Mars

    - Eta Aquariids meteor peak - persistent long tail meteors leftovers from Halley's Comet! Unfortunately there is likely to be interference with the Moon
    19- Jupiter 2 deg S of Moon
    20-26- National Dark Sky Week - turn off unnecessary light, change out bulbs to energy efficient low watt bulbs, install motion detectors....do something! :-)
    22- Lyrid meteor shower peak -Not one of the strongest annual showers but should be a good show with very little Moon (3 days until new) leftovers from Comet Thatcher look for ~12 meteors per hour

    - Venus 1.1 deg S of Moon! possible occultation in your area.

    - Mars 6 deg S of Moon
    25- New Moon (3:23 UT)

    - Mercury 1.9 deg S of the Moon and the Pleiades (M45) in Taurus
    28- Moon at perigee (366040 km)
    29- Moon 1.8 deg N of M35 in Gemini

    - Don't forget to visit the International Year of Astronomy Website for a plethora of fantastic activities, events and ideas!

    - Venus at its brightest for the month, -4.5 mag

    Date information courtesy of: RASC Observer's Handbook, Skymaps.com, Astronomical Calendar 2009, CalSky, Skymaps.com. sunrise and sunset times for your home*
    Comparative lengths of day and night

    Monthly Messier*

    This month we will look for 10 objects, 8 open clusters in the southern milky way and a pair of galaxies, all are within reach of binoculars. The open clusters are easy binocular targets and most are visible with the naked eye. M81 and M82 are difficult binocular targets that offer a stunning telescopic view.

    (I'm trying to find out what has happened to the NGC/IC Project homepage. It has been a standard AAGG reference for 3 years but seems to have disappeared! If you have any information on this great site please let me know....until then the images will be from: "Messier45.com" )

     

      M41
      This cluster in Canis Major is visible as a hazy patch to the naked eye just below Sirius. M41 is resolvable in binoculars and appears fairly loose in telescopes at low power.
      M93
      This is a small fuzzy patch of light in Puppis, partially resolvable in binoculars. The hardest part of finding this cluster in binoculars is picking it out of a fairly rich region of the milky way. Use low power to examine this cluster and the surrounding richness in a telescope. Medium power provides a nice view of the cluster itself.
      M47
      A bright cluster in Puppis, easily visible as a hazy patch to the naked eye. Binoculars will show a large hazy patch with many stars resolvable. Telescopes show a fairly loose cluster with stars of wide variety of magnitudes.
      M46
      This cluster is right next to M47 and is also visible to the naked eye. In binoculars M46 appears as a large hazy patch with no stars resolvable, giving a nice contrast to M47. In telescopes at low powers this cluster evenly fills the eyepiece. While you are here go to medium or high power and look for the planetary nebula NGC2438. It will appear as a faint uneven ring, with a blue/green color.
      M50
      An open cluster in Monoceros. This is a small hazy patch in binoculars, partially resolvable. Like M93, the richness of the surrounding field is the only difficulty in finding this object. This is a fairly tight cluster at low power in a telescope.
      M48
      Moving on to Hydra, we find another naked eye cluster. M48 is a large fuzzy patch in binoculars, partially resolvable. Use low to medium power in your telescope for a spectacular view.
      M67
      In the southeast portion of Cancer is another open cluster, barely visible as a fuzzy patch to the naked eye. Binoculars show M67 as a large hazy patch of light, similar to M46. Use low power to resolve this large, rich cluster in a telescope.
      M44
      Known as the Praesepe or Beehive Cluster, this open cluster is easily visible to the naked eye as a large, fuzzy patch bigger than the moon. Binoculars or rich field telescopes provide the best view of M44.
      M81, M82
      This pair of galaxies in Ursa Major are very possible to see in binoculars, they look like a pair of fuzzy stars. Both galaxies will fit into the same low power telescope field. M81 will appear as a large oval gray patch of light. M82 is a pencil like streak of light next to and perpendicular to the long axis of M81.

    From the Tony Cecce, Corning, NY - Twelve Month Tour of The Messier Catalog

    Comets for April 2009

    More comet information at Seiichi Yoshida's comet website. Also checkout Gary Kronk's comet and meteor pages
    Skyhound Comet pages

    Historical and Current Events

    ...Did you know?

    Mark has developed his own website so let's all trot on over and see the pages of wonderful history he has for us this month!

     

    Help us out by leaving a donation in the ol' PayPal hat

    or write us a favorable review in iTunes of Podcast Pickle or iPodder!

     

    Music Scottish Guitar Quartet -"Romance Within You"
    Marqui Adora- "Catch the Sun"
    Sean Wiggins- "Mercury in Retrograde"

     



    Earth's major motions for 2009

    Perihelion
    Jan 4 15(UT)
    First Cross Quarter Day
    Feb 2-6
    Equinox
    Mar 20 11:44(UT)
    Second Cross Quarter Day
    May 4-7
    Solstice
    June 21 05:45(UT)
    Aphelion
    July 4 02h (UT)
    Third Cross Quarter Day
    Aug 5-8
    Equinox
    Sept 22 21:18(UT)
    Fourth Cross Quarter Day
    Nov 5-8
    Solstice
    Dec 21 17:47(UT)

     

    Planet Positions for 2009


    2009JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
    VenusSgrCapAqrPscTauGemCncVirVirScoSgrCap
    MarsSgrCapAqrPscPscAriTauTauGemCncCncLeo
    JupiterCapCapCapCapCapCapCapCapCapCapCapCap
    SaturnLeoLeoLeoLeoLeoLeoLeoLeoVirVirVirVir

     

    Interesting Planet Pairing for 2009

    • December 31, 2008 - Jupiter and Mercury - After sunset a little more than one degree apart in Sagittarius. Pull out the binos and telescopes because Mercury will be a mere 15 arcminutes from the globular cluster M75. All three will be together in one field of view in most home binoculars.
    • January 22nd - Venus and Uranus - After sunset 1.3 degrees apart a few days later on the 29th they are joined by a waxing crescent moon.
    • February 23rd - Jupiter, Mars and Mercury - In the early morning sky just before sunrise the trio are in a space about 2 degrees wide. Binoculars will be helpful but beware the quickly rising Sun. The Moon, almost invisible, will be between Mars and the Sun.
    • March 23rd - Mars, Moon, Neptune, and Jupiter - Makes a nice line-up in the morning sky with Neptune just off the tip of the waning crescent moon.
    • April 21st - Venus, Mars, Uranus, waning crescent Moon, Neptune and Jupiter - all in the pre-dawn sky together. First the right triangle of Venus, Mars, and Uranus followed by the waning crescent Moon and then finally by Neptune and Jupiter. Mars will be a faint 1.41 mag so binoculars will be helpful. The next day, possible occultation of Venus by the Moon. Check the IOTA website for occultations in your area.
    • May 25th - Jupiter and Neptune - Jupiter is less than 1/2 degree South of Neptune in the morning sky. If you have ever had problems finding Neptune this would be a good time to try, between now and June.
    • June 19th - Venus and Mars - In the pre-dawn sky just south of a waning crescent Moon. Closer to the Sun is Mercury and the Pleiades.
    • August 17th - Saturn and Mercury - Very close to the Sun low in the evening sky. Much better view for Southern viewers.
    • September 3rd UT 4:43 - Jupiter hides its Galilean moons. Not until 2019 will all of Jupiter's Galilean moons orbit in such a way.
    • September 4th - Saturn - Not exactly a pairing but the Earth will cross the plane of the rings from south to north making the rings invisible
    • October 16th - Mercury, Venus, and Saturn - All lined up in the pre-dawn sky close to the horizon. A faint waning crescent is just south of the trio.
    • December 24th - Jupiter and Neptune - Just after sunset Jupiter and Neptune sit side-by-side just north of delta Capricornus and east of the "42,44,45 Cap Wall"

    Phases of the Moon 2009


    (click to enlarge)

    Universal Time

          NEW MOON    FIRST QUARTER       FULL MOON     LAST QUARTER

    d h m d h m d h m d h m

    JAN. 4 11 56 JAN. 11 3 27 JAN. 18 2 46
    JAN. 26 7 55 FEB. 2 23 13 FEB. 9 14 49 FEB. 16 21 37
    FEB. 25 1 35 MAR. 4 7 46 MAR. 11 2 38 MAR. 18 17 47
    MAR. 26 16 06 APR. 2 14 34 APR. 9 14 56 APR. 17 13 36
    APR. 25 3 23 MAY 1 20 44 MAY 9 4 01 MAY 17 7 26
    MAY 24 12 11 MAY 31 3 22 JUNE 7 18 12 JUNE 15 22 15
    JUNE 22 19 35 JUNE 29 11 28 JULY 7 9 21 JULY 15 9 53
    JULY 22 2 35 JULY 28 22 00 AUG. 6 0 55 AUG. 13 18 55
    AUG. 20 10 02 AUG. 27 11 42 SEPT. 4 16 03 SEPT. 12 2 16
    SEPT. 18 18 44 SEPT. 26 4 50 OCT. 4 6 10 OCT. 11 8 56
    OCT. 18 5 33 OCT. 26 0 42 NOV. 2 19 14 NOV. 9 15 56
    NOV. 16 19 14 NOV. 24 21 39 DEC. 2 7 30 DEC. 9 0 13
    DEC. 16 12 02 DEC. 24 17 36 DEC. 31 19 13

    Eclipses for 2009

     

     

     

    2009 January 26
    [ Solar: Annular ]
    2009 February 09
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 07
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 21-22
    [ Solar: Total ]
    2009 August 05-06
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 December 31
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]

     

    January 26 - Annular Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): The first solar eclipse of 2009 occurs at the Moon's ascending node in western Capricornus. An annular eclipse will be visible from a wide track that traverses the Indian Ocean and western Indonesia. A partial eclipse will be seen within the much larger path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes the southern third of Africa, Madagascar, Australia except Tasmania, southeast India, Southeast Asia and Indonesia.

     

    February 09 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The first lunar eclipse of 2009 is one of four such events during the year. The first three eclipses are penumbral while the last (on Dec. 31) is partial. The Feb 09 event is the deepest penumbral eclipse of the year with a penumbral magnitude of 0.899. It will be easily visible to the naked eye as a dusky shading in the northern half of the Moon. The times of the major phases are listed below.

    July 07 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times.): July's penumbral eclipse is only of academic interest since the magnitude is just 0.156. Although the Moon will be above the horizon from most of Canada, the eclipse is so minor as to be completely invisible to the naked eye.

    July 21-22 - Total Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): To make up for the anemic lunar eclipse earlier in the month, a major total eclipse of the Sun occurs two weeks later. The path of the Moon's umbral shadow extends across India, China, a handful of Japanese islands and the South Pacific Ocean (Espenak and Anderson, 2008). A partial eclipse is seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes most of eastern Asia, Indonesia, and the Pacific Ocean.

    August 05-06 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): A shallow penumbral eclipse occurs 15 days after the total solar eclipse. Since its magnitude is only 0.402, it will not be visible to the naked eye.

    December 31 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The last eclipse of 2009 occurs on New Year's Eve. This minor partial lunar eclipse takes place in Gemini, and is visible primarily from the Eastern Hemisphere (Figure 8). Greatest eclipse takes place at 19:23 UT when the eclipse magnitude will reach 0.0763.

    Eclipse information from: NASA Eclipse Homepage, Eclipses Online (HM Nautical Almanac Office, UK in coordination with the U.S. Naval Observatory)

    2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    ShowerActivity PeriodMaximumRadiantVelocityrZHRClassMoon
      DateS. L.R.A.Dec.km/s    
    Antihelion Source (ANT) Dec 14-Sep 07----303.03II-
    Quadrantids (QUA) Dec 26-Jan 13Jan 03 283°16 15:20 +49°422.1120I6
    Alpha Centaurids (ACE) Jan 28-Feb 21Feb 07 319°2 14:00 -59°562.05II12
    Delta Leonids (DLE)Feb 15-Mar 10Feb 25 336° 11:12 +16°233.02II0
    Gamma Normids (GNO) Feb 25-Mar 22Mar 13 353° 16:36 -51°562.44II16
    Lyrids (LYR) Apr 16-Apr 27Apr 23 033° 18:12 +33°462.118I27
    Pi Puppids (PPU) Apr 15-Apr 28Apr 23 033°5 07:20 -45°182.0varIII27
    Eta Aquarids (ETA) Apr 27-May 23May 07047° 22:36 -01°682.460I12
    Eta Lyrids (ELY) May 06-May 14May 10050°19:22 +43°433.03II15
    June Bootids (JBO) Jun 22-Jul 02Jun 27 095°7 14:56 +48°182.2varIII5
    Piscis Austrinids (PAU) Jul 15-Aug 10Jul 28 125° 22:44 -30°353.25II7
    Alpha Capricornids (CAP) Jul 12-Aug 08Jul 28 125° 20:20 -10°242.54II7
    Delta Aquarids (SDA) Jul 21-Aug 30Jul 30 127° 22:42 -17°433.220I9
    Perseids (PER) Jul 13-Aug 26Aug 12 140° 03:12 +58°592.6100I20
    Kappa Cygnids (KCG) Aug 03-Aug 25Aug 17 145° 19:04 +59°253.03II25
    Alpha Aurigids (AUR) Aug 28-Sep 03Sep 01 158°6 06:06 +39°652.67II11
    September Perseids (SPR) Sep 06-Sep 13Sep 10 168° 03:12 +40°652.95II19
    Delta Aurigids (DAU) Sep 18-Oct 10Sep 29 186° 05:52 +49°642.92II13
    Draconids (GIA) Oct 06-Oct 10Oct 08 195°4 17:28 +54°202.6varIII18
    Southern Taurids (STA) Sep 18-Nov 26Oct 11 198° 02:18 +09°292.35II21
    Epsilon Geminids (EGE) Oct 18-Oct 21Oct 20 207° 06:48 +28°713.02II2
    Orionids (ORI) Sep 28-Nov 10Oct 21 208° 06:22 +16°682.523I3
    Leo Minorids (LMI) Oct 17-Oct 27Oct 23 209° 10:40 +37°612.72II4
    Northern Taurids (NTA) Oct 20-Nov 29Nov 13 231° 03:52 +22°292.35II25
    Leonids (LEO) Nov 07-Nov 28Nov 18 236° 10:16 +22°712.5varIII1
    Alpha Monocerotids (AMO) Nov 15-Nov 25Nov 21 239°32 07:48 +01°652.4varIII4
    Dec Phoenicids (PHO) Nov 28-Dec 09Dec 06 254°25 01:12 -53°182.8varIII18
    Puppid/Velids (PUP) Dec 01-Dec 15Dec 07255° 08:12 -45°402.910I19
    Monocerotids (MON) Dec 06-Dec 20Dec 07 255° 06:32 +09°413.02II10
    Sigma Hydrids (HYD) Nov 22-Dec 23Dec 09 257° 08:24 +03°603.03II21
    Geminids (GEM) Dec 05-Dec 19Dec 14 262°2 07:36 +32°352.6120I26
    Coma Berenicids (COM) Dec 10-Jan 25Dec 19 268° 11:40 +25°643.05II3
    Ursids (URS) Dec 16-Dec 25Dec 22 270°7 14:34 +75°323.010I5

    Information and Table Template Courtesy The American Meteor Society, International Meteor Organization, and Meteors Online.

    Explanation of the 2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower: named for the constellation or closest star within a constellation where the radiant is located at maximum activity.

    Activity Period: the dates when the ZHR (Zenith Hourly Rates) are equal to or greater than one.

    Maximum: the date on which the maximum activity is expected to occur.

    S.L.: the equivalent solar longitude of the date of maximum activity. Solar longitude is measured in degrees (0-359) with 0 occurring at the exact moment of the spring equinox, 90 at the summer solstice, 180 at the autumnal equinox, and 270 at the winter solstice.

    Radiant: the area in the sky where shower meteors seem to appear from. This position is given in right ascension (celestial longitude) and declination (celestial latitude).

    Velocity: the velocity at which shower meteors strike the Earth's atmosphere. The velocity depends on the angle meteoroids (meteors in space) intersect the Earth. Meteoroids orbiting in the opposite direction of the Earth and striking the atmosphere head-on are much faster than those orbiting in the same direction as the Earth. This velocity is measured in kilometers per second.

    r: The Population Index, An estimate of the ratio of the number of meteors in subsequent magnitude classes. Simply stated: the lower the "r" value, the resulting overall mean magnitude of each shower will be brighter. "r" usually ranges from 2.0 (bright) to 3.5 (faint).

    ZHR: Zenith Hourly Rate, the average maximum number of shower meteors visible per hour if the radiant is located exactly overhead and the limiting magnitude equals +6.5. Actual counts rarely reach this figure as the zenith angle of the radiant is usually less and the limiting magnitude is usually lower. ZHR is a useful tool when comparing the actual observed rates between individual observers as it sets observing conditions for all to the same standards.

    Class: A scale developed by Robert Lunsford to group meteor showers by their intensity:

    Class I: the strongest annual showers with ZHR's normally ten or better.

    Class II: reliable minor showers with ZHR's normally three or better.

    Class III: showers with widely variable rates. They may be strong one year and totally inactive the next.

    Class IV: weak minor showers with ZHR's rarely exceeding three. The study of these showers is best left to experienced observers who use plotting and angular velocity estimates to determine shower association. Observers with less experience are urged to limit their shower associations to showers with a rating of I to III. These showers are also good targets for video and photographic work.

    Moon: the age of the moon in days where 0 is new, 7 is first quarter, 14 is full, and 21 is last quarter. Meteor activity is best seen in the absence of moonlight so showers reaching maximum activity when the moon is less than 10 days old or more than 25 are much more favorably observed than those situated closer to the full moon.

     

    Information from the "Observer's Handbook 2009" RASC



    Direct download: AAGG_sky_tour_April_2009.mp3
    Category: Sky Tours -- posted at: 2:32 PM
    Comments[0]

    Astronomy a Go Go! March Sky Tour



    This tool displays the approximate Moon phases for a given month(images are close approximations). For official phase times and dates for this month and past months are available from the U.S. Naval Observatory.

    Astronomical Online Glossary

    Download this month's sky map!

    Skymaps.com is our favorite monthly skymap provider. Download either the

    Northern hemisphere sky map or theSouthern hemisphere sky map so you can follow along with our viewing sessions.
    Creator: Kym Thalassoudis

    Southern Hemisphere Additional Information

    As Astronomy a Go Go! finds its home in the higher Northern latitudes those of you who live south of the equator will benefit from these two Southern Hemisphere sites: Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand's Southern Hemisphere Calendar RASNZ site (absolutely outstanding) and
    Southern Sky Watch.

     

    Planets for March 2009

    This year will be a morning viewing year but we still have bright Venus in the early evening and Saturn for late night viewers!


    March Morning Planets (March 1st) (click image to enlarge)

     

    • Mercury- By the 1st of March Mercury will neck-and-neck with Mars. 0.6 mag (1st) to 0.0 mag (21st)
    • Venus- Make sure you share Venus with your friends and let them see the wonderful 'phases' she shares with our Moon. -4.4 mag (1st) to -4.5 mag (21st)
    • Mars- Start looking later in the month when on the 24th it is paired with Mercury. 1.3 (1st) to 1.3 mag (21st)
    • Jupiter- -1.9 mag (1st) to -1.9 mag (21st)
    • Saturn- In eastern Leo Saturn's rings are inclined 1.74 beg towards Earth and will be at opposition on March 8th 0.9 mag (1st) to 0.9 mag (21st)
    • Uranus- In Aquarius 5.9 mag (1st) to 5.9 mag (21st)
    • Neptune- In Capricorn 8.0 mag (1st) to 8.0 mag (21st)
    • Ceresand Eta - Finder chart from the New Zealand RAS (RASNZ) great charts! Northern Hemisphere observers this time you get to flip the chart or stand on your head!
      Vesta chart temporarily missing...use this one until site is corrected

    Key Dates for March 2009

    Days and Times in UT: (help with time)
    Observations are for 10 pm for the mid-southern latitudes and for 7 pm for the mid-northern latitudes.
    Today's sunrise and sunset times or plan ahead using the US Naval Observatory Website

    Occultation information can be found at the IOTA website!

    Astronomical Highlights - March 2009

    Watch for Comet Lulin throughout the beginning of the month, crusing along the ecliptic, from east to west.
    4 - First Quarter Moon
    7 - Moon at perigee (367017 km)
    11 - Full Moon (2:38 UT)
    13 - Zodiacal Lights - visible in Northern latitudes in the West in the evening twilight
    13 - Uranus in conjunction with the Sun...moving into the morning
    18 - Last Quarter Moon
    17 - Antares 0.2 deg S of Moon possible occultation in your area.
    19 - Moon at apogee (404299 km)
    - Mercury 0.6 deg S of Jupiter
    26 - New Moon (16:06 UT)

    Date information courtesy of: RASC Observer's Handbook, Skymaps.com, Astronomical Calendar 2009, CalSky, Skymaps.com. sunrise and sunset times for your home*
    Comparative lengths of day and night

    Monthly Messier*

    This month we will look for 10 objects, 8 open clusters in the southern milky way and a pair of galaxies, all are within reach of binoculars. The open clusters are easy binocular targets and most are visible with the naked eye. M81 and M82 are difficult binocular targets that offer a stunning telescopic view.

    (I'm trying to find out what has happened to the NGC/IC Project homepage. It has been a standard AAGG reference for 3 years but seems to have disappeared! If you have any information on this great site please let me know....until then the images will be from: "Messier45.com" )

      M41
      This cluster in Canis Major is visible as a hazy patch to the naked eye just below Sirius. M41 is resolvable in binoculars and appears fairly loose in telescopes at low power.
      M93
      This is a small fuzzy patch of light in Puppis, partially resolvable in binoculars. The hardest part of finding this cluster in binoculars is picking it out of a fairly rich region of the milky way. Use low power to examine this cluster and the surrounding richness in a telescope. Medium power provides a nice view of the cluster itself.
      M47
      A bright cluster in Puppis, easily visible as a hazy patch to the naked eye. Binoculars will show a large hazy patch with many stars resolvable. Telescopes show a fairly loose cluster with stars of wide variety of magnitudes.
      M46
      This cluster is right next to M47 and is also visible to the naked eye. In binoculars M46 appears as a large hazy patch with no stars resolvable, giving a nice contrast to M47. In telescopes at low powers this cluster evenly fills the eyepiece. While you are here go to medium or high power and look for the planetary nebula NGC2438. It will appear as a faint uneven ring, with a blue/green color.
      M50
      An open cluster in Monoceros. This is a small hazy patch in binoculars, partially resolvable. Like M93, the richness of the surrounding field is the only difficulty in finding this object. This is a fairly tight cluster at low power in a telescope.
      M48
      Moving on to Hydra, we find another naked eye cluster. M48 is a large fuzzy patch in binoculars, partially resolvable. Use low to medium power in your telescope for a spectacular view.
      M67
      In the southeast portion of Cancer is another open cluster, barely visible as a fuzzy patch to the naked eye. Binoculars show M67 as a large hazy patch of light, similar to M46. Use low power to resolve this large, rich cluster in a telescope.
      M44
      Known as the Praesepe or Beehive Cluster, this open cluster is easily visible to the naked eye as a large, fuzzy patch bigger than the moon. Binoculars or rich field telescopes provide the best view of M44.
      M81, M82
      This pair of galaxies in Ursa Major are very possible to see in binoculars, they look like a pair of fuzzy stars. Both galaxies will fit into the same low power telescope field. M81 will appear as a large oval gray patch of light. M82 is a pencil like streak of light next to and perpendicular to the long axis of M81.

    From the Tony Cecce, Corning, NY - Twelve Month Tour of The Messier Catalog

    Comets for March 2009

    More comet information at Seiichi Yoshida's comet website. Also checkout Gary Kronk's comet and meteor pages
    Skyhound Comet pages

    Historical and Current Events

    ...Did you know?

    Mark has developed his own website so let's all trot on over and see the pages of wonderful history he has for us this month!

    Help us out by leaving a donation in the ol' PayPal hat

    or write us a favorable review in iTunes of Podcast Pickle or iPodder!

     

    Music Scottish Guitar Quartet -"Romance Within You"
    Great Big Sea- "French Shore"
    Amaryoni- "Woza"

    Category: Sky Tours -- posted at: 2:29 PM

    Space Weather News for Feb. 23, 2009
    http://spaceweather.com

    COSMIC COINCIDENCE: What are the odds? On Tuesday, Feb. 24th, Saturn and Comet Lulin will converge in the constellation Leo only 2 degrees apart. At the same time, Comet Lulin will be making its closest approach to Earth--the comet at its best!-- while four of Saturn's moons transit the disk of the ringed planet in view of backyard telescopes. Oh, and the Moon will be New, providing dark skies for anyone who wishes to see the show.

    The best time to look is around 1 a.m. Tuesday morning (your local time) when the planet-comet combo ascend high in the southern sky. To the unaided eye, Comet Lulin looks like a faint patch of gas floating next to golden Saturn. Point your backyard telescope at that patch and you will see a lovely green comet with a double tail.

    Visit http://spaceweather.com for full coverage including photos, sky maps, and a live webcast.

    Geographic Notes: Comet Lulin is visible from all parts of the globe--all longitudes and both hemispheres. Directions are reversed in the southern hemisphere; there the comet is located in the northern sky around 1 am.  Saturn is globally visible, too, but the special quadruple transit of Saturn's moons starting around 3 a.m. PST on Feb. 24th is visible only to observers around the Pacific Rim.  Details may be found here: http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2009/19feb_quadrupletransit.htm
    Category: News Updates -- posted at: 11:27 AM
    Comments[1]

    Astronomy a Go Go! February Sky Tour



    This tool displays the approximate Moon phases for a given month(images are close approximations). For official phase times and dates for this month and past months are available from the U.S. Naval Observatory.

    Astronomical Online Glossary

    Download this month's sky map!

    Skymaps.com is our favorite monthly skymap provider. Download either the

    Northern hemisphere sky map or theSouthern hemisphere sky map so you can follow along with our viewing sessions.
    Creator: Kym Thalassoudis

    Southern Hemisphere Additional Information

    As Astronomy a Go Go! finds its home in the higher Northern latitudes those of you who live south of the equator will benefit from these two Southern Hemisphere sites: Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand's Southern Hemisphere Calendar RASNZ site (absolutely outstanding) and
    Southern Sky Watch.

     

    Planets for February 2009

    This year will be a morning viewing year but we still have bright Venus in the early evening and Saturn for late night viewers!


    Feb Morning Planets (Feb 22nd) (click image to enlarge)

     

    • Mercury- Now a morning planet, Mercury starts the month further away from the Sun that the other two morning planets, Jupiter and Mars, and its angle favors the S.hemisphere. Look for greatest elongation on the 13th. Mercury has several close pairing this month with Jupiter on the 20th and Mars on the 24th. By the 1st of March Mercury will neck-and-neck with Mars. 0.6 mag (1st) to 0.0 mag (21st)
    • Venus- Venus has been distancing herself from the Sun for months, a sparkling beacon in the early evening sky, even shining through the clouds from time to time. Having reached greatest elongation on the Jan 14, a full 47 deg east of the Sun, Venus begins her descent back towards the Sun. She was paired nicely with the moon at the beginning of the month and will be again at the end of the month with the next waxing crescent. RASC Observing guides recommend watching for rare green and blue flashes as Venus sets through strong inversion layers (possibly the only good thing about inversion layers!) Make sure you share Venus with your friends and let them see the wonderful 'phases' she shares with our Moon. -4.4 mag (1st) to -4.5 mag (21st)
    • Mars- Has moved into the morning sky this month and will slowly crawl away from the Sun all month. Start looking later in the month when on the 24th it is paired with Mercury. 1.3 (1st) to 1.3 mag (21st)
    • Jupiter- Still too close to the Sun at the beginning of the month. By mid-month Jupiter will start to stand out in the pre-dawn sky on a flat horizon growing stronger towards the end of the month and into March -1.9 mag (1st) to -1.9 mag (21st)
    • Saturn- In eastern Leo Saturn's rings are inclined 1.74 beg towards Earth and will be at opposition on March 8th 0.9 mag (1st) to 0.9 mag (21st)
    • Uranus- In Aquarius 5.9 mag (1st) to 5.9 mag (21st)
    • Neptune- In Capricorn 8.0 mag (1st) to 8.0 mag (21st)
    • Ceresand Eta - Finder chart from the New Zealand RAS (RASNZ) great charts! Northern Hemisphere observers this time you get to flip the chart or stand on your head!
      Vesta chart temporarily missing...use this one until site is corrected

    Key Dates for February 2009

    Days and Times in UT: (help with time)
    Observations are for 10 pm for the mid-southern latitudes and for 7 pm for the mid-northern latitudes.
    Today's sunrise and sunset times or plan ahead using the US Naval Observatory Website

    Occultation information can be found at the IOTA website!

    Astronomical Highlights - February 2009

    2 - First Quarter Moon

    - First Cross Quarter Day (halfway between Solstice and the Equinox) also Groundhog's Day or Candlemass.
    7 - Moon at perigee (361488 km)
    9 - Full Moon (14:49 UT)
    9 - Penumbral Eclipse of the Moon - from 12:37 UT to mid-eclipse 14:38 UT to 16:40 UT - The Northern (Mare Frigoris) edge of the Moon will appear dimmer as it is closer to the umbra. Visible from NW North America, Pacific, Asia, Australia and New Zealand.
    11 - Equation of Time is at the minimum for the year, -14.26 minutes (Sun running slow...at 12noon (solar mean) clock time the Sun still needs 14.26 minutes to get to "noon"
    12 - Zodiacal Lights - visible in Northern latitudes in the west after sunset
    13 - Mercury at greatest elongation W (26deg)

    - Neptune in conjunction with the Sun...moving into the morning
    14 - Comet Lulin 3 deg from Spica (5h UT) Mag +6

    - Valentine's Day (hint, hint)
    16 - Last Quarter Moon
    17 - Mars 0.6 deg S of Jupiter
    17 - Antares 0.04 deg S of Moon possible occultation in your area.
    19 - Moon at apogee (405129 km)

    - Venus greatest illuminated extent** - Venus brightest at -4.6 mag
    21 - Venus at perihelion
    22 - Mercury 1.1 deg S of Moon possible occultation in your area.
    23 - Jupiter 0.7 deg S of Moon possible occultation in your area.

    - Mars 1.7 deg S of Moon
    24 - Comet Lulin 2 deg from Saturn Mag +5

    - Mercury 0.6 deg S of Jupiter
    25 - New Moon (1:35 UT)

    - Ceres at opposition and closer to Earth than it will be for another 2000 years. On this date it makes the North point of a "Saturn-Regulus-Ceres" equilateral triangle.
    27 - Moon and Venus make a lovely pair

    - Uranus at aphelion (20+AU from Sun) Uranus has an 84 year orbit

    ** "A descriptive parameter dubbed "illuminated extent" is proposed, defined as the total solid angle subtended, from an astronomer's view, by the illuminated portion of an object. A celestial body exhibiting wide variance in both phase and angular size - an inferior planet primarily - is well characterized by this parameter, for its peak value denotes when the luminous image maximally covers a telescope's focal surface, a prime viewing circumstance. " Gingrich, M Strolling Astron., Vol. 42, No. 1, p. 18 - 22

    Date information courtesy of: RASC Observer's Handbook, Skymaps.com, Astronomical Calendar 2009, CalSky, Skymaps.com. sunrise and sunset times for your home*
    Comparative lengths of day and night

    Monthly Messier*

    Wahoo! This month has objects which are big, bright and easy to find!

    (I'm trying to find out what has happened to the NGC/IC Project homepage. It has been a standard AAGG reference for 3 years but seems to have disappeared! If you have any information on this great site please let me know....until then the images will be from: "Messier45.com" )

    • M1 - The Crab nebula is a supernova remnant in Taurus. It is a hazy patch in small telescopes, large scopes can resolve some detail. It is difficult but possible to see in binoculars.
    • M45 - The Pleiades are a large open cluster in Taurus. Easy to resolve six stars naked eye. Binoculars provide the best view. Large telescopes can show some nebulosity.
    • M35, M37, M36, M38 - A series of open clusters in the winter milky way. M35 is in Gemini, the others are in Auriga. All can be seen naked eye as faint fuzzy stars, binoculars reveal fuzzy patches, low power telescopes can resolve these rich clusters.
    • M42 (seen here with M43), M43 - M42 is the great Orion Nebula. It can be seen as small fuzzy patch naked eye. Binoculars show some detail, and the view is superb in most any scope. M43 is a small region of nebulosity next to M42, and probably requires the use of a telescope to view. Use low to moderate powers for the best view of this pair.
    • M78 - A small emission nebula in Orion, a tough binocular object. Best viewed in a telescope at moderate powers.
    • M79 - One of the smallest and dimmest globular clusters in the catalog. A tough binocular object in Lepus, best viewed in a telescope at moderate powers.

    From the Astronomical Connection and the Moncton Center in Canada, images vary.

    Comets for February 2009

    More comet information at Seiichi Yoshida's comet website. Also checkout Gary Kronk's comet and meteor pages
    Skyhound Comet pages

    Historical and Current Events

    ...Did you know?

    Mark has developed his own website so let's all trot on over and see the pages of wonderful history he has for us this month!

    Help us out by leaving a donation in the ol' PayPal hat

    or write us a favorable review in iTunes of Podcast Pickle or iPodder!

     

    Music Scottish Guitar Quartet -"Romance Within You"
    Great Big Sea- "French Shore"
    Amaryoni- "Woza"

     



    Earth's major motions for 2009

    Perihelion
    Jan 4 15(UT)
    First Cross Quarter Day
    Feb 2-6
    Equinox
    Mar 20 11:44(UT)
    Second Cross Quarter Day
    May 4-7
    Solstice
    June 21 05:45(UT)
    Aphelion
    July 4 02h (UT)
    Third Cross Quarter Day
    Aug 5-8
    Equinox
    Sept 22 21:18(UT)
    Fourth Cross Quarter Day
    Nov 5-8
    Solstice
    Dec 21 17:47(UT)

    Planet Positions for 2009


    2009 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
    Venus Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Tau Gem Cnc Vir Vir Sco Sgr Cap
    Mars Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Psc Ari Tau Tau Gem Cnc Cnc Leo
    Jupiter Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap
    Saturn Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Vir Vir Vir Vir

     

    Interesting Planet Pairing for 2009

    • December 31, 2008 - Jupiter and Mercury - After sunset a little more than one degree apart in Sagittarius. Pull out the binos and telescopes because Mercury will be a mere 15 arcminutes from the globular cluster M75. All three will be together in one field of view in most home binoculars.
    • January 22nd - Venus and Uranus - After sunset 1.3 degrees apart a few days later on the 29th they are joined by a waxing crescent moon.
    • February 23rd - Jupiter, Mars and Mercury - In the early morning sky just before sunrise the trio are in a space about 2 degrees wide. Binoculars will be helpful but beware the quickly rising Sun. The Moon, almost invisible, will be between Mars and the Sun.
    • March 23rd - Mars, Moon, Neptune, and Jupiter - Makes a nice line-up in the morning sky with Neptune just off the tip of the waning crescent moon.
    • April 21st - Venus, Mars, Uranus, waning crescent Moon, Neptune and Jupiter - all in the pre-dawn sky together. First the right triangle of Venus, Mars, and Uranus followed by the waning crescent Moon and then finally by Neptune and Jupiter. Mars will be a faint 1.41 mag so binoculars will be helpful. The next day, possible occultation of Venus by the Moon. Check the IOTA website for occultations in your area.
    • May 25th - Jupiter and Neptune - Jupiter is less than 1/2 degree South of Neptune in the morning sky. If you have ever had problems finding Neptune this would be a good time to try, between now and June.
    • June 19th - Venus and Mars - In the pre-dawn sky just south of a waning crescent Moon. Closer to the Sun is Mercury and the Pleiades.
    • August 17th - Saturn and Mercury - Very close to the Sun low in the evening sky. Much better view for Southern viewers.
    • September 3rd UT 4:43 - Jupiter hides its Galilean moons. Not until 2019 will all of Jupiter's Galilean moons orbit in such a way.
    • September 4th - Saturn - Not exactly a pairing but the Earth will cross the plane of the rings from south to north making the rings invisible
    • October 16th - Mercury, Venus, and Saturn - All lined up in the pre-dawn sky close to the horizon. A faint waning crescent is just south of the trio.
    • December 24th - Jupiter and Neptune - Just after sunset Jupiter and Neptune sit side-by-side just north of delta Capricornus and east of the "42,44,45 Cap Wall"

    Phases of the Moon 2009


    (click to enlarge)

    Universal Time

          NEW MOON    FIRST QUARTER       FULL MOON     LAST QUARTER

    d h m d h m d h m d h m

    JAN. 4 11 56 JAN. 11 3 27 JAN. 18 2 46
    JAN. 26 7 55 FEB. 2 23 13 FEB. 9 14 49 FEB. 16 21 37
    FEB. 25 1 35 MAR. 4 7 46 MAR. 11 2 38 MAR. 18 17 47
    MAR. 26 16 06 APR. 2 14 34 APR. 9 14 56 APR. 17 13 36
    APR. 25 3 23 MAY 1 20 44 MAY 9 4 01 MAY 17 7 26
    MAY 24 12 11 MAY 31 3 22 JUNE 7 18 12 JUNE 15 22 15
    JUNE 22 19 35 JUNE 29 11 28 JULY 7 9 21 JULY 15 9 53
    JULY 22 2 35 JULY 28 22 00 AUG. 6 0 55 AUG. 13 18 55
    AUG. 20 10 02 AUG. 27 11 42 SEPT. 4 16 03 SEPT. 12 2 16
    SEPT. 18 18 44 SEPT. 26 4 50 OCT. 4 6 10 OCT. 11 8 56
    OCT. 18 5 33 OCT. 26 0 42 NOV. 2 19 14 NOV. 9 15 56
    NOV. 16 19 14 NOV. 24 21 39 DEC. 2 7 30 DEC. 9 0 13
    DEC. 16 12 02 DEC. 24 17 36 DEC. 31 19 13

    Eclipses for 2009

     

    2009 January 26
    [ Solar: Annular ]
    2009 February 09
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 07
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 21-22
    [ Solar: Total ]
    2009 August 05-06
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 December 31
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]

     

    January 26 - Annular Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): The first solar eclipse of 2009 occurs at the Moon's ascending node in western Capricornus. An annular eclipse will be visible from a wide track that traverses the Indian Ocean and western Indonesia. A partial eclipse will be seen within the much larger path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes the southern third of Africa, Madagascar, Australia except Tasmania, southeast India, Southeast Asia and Indonesia.

     

    February 09 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The first lunar eclipse of 2009 is one of four such events during the year. The first three eclipses are penumbral while the last (on Dec. 31) is partial. The Feb 09 event is the deepest penumbral eclipse of the year with a penumbral magnitude of 0.899. It will be easily visible to the naked eye as a dusky shading in the northern half of the Moon. The times of the major phases are listed below.

    July 07 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times.): July's penumbral eclipse is only of academic interest since the magnitude is just 0.156. Although the Moon will be above the horizon from most of Canada, the eclipse is so minor as to be completely invisible to the naked eye.

    July 21-22 - Total Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): To make up for the anemic lunar eclipse earlier in the month, a major total eclipse of the Sun occurs two weeks later. The path of the Moon's umbral shadow extends across India, China, a handful of Japanese islands and the South Pacific Ocean (Espenak and Anderson, 2008). A partial eclipse is seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes most of eastern Asia, Indonesia, and the Pacific Ocean.

    August 05-06 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): A shallow penumbral eclipse occurs 15 days after the total solar eclipse. Since its magnitude is only 0.402, it will not be visible to the naked eye.

    December 31 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The last eclipse of 2009 occurs on New Year's Eve. This minor partial lunar eclipse takes place in Gemini, and is visible primarily from the Eastern Hemisphere (Figure 8). Greatest eclipse takes place at 19:23 UT when the eclipse magnitude will reach 0.0763.

    Eclipse information from: NASA Eclipse Homepage, Eclipses Online (HM Nautical Almanac Office, UK in coordination with the U.S. Naval Observatory)

    2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    ShowerActivity PeriodMaximumRadiantVelocityrZHRClassMoon
      DateS. L.R.A.Dec.km/s    
    Antihelion Source (ANT) Dec 14-Sep 07 - - - - 30 3.0 3 II -
    Quadrantids (QUA) Dec 26-Jan 13 Jan 03 283°16 15:20 +49° 42 2.1 120 I 6
    Alpha Centaurids (ACE) Jan 28-Feb 21 Feb 07 319°2 14:00 -59° 56 2.0 5 II 12
    Delta Leonids (DLE) Feb 15-Mar 10 Feb 25 336° 11:12 +16° 23 3.0 2 II 0
    Gamma Normids (GNO) Feb 25-Mar 22 Mar 13 353° 16:36 -51° 56 2.4 4 II 16
    Lyrids (LYR) Apr 16-Apr 27 Apr 23 033° 18:12 +33° 46 2.1 18 I 27
    Pi Puppids (PPU) Apr 15-Apr 28 Apr 23 033°5 07:20 -45° 18 2.0 var III 27
    Eta Aquarids (ETA) Apr 27-May 23 May 07 047° 22:36 -01° 68 2.4 60 I 12
    Eta Lyrids (ELY) May 06-May 14 May 10 050° 19:22 +43° 43 3.0 3 II 15
    June Bootids (JBO) Jun 22-Jul 02 Jun 27 095°7 14:56 +48° 18 2.2 var III 5
    Piscis Austrinids (PAU) Jul 15-Aug 10 Jul 28 125° 22:44 -30° 35 3.2 5 II 7
    Alpha Capricornids (CAP) Jul 12-Aug 08 Jul 28 125° 20:20 -10° 24 2.5 4 II 7
    Delta Aquarids (SDA) Jul 21-Aug 30 Jul 30 127° 22:42 -17° 43 3.2 20 I 9
    Perseids (PER) Jul 13-Aug 26 Aug 12 140° 03:12 +58° 59 2.6 100 I 20
    Kappa Cygnids (KCG) Aug 03-Aug 25 Aug 17 145° 19:04 +59° 25 3.0 3 II 25
    Alpha Aurigids (AUR) Aug 28-Sep 03 Sep 01 158°6 06:06 +39° 65 2.6 7 II 11
    September Perseids (SPR) Sep 06-Sep 13 Sep 10 168° 03:12 +40° 65 2.9 5 II 19
    Delta Aurigids (DAU) Sep 18-Oct 10 Sep 29 186° 05:52 +49° 64 2.9 2 II 13
    Draconids (GIA) Oct 06-Oct 10 Oct 08 195°4 17:28 +54° 20 2.6 var III 18
    Southern Taurids (STA) Sep 18-Nov 26 Oct 11 198° 02:18 +09° 29 2.3 5 II 21
    Epsilon Geminids (EGE) Oct 18-Oct 21 Oct 20 207° 06:48 +28° 71 3.0 2 II 2
    Orionids (ORI) Sep 28-Nov 10 Oct 21 208° 06:22 +16° 68 2.5 23 I 3
    Leo Minorids (LMI) Oct 17-Oct 27 Oct 23 209° 10:40 +37° 61 2.7 2 II 4
    Northern Taurids (NTA) Oct 20-Nov 29 Nov 13 231° 03:52 +22° 29 2.3 5 II 25
    Leonids (LEO) Nov 07-Nov 28 Nov 18 236° 10:16 +22° 71 2.5 var III 1
    Alpha Monocerotids (AMO) Nov 15-Nov 25 Nov 21 239°32 07:48 +01° 65 2.4 var III 4
    Dec Phoenicids (PHO) Nov 28-Dec 09 Dec 06 254°25 01:12 -53° 18 2.8 var III 18
    Puppid/Velids (PUP) Dec 01-Dec 15 Dec 07 255° 08:12 -45° 40 2.9 10 I 19
    Monocerotids (MON) Dec 06-Dec 20 Dec 07 255° 06:32 +09° 41 3.0 2 II 10
    Sigma Hydrids (HYD) Nov 22-Dec 23 Dec 09 257° 08:24 +03° 60 3.0 3 II 21
    Geminids (GEM) Dec 05-Dec 19 Dec 14 262°2 07:36 +32° 35 2.6 120 I 26
    Coma Berenicids (COM) Dec 10-Jan 25 Dec 19 268° 11:40 +25° 64 3.0 5 II 3
    Ursids (URS) Dec 16-Dec 25 Dec 22 270°7 14:34 +75° 32 3.0 10 I 5

    Information and Table Template Courtesy The American Meteor Society, International Meteor Organization, and Meteors Online.

    Explanation of the 2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower: named for the constellation or closest star within a constellation where the radiant is located at maximum activity.

    Activity Period: the dates when the ZHR (Zenith Hourly Rates) are equal to or greater than one.

    Maximum: the date on which the maximum activity is expected to occur.

    S.L.: the equivalent solar longitude of the date of maximum activity. Solar longitude is measured in degrees (0-359) with 0 occurring at the exact moment of the spring equinox, 90 at the summer solstice, 180 at the autumnal equinox, and 270 at the winter solstice.

    Radiant: the area in the sky where shower meteors seem to appear from. This position is given in right ascension (celestial longitude) and declination (celestial latitude).

    Velocity: the velocity at which shower meteors strike the Earth's atmosphere. The velocity depends on the angle meteoroids (meteors in space) intersect the Earth. Meteoroids orbiting in the opposite direction of the Earth and striking the atmosphere head-on are much faster than those orbiting in the same direction as the Earth. This velocity is measured in kilometers per second.

    r: The Population Index, An estimate of the ratio of the number of meteors in subsequent magnitude classes. Simply stated: the lower the "r" value, the resulting overall mean magnitude of each shower will be brighter. "r" usually ranges from 2.0 (bright) to 3.5 (faint).

    ZHR: Zenith Hourly Rate, the average maximum number of shower meteors visible per hour if the radiant is located exactly overhead and the limiting magnitude equals +6.5. Actual counts rarely reach this figure as the zenith angle of the radiant is usually less and the limiting magnitude is usually lower. ZHR is a useful tool when comparing the actual observed rates between individual observers as it sets observing conditions for all to the same standards.

    Class: A scale developed by Robert Lunsford to group meteor showers by their intensity:

    Class I: the strongest annual showers with ZHR's normally ten or better.

    Class II: reliable minor showers with ZHR's normally three or better.

    Class III: showers with widely variable rates. They may be strong one year and totally inactive the next.

    Class IV: weak minor showers with ZHR's rarely exceeding three. The study of these showers is best left to experienced observers who use plotting and angular velocity estimates to determine shower association. Observers with less experience are urged to limit their shower associations to showers with a rating of I to III. These showers are also good targets for video and photographic work.

    Moon: the age of the moon in days where 0 is new, 7 is first quarter, 14 is full, and 21 is last quarter. Meteor activity is best seen in the absence of moonlight so showers reaching maximum activity when the moon is less than 10 days old or more than 25 are much more favorably observed than those situated closer to the full moon.

    Information from the "Observer's Handbook 2009" RASC



    Direct download: AAGG_sky_tour_Feb_09.mp3
    Category: Sky Tours -- posted at: 4:17 AM
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    Astronomy a Go Go! January Sky Tour



    This tool displays the approximate Moon phases for a given month. For official phase times and dates for this month and past months are available from the U.S. Naval Observatory.

    Astronomical Online Glossary

    Download this month's sky map!

    Skymaps.com is our favorite monthly skymap provider. Download either the

    Northern hemisphere sky map or theSouthern hemisphere sky map so you can follow along with our viewing sessions.
    Creator: Kym Thalassoudis

    Southern Hemisphere Additional Information

    As Astronomy a Go Go! finds its home in the higher Northern latitudes those of you who live south of the equator will benefit from these two Southern Hemisphere sites: Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand's Southern Hemisphere Calendar RASNZ site (absolutely outstanding) and
    Southern Sky Watch.

     

    Planets for January 2009

    This year will be a morning viewing year but we still have bright Venus in the early evening and Saturn for late night viewers!


    Early January Evening Planets (click image to enlarge)


    Late January Evening Planets (click image to enlarge)

    • Mercury- Starts the year close to Jupiter in the evening twilight. The further south you are the easier it is to pick up this pair against the glowing horizon. Mercury reaches greatest elongation on the 4th before racing back towards the sun (passing Jupiter again) reaching inferior conjunction on the 20th. By the end of the month Mercury is with Mars and Jupiter in the morning, pre-dawn sky. They will all be quite faint, low for northern observers but better as you go further south. -0.7 mag (1st) to 5.1 mag (21st)
    • Venus- Venus has been distancing herself from the Sun for months, a sparkling beacon in the early evening sky, even shining through the clouds from time to time. She reaches greatest elongation on the 14th, a full 47 deg east of the Sun. On the 30th look for a pretty pairing with the crescent Moon. -4.2 mag (1st) to -4.3 mag (21st)
    • Mars- Mars reached conjunction with the Sun on Dec 5th, and is slowly drifting into the morning sky. Mars will play hide and seek with Mercury and Jupiter later in the month but will really start to become visible later in February. 1.3 (1st) to 1.3 mag (21st)
    • Jupiter- Is paired up nicely with Mercury as the year starts but quickly slides into the glare of the Sun reaching conjunction on the 24th. Look for the return of the King to the pre-dawn sky in February. -1.9 mag (1st) to -1.9 mag (21st)
    • Saturn- Saturn has been our "planet of the night" and those rings are continuing to flatten out. Saturn spends most of the year in Leo before sliding into Virgo in September. With the rings at a close tilt of .81 deg. Although there are those who mourn the shallow ring angle others will be using the reduction of glare to chase after Saturn's moons. (See the RASC Observing Challenge for 2009) 0.9 mag (1st) to 0.9 mag (21st)
    • Uranus- In Aquarius 5.9 mag (1st) to 5.9 mag (21st)
    • Neptune- In Capricorn 8.0 mag (1st) to 8.0 mag (21st)
    • Ceresand Vesta - Finder chart from the New Zealand RAS (RASNZ) great charts! Northern Hemisphere observers this time you get to flip the chart or stand on your head!
      Vesta chart temporarily missing...use this one until site is corrected

    Key Dates for January 2009

    Days and Times in UT: (help with time)
    Observations are for 10 pm for the mid-southern latitudes and for 7 pm for the mid-northern latitudes.
    Today's sunrise and sunset times or plan ahead using the US Naval Observatory Website

    Occultation information can be found at the IOTA website!

    Astronomical Highlights - January 2009

    1- Saturn stationary
    3- Quandrantid meteor shower peak
    4- First Quarter Moon
    - Mercury at greatest elongation East (19 deg)
    - Earth at perihelion (closest to the Sun) 147095260 km
    7- Moon 0.8 deg N of M45 - Pleiades
    10- Moon at perigee (357497 km) expect large tides
    11- Full Moon (largest in 2009)
    12- Moon 1.5 deg South of M44 - Beehive cluster
    14- Venus at greatest elongation E (47 deg)
    17- Ceres stationary - also part of the RASC Observing challenge
    18- Last Quarter Moon
    20- Mercury in inferior conjunction with the Sun
    21- Antares 0.02 deg S of Moon, possible occultation in your area.
    23- Moon at apogee (406118 km)
    - Venus 1.4 deg N of Uranus
    24- Jupiter in conjunction with the Sun
    26- New Moon
    - Annular Solar Eclipse - NEVER look at the SUN! For safe solar eclipse viewing techniques visit Fred Espenak's (Mr. Eclipse) website.
    - Mercury 4 deg N or Mars in the pre-dawn sky
    30- Moon and Venus pair up in the evening sky

    Date information courtesy of: RASC Observer's Handbook, Skymaps.com, Astronomical Calendar 2009, CalSky, Skymaps.com. sunrise and sunset times for your home*
    Comparative lengths of day and night

    Monthly Messier*

    This month has two of my personal Messier thorns; M77 and M74. Those two are offset by a favorite; the Little Dumbell. You will need binoculars and a telescope to fully enjoy the January Messier objects.

    • M33 This is a very large (about the size of the full moon) face on spiral galaxy in the constellation Triangulum. The total light from M33 is about magnitude 5.3, but when spread out over its large area it yields a very low surface brightness. The best and easiest views of M33 can be found with a pair of binoculars. Look for a large, round hazy patch of light with little detail at first glance. M33 can be glimpsed with the naked eye in dark clear skies. Finding M33 in a telescope can be a challenge because of its size. Use the widest field eyepiece you have and look for a change in light level to identify the galaxy.
    • M103 This is a fairly small, sparse open cluster in Cassiopeia. Look for a tight group of stars in binoculars, being careful not to mistake it for several other clusters in the same area. Through a telescope the cluster is very sparse, four bright stars amidst the slight glow of much fainter companions.
    • M52 This rich open cluster in Cassiopeia is fairly easy to see in binoculars as a faint smudge of light. A small to mid telescope will begin to resolve this cluster. Look for a triangular patch of light with some stars clearly resolved, but most of the cluster members provide only a hint of graininess.
    • M76 Known as the little dumbell, this planetary nebula in Perseus is one of the dimmest objects in the Catalog. Look for a small, faint, oblong patch of light. Not a very obvious object, if you don't see it at first try varying magnifications in an attempt to bring it out. Fortunately M76 is located near a bright star which aids in locating the correct field to search.
    • M34 This is a large and bright, but sparse open cluster located in Perseus. Visible as a faint patch of light to the naked eye, it is very obvious and easy to resolve in binoculars. In fact, binoculars provide a better view of this cluster than most telescopes.
    • M74 This galaxy in Pisces is a smaller and fainter version of M33, a face on spiral galaxy with low surface brightness. M74 is arguably the most difficult object to find in the Catalog. You will need very dark, clear skies to easily see it, anything less than perfect conditions will make M74 nearly impossible to find. Look for a very faint fuzzy star, which is the bright central condensation, surrounded by a very faint glow. Try all of your tricks on this one; star hop to the correct field, try varying magnification, tap the scope to detect the galaxy through its motion. If all of the above fail, try again another night or seek darker skies.
    • M77 This is a small faint galaxy in Cetus. Possible to see in binoculars, but very difficult, look for a faint fuzzy star. Through a telescope look for a fuzzy, oval shaped patch of light, bright in the center, fading towards the edges.

    From the Astronomical Connection and the Moncton Center in Canada

    Comets for January 2009

    More comet information at Seiichi Yoshida's comet website. Also checkout Gary Kronk's comet and meteor pages
    Skyhound Comet pages

    Historical and Current Events

    ...Did you know?

    Mark has developed his own website so let's all trot on over and see the pages of wonderful history he has for us this month!

     

    Help us out by leaving a donation in the ol' PayPal hat

    or write us a favorable review in iTunes of Podcast Pickle or iPodder!

     

    Music Scottish Guitar Quartet -"Romance within you"
    Three Blind Mice- "Watch Star"
    Finniston- "Peace of Mind"



    Earth's major motions for 2009

    Perihelion
    Jan 4 15(UT)
    First Cross Quarter Day
    Feb 2-6
    Equinox
    Mar 20 11:44(UT)
    Second Cross Quarter Day
    May 4-7
    Solstice
    June 21 05:45(UT)
    Aphelion
    July 4 02h (UT)
    Third Cross Quarter Day
    Aug 5-8
    Equinox
    Sept 22 21:18(UT)
    Fourth Cross Quarter Day
    Nov 5-8
    Solstice
    Dec 21 17:47(UT)

     

    Planet Positions for 2009


    2009JanFebMarAprMayJun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
    Venus Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Tau Gem Cnc Vir Vir Sco Sgr Cap
    Mars Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Psc Ari Tau Tau Gem Cnc Cnc Leo
    Jupiter Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap
    Saturn Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Vir Vir Vir Vir

     

    Interesting Planet Pairing for 2009

    • December 31, 2008 - Jupiter and Mercury - After sunset a little more than one degree apart in Sagittarius. Pull out the binos and telescopes because Mercury will be a mere 15 arcminutes from the globular cluster M75. All three will be together in one field of view in most home binoculars.
    • January 22nd - Venus and Uranus - After sunset 1.3 degrees apart a few days later on the 29th they are joined by a waxing crescent moon.
    • February 23rd - Jupiter, Mars and Mercury - In the early morning sky just before sunrise the trio are in a space about 2 degrees wide. Binoculars will be helpful but beware the quickly rising Sun. The Moon, almost invisible, will be between Mars and the Sun.
    • March 23rd - Mars, Moon, Neptune, and Jupiter - Makes a nice line-up in the morning sky with Neptune just off the tip of the waning crescent moon.
    • April 21st - Venus, Mars, Uranus, waning crescent Moon, Neptune and Jupiter - all in the pre-dawn sky together. First the right triangle of Venus, Mars, and Uranus followed by the waning crescent Moon and then finally by Neptune and Jupiter. Mars will be a faint 1.41 mag so binoculars will be helpful. The next day, possible occultation of Venus by the Moon. Check the IOTA website for occultations in your area.
    • May 25th - Jupiter and Neptune - Jupiter is less than 1/2 degree South of Neptune in the morning sky. If you have ever had problems finding Neptune this would be a good time to try, between now and June.
    • June 19th - Venus and Mars - In the pre-dawn sky just south of a waning crescent Moon. Closer to the Sun is Mercury and the Pleiades.
    • August 17th - Saturn and Mercury - Very close to the Sun low in the evening sky. Much better view for Southern viewers.
    • September 3rd UT 4:43 - Jupiter hides its Galilean moons. Not until 2019 will all of Jupiter's Galilean moons orbit in such a way.
    • September 4th - Saturn - Not exactly a pairing but the Earth will cross the plane of the rings from south to north making the rings invisible
    • October 16th - Mercury, Venus, and Saturn - All lined up in the pre-dawn sky close to the horizon. A faint waning crescent is just south of the trio.
    • December 24th - Jupiter and Neptune - Just after sunset Jupiter and Neptune sit side-by-side just north of delta Capricornus and east of the "42,44,45 Cap Wall"

    Phases of the Moon 2009


    (click to enlarge)

    Universal Time

          NEW MOON    FIRST QUARTER       FULL MOON     LAST QUARTER
    
           d  h  m          d  h  m         d  h  m          d  h  m
           
                     JAN.   4 11 56   JAN. 11  3 27   JAN.  18  2 46
    JAN.  26  7 55   FEB.   2 23 13   FEB.  9 14 49   FEB.  16 21 37
    FEB.  25  1 35   MAR.   4  7 46   MAR. 11  2 38   MAR.  18 17 47 
    MAR.  26 16 06   APR.   2 14 34   APR.  9 14 56   APR.  17 13 36  
    APR.  25  3 23   MAY    1 20 44   MAY   9  4 01   MAY   17  7 26
    MAY   24 12 11   MAY   31  3 22   JUNE  7 18 12   JUNE  15 22 15
    JUNE  22 19 35   JUNE  29 11 28   JULY  7  9 21   JULY  15  9 53  
    JULY  22  2 35   JULY  28 22 00   AUG.  6  0 55   AUG.  13 18 55  
    AUG.  20 10 02   AUG.  27 11 42   SEPT. 4 16 03   SEPT. 12  2 16
    SEPT. 18 18 44   SEPT. 26  4 50   OCT.  4  6 10   OCT.  11  8 56  
    OCT.  18  5 33   OCT.  26  0 42   NOV.  2 19 14   NOV.   9 15 56  
    NOV.  16 19 14   NOV.  24 21 39   DEC.  2  7 30   DEC.   9  0 13  
    DEC.  16 12 02   DEC.  24 17 36   DEC. 31 19 13
    
    

    Eclipses for 2009

    2009 January 26
    [ Solar: Annular ]
    2009 February 09
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 07
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 21-22
    [ Solar: Total ]
    2009 August 05-06
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 December 31
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]

     

    January 26 - Annular Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): The first solar eclipse of 2009 occurs at the Moon's ascending node in western Capricornus. An annular eclipse will be visible from a wide track that traverses the Indian Ocean and western Indonesia. A partial eclipse will be seen within the much larger path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes the southern third of Africa, Madagascar, Australia except Tasmania, southeast India, Southeast Asia and Indonesia.

     

    February 09 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The first lunar eclipse of 2009 is one of four such events during the year. The first three eclipses are penumbral while the last (on Dec. 31) is partial. The Feb 09 event is the deepest penumbral eclipse of the year with a penumbral magnitude of 0.899. It will be easily visible to the naked eye as a dusky shading in the northern half of the Moon. The times of the major phases are listed below.

    July 07 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times.): July's penumbral eclipse is only of academic interest since the magnitude is just 0.156. Although the Moon will be above the horizon from most of Canada, the eclipse is so minor as to be completely invisible to the naked eye.

    July 21-22 - Total Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): To make up for the anemic lunar eclipse earlier in the month, a major total eclipse of the Sun occurs two weeks later. The path of the Moon's umbral shadow extends across India, China, a handful of Japanese islands and the South Pacific Ocean (Espenak and Anderson, 2008). A partial eclipse is seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes most of eastern Asia, Indonesia, and the Pacific Ocean.

    August 05-06 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): A shallow penumbral eclipse occurs 15 days after the total solar eclipse. Since its magnitude is only 0.402, it will not be visible to the naked eye.

    December 31 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The last eclipse of 2009 occurs on New Year's Eve. This minor partial lunar eclipse takes place in Gemini, and is visible primarily from the Eastern Hemisphere (Figure 8). Greatest eclipse takes place at 19:23 UT when the eclipse magnitude will reach 0.0763.

    Eclipse information from: NASA Eclipse Homepage, Eclipses Online (HM Nautical Almanac Office, UK in coordination with the U.S. Naval Observatory)

    2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower Activity Period Maximum Radiant Velocity r ZHR Class Moon
        Date S. L. R.A. Dec. km/s        
    Antihelion Source (ANT) Dec 14-Sep 07 - - - - 30 3.0 3 II -
    Quadrantids (QUA) Dec 26-Jan 13 Jan 03 283°16 15:20 +49° 42 2.1 120 I 6
    Alpha Centaurids (ACE) Jan 28-Feb 21 Feb 07 319°2 14:00 -59° 56 2.0 5 II 12
    Delta Leonids (DLE) Feb 15-Mar 10 Feb 25 336° 11:12 +16° 23 3.0 2 II 0
    Gamma Normids (GNO) Feb 25-Mar 22 Mar 13 353° 16:36 -51° 56 2.4 4 II 16
    Lyrids (LYR) Apr 16-Apr 27 Apr 23 033° 18:12 +33° 46 2.1 18 I 27
    Pi Puppids (PPU) Apr 15-Apr 28 Apr 23 033°5 07:20 -45° 18 2.0 var III 27
    Eta Aquarids (ETA) Apr 27-May 23 May 07 047° 22:36 -01° 68 2.4 60 I 12
    Eta Lyrids (ELY) May 06-May 14 May 10 050° 19:22 +43° 43 3.0 3 II 15
    June Bootids (JBO) Jun 22-Jul 02 Jun 27 095°7 14:56 +48° 18 2.2 var III 5
    Piscis Austrinids (PAU) Jul 15-Aug 10 Jul 28 125° 22:44 -30° 35 3.2 5 II 7
    Alpha Capricornids (CAP) Jul 12-Aug 08 Jul 28 125° 20:20 -10° 24 2.5 4 II 7
    Delta Aquarids (SDA) Jul 21-Aug 30 Jul 30 127° 22:42 -17° 43 3.2 20 I 9
    Perseids (PER) Jul 13-Aug 26 Aug 12 140° 03:12 +58° 59 2.6 100 I 20
    Kappa Cygnids (KCG) Aug 03-Aug 25 Aug 17 145° 19:04 +59° 25 3.0 3 II 25
    Alpha Aurigids (AUR) Aug 28-Sep 03 Sep 01 158°6 06:06 +39° 65 2.6 7 II 11
    September Perseids (SPR) Sep 06-Sep 13 Sep 10 168° 03:12 +40° 65 2.9 5 II 19
    Delta Aurigids (DAU) Sep 18-Oct 10 Sep 29 186° 05:52 +49° 64 2.9 2 II 13
    Draconids (GIA) Oct 06-Oct 10 Oct 08 195°4 17:28 +54° 20 2.6 var III 18
    Southern Taurids (STA) Sep 18-Nov 26 Oct 11 198° 02:18 +09° 29 2.3 5 II 21
    Epsilon Geminids (EGE) Oct 18-Oct 21 Oct 20 207° 06:48 +28° 71 3.0 2 II 2
    Orionids (ORI) Sep 28-Nov 10 Oct 21 208° 06:22 +16° 68 2.5 23 I 3
    Leo Minorids (LMI) Oct 17-Oct 27 Oct 23 209° 10:40 +37° 61 2.7 2 II 4
    Northern Taurids (NTA) Oct 20-Nov 29 Nov 13 231° 03:52 +22° 29 2.3 5 II 25
    Leonids (LEO) Nov 07-Nov 28 Nov 18 236° 10:16 +22° 71 2.5 var III 1
    Alpha Monocerotids (AMO) Nov 15-Nov 25 Nov 21 239°32 07:48 +01° 65 2.4 var III 4
    Dec Phoenicids (PHO) Nov 28-Dec 09 Dec 06 254°25 01:12 -53° 18 2.8 var III 18
    Puppid/Velids (PUP) Dec 01-Dec 15 Dec 07 255° 08:12 -45° 40 2.9 10 I 19
    Monocerotids (MON) Dec 06-Dec 20 Dec 07 255° 06:32 +09° 41 3.0 2 II 10
    Sigma Hydrids (HYD) Nov 22-Dec 23 Dec 09 257° 08:24 +03° 60 3.0 3 II 21
    Geminids (GEM) Dec 05-Dec 19 Dec 14 262°2 07:36 +32° 35 2.6 120 I 26
    Coma Berenicids (COM) Dec 10-Jan 25 Dec 19 268° 11:40 +25° 64 3.0 5 II 3
    Ursids (URS) Dec 16-Dec 25 Dec 22 270°7 14:34 +75° 32 3.0 10 I 5

    Information and Table Template Courtesy The American Meteor Society, International Meteor Organization, and Meteors Online.

    Explanation of the 2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower: named for the constellation or closest star within a constellation where the radiant is located at maximum activity.

    Activity Period: the dates when the ZHR (Zenith Hourly Rates) are equal to or greater than one.

    Maximum: the date on which the maximum activity is expected to occur.

    S.L.: the equivalent solar longitude of the date of maximum activity. Solar longitude is measured in degrees (0-359) with 0 occurring at the exact moment of the spring equinox, 90 at the summer solstice, 180 at the autumnal equinox, and 270 at the winter solstice.

    Radiant: the area in the sky where shower meteors seem to appear from. This position is given in right ascension (celestial longitude) and declination (celestial latitude).

    Velocity: the velocity at which shower meteors strike the Earth's atmosphere. The velocity depends on the angle meteoroids (meteors in space) intersect the Earth. Meteoroids orbiting in the opposite direction of the Earth and striking the atmosphere head-on are much faster than those orbiting in the same direction as the Earth. This velocity is measured in kilometers per second.

    r: The Population Index, An estimate of the ratio of the number of meteors in subsequent magnitude classes. Simply stated: the lower the "r" value, the resulting overall mean magnitude of each shower will be brighter. "r" usually ranges from 2.0 (bright) to 3.5 (faint).

    ZHR: Zenith Hourly Rate, the average maximum number of shower meteors visible per hour if the radiant is located exactly overhead and the limiting magnitude equals +6.5. Actual counts rarely reach this figure as the zenith angle of the radiant is usually less and the limiting magnitude is usually lower. ZHR is a useful tool when comparing the actual observed rates between individual observers as it sets observing conditions for all to the same standards.

    Class: A scale developed by Robert Lunsford to group meteor showers by their intensity:

    Class I: the strongest annual showers with ZHR's normally ten or better.

    Class II: reliable minor showers with ZHR's normally three or better.

    Class III: showers with widely variable rates. They may be strong one year and totally inactive the next.

    Class IV: weak minor showers with ZHR's rarely exceeding three. The study of these showers is best left to experienced observers who use plotting and angular velocity estimates to determine shower association. Observers with less experience are urged to limit their shower associations to showers with a rating of I to III. These showers are also good targets for video and photographic work.

    Moon: the age of the moon in days where 0 is new, 7 is first quarter, 14 is full, and 21 is last quarter. Meteor activity is best seen in the absence of moonlight so showers reaching maximum activity when the moon is less than 10 days old or more than 25 are much more favorably observed than those situated closer to the full moon.

    Information from the "Observer's Handbook 2009" RASC



    Direct download: AAGG_sky_tour_Jan_09.mp3
    Category: Sky Tours -- posted at: 6:32 PM
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    Astronomy a Go Go! 2009 Preview



    Earth's major motions for 2009

    Perihelion
    Jan 4 15(UT)
    First Cross Quarter Day
    Feb 2-6
    Equinox
    Mar 20 11:44(UT)
    Second Cross Quarter Day
    May 4-7
    Solstice
    June 21 05:45(UT)
    Aphelion
    July 4 02h (UT)
    Third Cross Quarter Day
    Aug 5-8
    Equinox
    Sept 22 21:18(UT)
    Fourth Cross Quarter Day
    Nov 5-8
    Solstice
    Dec 21 17:47(UT)

     

    Planet Positions for 2009


    2009 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
    Venus Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Tau Gem Cnc Vir Vir Sco Sgr Cap
    Mars Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Psc Ari Tau Tau Gem Cnc Cnc Leo
    Jupiter Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap
    Saturn Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Vir Vir Vir Vir

     

    Interesting Planet Pairing for 2009

    • December 31, 2008 - Jupiter and Mercury - After sunset a little more than one degree apart in Sagittarius. Pull out the binos and telescopes because Mercury will be a mere 15 arcminutes from the globular cluster M75. All three will be together in one field of view in most home binoculars.
    • January 22nd - Venus and Uranus - After sunset 1.3 degrees apart a few days later on the 29th they are joined by a waxing crescent moon.
    • February 23rd - Jupiter, Mars and Mercury - In the early morning sky just before sunrise the trio are in a space about 2 degrees wide. Binoculars will be helpful but beware the quickly rising Sun. The Moon, almost invisible, will be between Mars and the Sun.
    • March 23rd - Mars, Moon, Neptune, and Jupiter - Makes a nice line-up in the morning sky with Neptune just off the tip of the waning crescent moon.
    • April 21st - Venus, Mars, Uranus, waning crescent Moon, Neptune and Jupiter - all in the pre-dawn sky together. First the right triangle of Venus, Mars, and Uranus followed by the waning crescent Moon and then finally by Neptune and Jupiter. Mars will be a faint 1.41 mag so binoculars will be helpful. The next day, possible occultation of Venus by the Moon. Check the IOTA website for occultations in your area.
    • May 25th - Jupiter and Neptune - Jupiter is less than 1/2 degree South of Neptune in the morning sky. If you have ever had problems finding Neptune this would be a good time to try, between now and June.
    • June 19th - Venus and Mars - In the pre-dawn sky just south of a waning crescent Moon. Closer to the Sun is Mercury and the Pleiades.
    • August 17th - Saturn and Mercury - Very close to the Sun low in the evening sky. Much better view for Southern viewers.
    • September 3rd UT 4:43 - Jupiter hides its Galilean moons. Not until 2019 will all of Jupiter's Galilean moons orbit in such a way.
    • September 4th - Saturn - Not exactly a pairing but the Earth will cross the plane of the rings from south to north making the rings invisible
    • October 16th - Mercury, Venus, and Saturn - All lined up in the pre-dawn sky close to the horizon. A faint waning crescent is just south of the trio.
    • December 24th - Jupiter and Neptune - Just after sunset Jupiter and Neptune sit side-by-side just north of delta Capricornus and east of the "42,44,45 Cap Wall"

    Phases of the Moon 2009


    (click to enlarge)

    Universal Time

          NEW MOON    FIRST QUARTER       FULL MOON     LAST QUARTER
    
           d  h  m          d  h  m         d  h  m          d  h  m
           
                     JAN.   4 11 56   JAN. 11  3 27   JAN.  18  2 46
    JAN.  26  7 55   FEB.   2 23 13   FEB.  9 14 49   FEB.  16 21 37
    FEB.  25  1 35   MAR.   4  7 46   MAR. 11  2 38   MAR.  18 17 47 
    MAR.  26 16 06   APR.   2 14 34   APR.  9 14 56   APR.  17 13 36  
    APR.  25  3 23   MAY    1 20 44   MAY   9  4 01   MAY   17  7 26
    MAY   24 12 11   MAY   31  3 22   JUNE  7 18 12   JUNE  15 22 15
    JUNE  22 19 35   JUNE  29 11 28   JULY  7  9 21   JULY  15  9 53  
    JULY  22  2 35   JULY  28 22 00   AUG.  6  0 55   AUG.  13 18 55  
    AUG.  20 10 02   AUG.  27 11 42   SEPT. 4 16 03   SEPT. 12  2 16
    SEPT. 18 18 44   SEPT. 26  4 50   OCT.  4  6 10   OCT.  11  8 56  
    OCT.  18  5 33   OCT.  26  0 42   NOV.  2 19 14   NOV.   9 15 56  
    NOV.  16 19 14   NOV.  24 21 39   DEC.  2  7 30   DEC.   9  0 13  
    DEC.  16 12 02   DEC.  24 17 36   DEC. 31 19 13
    
    

    Eclipses for 2009

    2009 January 26
    [ Solar: Annular ]
    2009 February 09
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 07
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 21-22
    [ Solar: Total ]
    2009 August 05-06
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 December 31
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]

     

    January 26 - Annular Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): The first solar eclipse of 2009 occurs at the Moon's ascending node in western Capricornus. An annular eclipse will be visible from a wide track that traverses the Indian Ocean and western Indonesia. A partial eclipse will be seen within the much larger path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes the southern third of Africa, Madagascar, Australia except Tasmania, southeast India, Southeast Asia and Indonesia.

     

    February 09 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The first lunar eclipse of 2009 is one of four such events during the year. The first three eclipses are penumbral while the last (on Dec. 31) is partial. The Feb 09 event is the deepest penumbral eclipse of the year with a penumbral magnitude of 0.899. It will be easily visible to the naked eye as a dusky shading in the northern half of the Moon. The times of the major phases are listed below.

    July 07 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times.): July's penumbral eclipse is only of academic interest since the magnitude is just 0.156. Although the Moon will be above the horizon from most of Canada, the eclipse is so minor as to be completely invisible to the naked eye.

    July 21-22 - Total Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): To make up for the anemic lunar eclipse earlier in the month, a major total eclipse of the Sun occurs two weeks later. The path of the Moon's umbral shadow extends across India, China, a handful of Japanese islands and the South Pacific Ocean (Espenak and Anderson, 2008). A partial eclipse is seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes most of eastern Asia, Indonesia, and the Pacific Ocean.

    August 05-06 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): A shallow penumbral eclipse occurs 15 days after the total solar eclipse. Since its magnitude is only 0.402, it will not be visible to the naked eye.

    December 31 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The last eclipse of 2009 occurs on New Year's Eve. This minor partial lunar eclipse takes place in Gemini, and is visible primarily from the Eastern Hemisphere (Figure 8). Greatest eclipse takes place at 19:23 UT when the eclipse magnitude will reach 0.0763.

    Eclipse information from: NASA Eclipse Homepage, Eclipses Online (HM Nautical Almanac Office, UK in coordination with the U.S. Naval Observatory)

    2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    ShowerActivity PeriodMaximumRadiantVelocityrZHRClassMoon
      DateS. L.R.A.Dec.km/s    
    Antihelion Source (ANT) Dec 14-Sep 07 - - - - 30 3.0 3 II -
    Quadrantids (QUA) Dec 26-Jan 13 Jan 03 283°16 15:20 +49° 42 2.1 120 I 6
    Alpha Centaurids (ACE) Jan 28-Feb 21 Feb 07 319°2 14:00 -59° 56 2.0 5 II 12
    Delta Leonids (DLE) Feb 15-Mar 10 Feb 25 336° 11:12 +16° 23 3.0 2 II 0
    Gamma Normids (GNO) Feb 25-Mar 22 Mar 13 353° 16:36 -51° 56 2.4 4 II 16
    Lyrids (LYR) Apr 16-Apr 27 Apr 23 033° 18:12 +33° 46 2.1 18 I 27
    Pi Puppids (PPU) Apr 15-Apr 28 Apr 23 033°5 07:20 -45° 18 2.0 var III 27
    Eta Aquarids (ETA) Apr 27-May 23 May 07 047° 22:36 -01° 68 2.4 60 I 12
    Eta Lyrids (ELY) May 06-May 14 May 10 050° 19:22 +43° 43 3.0 3 II 15
    June Bootids (JBO) Jun 22-Jul 02 Jun 27 095°7 14:56 +48° 18 2.2 var III 5
    Piscis Austrinids (PAU) Jul 15-Aug 10 Jul 28 125° 22:44 -30° 35 3.2 5 II 7
    Alpha Capricornids (CAP) Jul 12-Aug 08 Jul 28 125° 20:20 -10° 24 2.5 4 II 7
    Delta Aquarids (SDA) Jul 21-Aug 30 Jul 30 127° 22:42 -17° 43 3.2 20 I 9
    Perseids (PER) Jul 13-Aug 26 Aug 12 140° 03:12 +58° 59 2.6 100 I 20
    Kappa Cygnids (KCG) Aug 03-Aug 25 Aug 17 145° 19:04 +59° 25 3.0 3 II 25
    Alpha Aurigids (AUR) Aug 28-Sep 03 Sep 01 158°6 06:06 +39° 65 2.6 7 II 11
    September Perseids (SPR) Sep 06-Sep 13 Sep 10 168° 03:12 +40° 65 2.9 5 II 19
    Delta Aurigids (DAU) Sep 18-Oct 10 Sep 29 186° 05:52 +49° 64 2.9 2 II 13
    Draconids (GIA) Oct 06-Oct 10 Oct 08 195°4 17:28 +54° 20 2.6 var III 18
    Southern Taurids (STA) Sep 18-Nov 26 Oct 11 198° 02:18 +09° 29 2.3 5 II 21
    Epsilon Geminids (EGE) Oct 18-Oct 21 Oct 20 207° 06:48 +28° 71 3.0 2 II 2
    Orionids (ORI) Sep 28-Nov 10 Oct 21 208° 06:22 +16° 68 2.5 23 I 3
    Leo Minorids (LMI) Oct 17-Oct 27 Oct 23 209° 10:40 +37° 61 2.7 2 II 4
    Northern Taurids (NTA) Oct 20-Nov 29 Nov 13 231° 03:52 +22° 29 2.3 5 II 25
    Leonids (LEO) Nov 07-Nov 28 Nov 18 236° 10:16 +22° 71 2.5 var III 1
    Alpha Monocerotids (AMO) Nov 15-Nov 25 Nov 21 239°32 07:48 +01° 65 2.4 var III 4
    Dec Phoenicids (PHO) Nov 28-Dec 09 Dec 06 254°25 01:12 -53° 18 2.8 var III 18
    Puppid/Velids (PUP) Dec 01-Dec 15 Dec 07 255° 08:12 -45° 40 2.9 10 I 19
    Monocerotids (MON) Dec 06-Dec 20 Dec 07 255° 06:32 +09° 41 3.0 2 II 10
    Sigma Hydrids (HYD) Nov 22-Dec 23 Dec 09 257° 08:24 +03° 60 3.0 3 II 21
    Geminids (GEM) Dec 05-Dec 19 Dec 14 262°2 07:36 +32° 35 2.6 120 I 26
    Coma Berenicids (COM) Dec 10-Jan 25 Dec 19 268° 11:40 +25° 64 3.0 5 II 3
    Ursids (URS) Dec 16-Dec 25 Dec 22 270°7 14:34 +75° 32 3.0 10 I 5

    Information and Table Template Courtesy The American Meteor Society, International Meteor Organization, and Meteors Online.

    Explanation of the 2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower: named for the constellation or closest star within a constellation where the radiant is located at maximum activity.

    Activity Period: the dates when the ZHR (Zenith Hourly Rates) are equal to or greater than one.

    Maximum: the date on which the maximum activity is expected to occur.

    S.L.: the equivalent solar longitude of the date of maximum activity. Solar longitude is measured in degrees (0-359) with 0 occurring at the exact moment of the spring equinox, 90 at the summer solstice, 180 at the autumnal equinox, and 270 at the winter solstice.

    Radiant: the area in the sky where shower meteors seem to appear from. This position is given in right ascension (celestial longitude) and declination (celestial latitude).

    Velocity: the velocity at which shower meteors strike the Earth's atmosphere. The velocity depends on the angle meteoroids (meteors in space) intersect the Earth. Meteoroids orbiting in the opposite direction of the Earth and striking the atmosphere head-on are much faster than those orbiting in the same direction as the Earth. This velocity is measured in kilometers per second.

    r: The Population Index, An estimate of the ratio of the number of meteors in subsequent magnitude classes. Simply stated: the lower the "r" value, the resulting overall mean magnitude of each shower will be brighter. "r" usually ranges from 2.0 (bright) to 3.5 (faint).

    ZHR: Zenith Hourly Rate, the average maximum number of shower meteors visible per hour if the radiant is located exactly overhead and the limiting magnitude equals +6.5. Actual counts rarely reach this figure as the zenith angle of the radiant is usually less and the limiting magnitude is usually lower. ZHR is a useful tool when comparing the actual observed rates between individual observers as it sets observing conditions for all to the same standards.

    Class: A scale developed by Robert Lunsford to group meteor showers by their intensity:

    Class I: the strongest annual showers with ZHR's normally ten or better.

    Class II: reliable minor showers with ZHR's normally three or better.

    Class III: showers with widely variable rates. They may be strong one year and totally inactive the next.

    Class IV: weak minor showers with ZHR's rarely exceeding three. The study of these showers is best left to experienced observers who use plotting and angular velocity estimates to determine shower association. Observers with less experience are urged to limit their shower associations to showers with a rating of I to III. These showers are also good targets for video and photographic work.

    Moon: the age of the moon in days where 0 is new, 7 is first quarter, 14 is full, and 21 is last quarter. Meteor activity is best seen in the absence of moonlight so showers reaching maximum activity when the moon is less than 10 days old or more than 25 are much more favorably observed than those situated closer to the full moon.

    Information from the "Observer's Handbook 2009" RASC



    Category: Tips and Tricks -- posted at: 7:50 PM



    Astronomical Online Glossary

    Download this month's sky map!

    Northern hemisphere sky map
    Southern hemisphere sky map
    Creator: Kym Thalassoudis

    Southern Hemisphere Additional Information

    James Barclay's site
    Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand's Southern Hemisphere Calendar RASNZ site
    Southern Sky Watch.

    Planets for December 2008

    Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Neptune, Uranus all in the evening by months end. Saturn rising before midnight and only Mars is missing from the major planet lineup.


    Early December Evening Planets (click image to enlarge)


    Late December Evening Planets (click image to enlarge)

    • Mercury- Starts the month passing into the evening sky and by mid-month appears in the evening twilight. By the end of the month look for Mercury next to Jupiter in the evening twilight. -0.8 mag (1st) to -1.2 mag (21st)
    • Venus- Started the month in a stellar pairing with Jupiter but climbs eastward, and Jupiter westward, quickly. Venus will be the crown jewel of the evening sky for the entire month. -4.0 mag (1st) to -4.1 mag (21st)
    • Mars- Mars is in conjunction with the Sun on Dec 5th, not to be seen again until 2009! 1.5 (1st) to 1.5 mag (21st)
    • Jupiter- Setting earlier every night pairing up with Jupiter towards the end of the month. As 2009 dawns Jupiter sets in evening twilight. -2.1 mag (1st) to -2.0 mag (21st)
    • Saturn- By the middle of the month Saturn rises in before midnight (in Leo). Look carefully at the rings as the inclination closes to 0.8 deg 1.0 mag (1st) to 1.0 mag (21st)
    • Uranus- In Aquarius 5.8 mag (1st) to 5.8 mag (21st)
    • Neptune- In Capricorn 7.9 mag (1st) to 7.9 mag (21st)
      (click for a larger images)

      2008 Finder Charts for Neptune and Uranus -Northern Hemisphere, Southern Hemisphere

    Key Dates for December 2008

    Days and Times in UT: (help with time)
    Observations are for 7 pm for the mid-southern latitudes and for 10 pm for the mid-northern latitudes.
    Today's sunrise and sunset times or plan ahead using the US Naval Observatory Website

    Occultation information can be found at the IOTA website!

    Astronomical Highlights - December 2008

    5 - First Quarter Moon
    7 - Earliest sunset of 2008 at 40 deg north (4:35)
    11 - Moon 0.7 deg N of Pleiades(M45) @ 8UT possible occultation, check the IOTA website for information for your area
    12 - Full Moon - at perigee (356566 km) closest and largest of 2008 - Large Tides
    13 - Geminid meteor peak - not a great year...too much moon
    15 - Moon 1.4 deg S of Beehive (M44)
    19 - Vesta stationary

    - Saturn 6 deg N of Moon

    - Last Quarter Moon
    21 - Solstice (12:04 UT)

    - Happy Birthday to Astronomy a Go Go! (3 years old)

    - Start watching for comet 85P/Boethin
    22 - Pluto in conjunction with the Sun

    - Ursid meteor peak
    25 - Antares 0.1 deg S of Moon possible occultation, check the IOTA website for information for your area
    26 - Moon at apogee (406601 km)
    27 - Venus 1.5 deg S of Neptune

    - New Moon
    29 - Mercury 0.7 deg S of Moon possible occultation, check the IOTA website for information for your area

    - Jupiter 0.6 deg N of Moon possible occultation, check the IOTA website for information for your area
    31 - Mercury 1.3 deg S of Jupiter

    Date information courtesy of: RASC Observer's Handbook, Skymaps.com, Astronomical Calendar 2008, CalSky, Skymaps.com. sunrise and sunset times for your home*
    Comparative lengths of day and night

    Monthly Messier*

    This will be a fairly easy month on the tour. We will view two small, but bright globular clusters, two open star clusters, and the grandest galaxy in the sky along with it's two companions. All of these objects are possible to find in binoculars, most are fairly easy.

    • M2 This is a small, bright globular cluster in Aquarius. To find it in binoculars look for a fuzzy star in a star poor field. A low power telescope field will show a round fuzzy patch, brighter in the center and fading to the edge, in a field with no other bright objects.
    • M15 This globular cluster in Pegasus is very similar to M2 in size and brightness, except it is surrounded by several bright stars. Fairly easy to find in binoculars but the best view is through a telescope at medium to high power.
    • M29 This galactic cluster is a small, sparse group of stars in Cygnus. It appears as a small fuzzy patch amongst a rich star field in binoculars. A telescope will easily resolve the members of this cluster. The shape of the cluster reminds me of the Pleiades as viewed through binoculars.
    • M39 Dark skies will allow this large, bright cluster in Cygnus to be seen with the naked eye as a hazy patch of light. Binoculars easily resolve this cluster into it's bright and widely scattered members, and provide a better view than can be seen with most telescopes.
    • M31, M32, and M110 M31 is the famous Andromeda Galaxy, our closest galactic neighbor, and the largest, brightest galaxy to be seen in the northern sky. The ability to see M31 with the naked eye provides a good, modern day, test of the darkness of your skies. M31 is so large that binoculars provide the best view, allowing the entire galaxy to be seen in one field of view. Look for an elongated patch of light, with a bright, round central core. M32 is an elliptical companion galaxy to M31. Through a telescope look for a slightly oval ball of fuzz in the same low power field as the core of M31. M32 is very possible to find in binoculars as a star like point of light. M110, Another elliptical companion galaxy to M31, lying on the opposite side of the core as M32. Through a telescope look for a large, oval patch of light. Although M110 is as bright as M32 it is much larger and thus has a lower surface brightness making it a difficult object in light polluted skies. M110 is a very difficult binocular object requiring dark transparent skies, and trained eyes to have a chance at finding it.

    From the Astronomical Connection and the Moncton Center in Canada

    Comets for December 2008

    Seiichi Yoshida's comet website. Also checkout Gary Kronk's comet and meteor pages
    Skyhound Comet pages

    Historical and Current Events

    ...Did you know?

    Mark has developed his own website so let's all trot on over and see the pages of wonderful history he has for us this month!

    Help us out by leaving a donation in the ol' PayPal hat

    or write us a favorable review in iTunes of Podcast Pickle or iPodder!

    Music Scottish Guitar Quartet -"Romance within you"
    Great Big Sea- "French Shores"
    Antonin Bastian- "Tu Cha Cha Cha"



    Astronomical Highlights for 2008

    Earth's major motions for 2008


    Perihelion
    Jan 3 00h(UT)
    First Cross Quarter Day
    Feb 2-6
    Equinox
    Mar 20 05:48(UT)
    Second Cross Quarter Day
    May 4-7
    Solstice
    June 20 23:59(UT)
    Aphelion
    July 4 08h (UT)
    Third Cross Quarter Day
    Aug 5-8
    Equinox
    Sept 22 15:44(UT)
    Fourth Cross Quarter Day
    Nov 5-8
    Solstice
    Dec 21 12:04(UT)

    Planet Positions for 2008


    2008 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
    Venus Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Tau Gem Cnc Vir Vir Sco Sgr Cap
    Mars Tau Tau Gem Gem Cnc Leo Leo Vir Vir Vir Sco Oph
    Jupiter Sgr Sgr Sgr Sgr Sgr Sgr Sgr Sgr Sgr Sgr Sgr Sgr
    Saturn Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo

    Interesting Planet Pairing for 2008

    • January (first two week) - Mars, Betelgeuse and Aldebaran - Mars will be moving westward into this red triangle, pausing at the end of the month and then returning to regular Eastward motion at the beginning of February.
    • February 1 (start watching in early January) - Jupiter and Venus - Start this early in January with Jupiter just off the horizon and watch as they creep closer and closer. On the 1st of Feb early in the morning, about one hour before sunrise in the east, Jupiter and Venus are less than one degree apart in the constellation Sagittarius. They will be outstanding and you could imagine all sorts of symbolism that could be associated with this conjunction.
    • February 27 - Mercury and Venus - Rising just one hour before the Sun in the East in the constellation Capricornus. Venus and Mercury will be just over one degree apart and then Venus will speed off, with Mercury in hot pursuit.
    • March 24 - Mercury and Venus...again - Mercury catches up to Venus again, this time less than one degree apart and in the constellation Aquarius. They will also be rising above the horizon only a half hour before the sun, so seeing them will be quite a challenge.
    • July 10 - Mars and Saturn - In the constellation Leo yellowish-white Saturn and reddish Mars will be less than one degree from each other. The pair is still up two hours after sunset and are bright so it should be easy to see.
    • August 13 - Venus and Saturn - Less than one degree apart in the constellation Leo. Venus will be the brighter of the two.
    • August 14 (watch from 10-16th)- Venus, Mercury, and Saturn - Just after sunset a triple conjunction! The three planets will be less than three degrees apart in the constellation Leo and almost in a line. Venus will be the highest and brightest Saturn the middle object and Mercury will be the lowest of the three but surprisingly brighter than Saturn. If you want to make this even more interesting look for Mars 16 degrees to the SW the trio.
    • August 19-21 - Venus and Mercury - The two planets will be about one degree apart for three days. VERY low on the western horizon at sunset.
    • September 11 (watch from 5-18)- Venus and Mars - Venus will come right next to the Red Planet, with the two less than one degree apart Mercury lying three and a half degrees away from the pair and shining brighter than Mars. The whole group will set just one hour after sunset.
    • December 1 - Venus and Jupiter - All within Sagittarius, the two planets will be two degrees apart and they don't set until three hours after sunset. As a bonus, a 15%-lit moon will lie three degrees away from Venus.
    • December 31 - Jupiter and Mercury - After sunset a little more than one degree apart in Sagittarius. Pull out the binos and telescopes because Mercury will be a mere 15 arcminutes from the globular cluster M75. All three will be together in one field of view in most home binoculars.

    2008 Phases of the Moon




    Universal Time
          NEW MOON   FIRST QUARTER        FULL MOON     LAST QUARTER

    d h m d h m d h m d h m

    JAN. 8 11 37 JAN. 15 19 46 JAN. 22 13 35 JAN. 30 5 03
    FEB. 7 3 44 FEB. 14 3 33 FEB. 21 3 30 FEB. 29 2 18
    MAR. 7 17 14 MAR. 14 10 46 MAR. 21 18 40 MAR. 29 21 47
    APR. 6 3 55 APR. 12 18 32 APR. 20 10 25 APR. 28 14 12
    MAY 5 12 18 MAY 12 3 47 MAY 20 2 11 MAY 28 2 57
    JUNE 3 19 23 JUNE 10 15 04 JUNE 18 17 30 JUNE 26 12 10
    JULY 3 2 19 JULY 10 4 35 JULY 18 7 59 JULY 25 18 42
    AUG. 1 10 13 AUG. 8 20 20 AUG. 16 21 16 AUG. 23 23 50
    AUG. 30 19 58 SEPT. 7 14 04 SEPT. 15 9 13 SEPT. 22 5 04
    SEPT. 29 8 12 OCT. 7 9 04 OCT. 14 20 02 OCT. 21 11 55
    OCT. 28 23 14 NOV. 6 4 03 NOV. 13 6 17 NOV. 19 21 31
    NOV. 27 16 55 DEC. 5 21 26 DEC. 12 16 37 DEC. 19 10 29
    DEC. 27 12 22

    Eclipses for 2008

    2008 February 07
    [ Solar: Annular ]
    2008 February 21
    [ Lunar: Total ]
    2008 August 01
    [ Solar: Total ]
    2008 August 16
    [ Lunar: Partial ]
    February 07 - Annular Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): The first solar eclipse of 2008 occurs at the Moon's ascending node in Capricornus. An annular eclipse will be visible from a wide track, that traverses Antarctica and southern regions of the Pacific Ocean. A partial eclipse will be seen within the much larger path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes the southeastern third of Australia, all of New Zealand and most of Antarctica.

    August 1 - Total Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): On Friday, 2008 August 01, a total eclipse of the Sun is visible from within a narrow corridor that traverses half the Earth. The path of the Moon's umbral shadow begins in Canada and extends across northern Greenland, the Arctic, central Russia, Mongolia, and China. A partial eclipse is seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes northeastern North America, most of Europe and Asia. Special website with extra information and links to live eclipse webcasts can be found at the NASA Eclipse Website for the August 1st Eclipse

    February 20th - Total Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times.): The first lunar eclipse of 2008 is perfectly placed for observers throughout most of the Americas as well as western Europe. The eclipse occurs at the Moon's descending node, midway between perigee and apogee. During the eclipse, Saturn lies about 3° northeast of the Moon and shines brightly (mv = +0.2) because it is near opposition. Special website with live broadcast can be found at the NASA Eclipse Website

    August 16 - Partial Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The last eclipse of 2008 is a partial lunar eclipse at the Moon's ascending node in Capricornus. It is visible primarily from the Eastern Hemisphere as well as eastern South America

    Eclipse information from: NASA Eclipse Homepage, Eclipses Online (HM Nautical Almanac Office, UK in coordination with the U.S. Naval Observatory)

    Meteor Showers for 2008

    All times are UT

    Name Date of Peak
    Time in UT (help with time)
    Moon Phase
    Quadrantids January 4, 7h Waning Crescent
    Lyrids April 22, 4h almost Full
    Eta Aquarids May 5, 18h New Moon
    Perseids August 12, 11h Waxing Gibbous
    Orionids October 21, 4h Last Quarter
    Leonids November 17, 10h Waning Gibbous
    Geminids December 13, 23h Full Moon

    Information from the "Observer's Handbook 2008" RASC



    Direct download: AAGG_sky_tour_Dec_08.mp3
    Category: Sky Tours -- posted at: 10:31 PM
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