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EI2GYB > ASTRO    26.07.22 11:49l 104 Lines 8568 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 28116_EI2GYB
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Subj: This Week's Sky at a Glance, July 22 - 30
Path: IW8PGT<IZ3LSV<DB0ERF<DB0RBS<DB0RES<PI8CDR<GB7YEW<GB7CIP<EI2GYB
Sent: 220726/0931Z 28116@EI2GYB.DGL.IRL.EURO BPQ6.0.23


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This Week's Sky at a Glance, July 22 - 30

By: Alan MacRobert July 22, 2022


FRIDAY, JULY 22

Ý Fourth star of the Summer Triangle. The next-brightest star near the Summer Triangle, if you want to turn it into a quadrilateral, is Rasalhague, the head of Ophiuchus, magnitude 2.0. Face south soon after dark. You'll find Rasalhague (Alpha Ophiuchi) about equally far to the right of Altair and lower right of Vega.

Altair is currently the Summer Triangle's lowest star. Vega, nearly overhead, is the brightest. The "Summer Quadrilateral" covers a little more than twice the area of the Summer Triangle.

Ý Out real late on this Friday night? By about 2 a.m. Saturday morning, the waning crescent Moon comes up in the east. Look just a few degrees above it for the Pleiades. As the Moon-Pleiades panorama climbs higher, watch for Aldebaran to rise into view farther below.

SATURDAY, JULY 23

Ý Bright Arcturus is still pretty high after dark, but as summer progresses, it moves down the western side of the evening sky. Its pale ginger-ale tint always helps identify it. Off to the right of Arcturus right is the Big Dipper.

Arcturus forms the bottom point of the Kite of Bootes. The Kite, rather narrow, extends upper right from Arcturus by 23ø, about two fists at arm's length. The lower side of the kite is dented inward, as if some invisible celestial intruder banged into it.

SUNDAY, JULY 24

Ý We're only about a third of the way through summer, but already Cassiopeia is getting well up after dark. Look for its tilted W pattern in the north-northeast.

High above it is dimmer Cepheus. Below it, the head of Perseus is on the rise. The farther north you live the higher they all will appear.

Ý On Monday morning the 25th, the crescent Moon in the east at dawn points down more or less toward Venus, as shown below. 

MONDAY, JULY 25

Ý Starry Scorpius is sometimes called "the Orion of Summer" - for its brightness, its blue-white giant stars, and its prominent red supergiant (Antares in the case of Scorpius, Betelgeuse for Orion). But for those of us at mid-northern latitudes, Scorpius passes a lot lower across the southern sky than Orion does. That means it has only one really good evening month: July.

Catch Scorpius due south just after dark now, before it starts to tilt lower toward the southwest. It's full of deep-sky objects to hunt with binoculars or a telescope.

Ý As dawn brightens on Tuesday morning the 26th, the thin waning crescent Moon hangs just a couple degrees above Venus low in the east-northeast, as shown above.

TUESDAY, JULY 26

Ý Arcturus dominates the high western sky after dark. Spot the Big Dipper off to its right, in the northwest.

In astronomy lore today, Arcturus may be best known for its cosmic history: It's a Population II orange giant some 7 billion years old, older than the solar system, racing by our part of space on a trajectory that indicates it came from another galaxy: a dwarf galaxy that fell into the Milky Way and merged with it.

But in the astronomy books of our grandparents, Arcturus had a different claim to fame: It turned on the lights of the 1933 World's Fair in Chicago, celebrating "a century of progress." Astronomers rigged the newly invented photocell to the eye end of big telescopes around the US and aimed the scopes where Arcturus would pass at the correct moment on opening night. In places where the sky was clear the star's light crept onto the photocells, the weak signals were amplified and sent over telegraph wires to Chicago, a switch was tripped, and on blazed the massive lights to the cheers of tens of thousands.

Why Arcturus? Astronomers of the time thought its was 40 light-years away (modern value: 36.7 ñ0.2 light-years). So the light would have been in flight since the previous such great event in Chicago, the World's Columbian Exhibition in 1893.

And earlier? Arcturus was known as the first of the familiar nighttime stars to be seen in the daytime with a telescope: by Jean-Baptiste Morin in 1635.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 27

Ý You probably know that the Big Dipper's curved handle "arcs to Arcturus." But the arc of the handle itself, extended to include the adjacent side of the Dipper's bowl, guides the way to another landmark. Fairly near the focus of that longer arc (the center of the circle that the arc would be part of) is 3rd-magnitude Cor Caroli, Alpha Canum Venaticorum. This is a lovely double star for small telescopes: colors white and pale yellow-white, separation a generous 23 arcseconds.

THURSDAY, JULY 28

Ý Can you spot the Northern Coal Sack? It's named for the more famous Coal Sack, the naked-eye dark nebula next to the Southern Cross. The northern version is a subtler dark nebula in Cygnus. You'll need a moonless night, like the evenings this week, and a fine dark sky in which the Milky Way stands out in detail.

Face east after dark and look very high, almost overhead. The brightest star there is Vega. Look about two fists at arm's length lower left of Vega, and there's Deneb, the brightest star of Cygnus.

To Deneb's right, along the outstretched neck of Cygnus the stick-figure Swan, is the Cygnus Star Cloud, one of the brightest stretches of the Milky Way. But there's a gap between the star cloud and Deneb. The darkest part of that gap is the Northern Coal Sack. Deneb shines right on its edge.

In a dark enough sky, or in photos, the Milky Way background outlines it well enough to make it pretty distinct. It's part of the Great Rift complex of dark nebulae that runs the entire length of the summer Milky Way.

Actual coal sacks were part of everyday life a few generations ago. The name turned out to be truer than its unknown inventor may have thought. Interstellar dust consists not just of silicates (rock dust) but carbon dust too - not from fossilized plant matter, but from the smoky carbonaceous exhalations of red-giant stars in the late stages of their lives.

Ý New Moon (at 1:55 p.m. EDT).

FRIDAY, JULY 29

Ý The Big Dipper hangs diagonally in the northwest after dark. From its midpoint, look to the right to find Polaris (not very bright) glimmering due north as always.

Polaris is the end of the Little Dipper's handle. The only other Little Dipper stars that are even moderately bright are the two forming the outer end of its bowl: 2nd-magnitude Kochab and 3rd-magnitude Pherkad. Find them to Polaris's upper left, one over the other, by about a fist and a half at arm's length. They're called the Guardians of the Pole, since they ceaselessly circle around Polaris through the night and through the year.

SATURDAY, JULY 30

Ý Face southeast after darkness is complete. Look a little more than halfway from horizontal to overhead, and there's Altair, the brightest star in that immediate area. A finger-width above it is its little sidekick Tarazed (Gamma Aquilae), two magnitudes fainter and far in the background. Tarazed is actually 100 times more luminous than Altair - it's an orange giant - but it's 390 light-years away compared to Altair's distance of just 17 light-years.

Ý Look left of Altair by a bit more than a fist for compact little Delphinus, the Dolphin, leaping leftward in the edge of the Milky Way.

Closer to Altair's upper left is Sagitta the narrow Arrow, smaller and dimmer than Delphinus. The arrow points left. Binoculars help with both.


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