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EI2GYB > ASTRO    01.01.23 15:46l 119 Lines 9099 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: This Week's Sky at a Glance, December 30 - January 7
Path: IW8PGT<IZ3LSV<IQ2LB<IW2OHX<EI2GYB
Sent: 230101/1337Z 8709@EI2GYB.DGL.IRL.EURO BPQK6.0.23


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This Week's Sky at a Glance, December 30 - January 7

By: Alan MacRobert December 30, 2022


FRIDAY, DECEMBER 30

Ý Cassiopeia is usually called a flattened letter W, but now it's a flattened M very high overhead around 7 or 8 p.m, just a little west of north.

Three hours later, Cassiopeia has turned around to stand on one end high in the northwest.

Ý This evening could be your last chance to catch fast-fading Mercury after sunset. See the illustration below, and bring binoculars.



SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31

Ý The Moon in the evening sky is poised almost midway between Jupiter far its right and Mars far to its left.

Ý After the noise and cheering at the turning of midnight tonight, step outside into the silent, cold dark. Shining high in the south will be Sirius, with the other bright stars of Canis Major to its right and below it. Sirius is the bottom star of the bright, equilateral Winter Triangle. The others are Betelgeuse in Orion's shoulder to Sirius's upper right, and Procyon the same distance to Sirius's upper left. The Triangle now stands upright, just about in precarious balance on the point of Sirius. Happy New Year.

SUNDAY, JANUARY 1

Ý By the start of January Orion has fully come into his own. This week he's striding up the east-southeastern sky as soon as it gets dark, with his three-star Belt nearly vertical. Left of the Belt is orange Betelgeuse; right of the Belt is bright white Rigel. The Belt points up toward Aldebaran and, even higher, the Pleiades. In the other direction, it points down to where bright Sirius rises soon after twilight's end.

Ý Algol, high overhead in Perseus, should shine at its minimum brightness, magnitude 3.4 instead of its usual 2.1, for a couple hours tonight centered on 10:42 p.m. EST; 7:42 p.m. PST. Algol takes several additional hours to fade and to rebrighten.

Ý For telescope users in western North America, Jupiter's moon Io reappears out of eclipse from Jupiter's shadow at 8:17 p.m. PST; 9:17 MST. In a telescope at 100x or more, watch for Io to gradually appear into view very close to Europa just a little off Jupiter's eastern (following) limb. First one moon will be there, then two. Almost exactly the same thing happened exactly a week ago, for observers in nearly the same parts of the continent.

MONDAY, JANUARY 2

Ý Sirius and Procyon in the balance. Sirius, the Dog Star, sparkles low in the east-southeast after dinnertime. Procyon, the Little Dog Star, shines in the east about two fist-widths at arm's length to Sirius's left.

But directly left? That depends. If you live around latitude 30ø (Tijuana, New Orleans, Jacksonville), the two canine stars will be at the same height above your horizon soon after they come up. If you're north of that latitude, Procyon will be higher. If you're south of there, Sirius will be the higher one. Depending on your latitude, your eastern horizon tilts differently with respect to the stars.

As the evening goes on, however, Procyon gains the ascendancy no matter where you are (in the Northern Hemisphere).

TUESDAY, JANUARY 3

Ý The waxing gibbous Moon shines only about 2ø or 3ø from Mars this evening, while Aldebaran looks on from their lower right. Although they appear close together, Mars is currently 250 times farther from us than the Moon. Physically, Mars is twice as large as the Moon in diameter.

Ý The Quadrantid meteor shower should hit its peak tonight, though moonlight will wash the sky. The peak activity of this short-lived shower, lasting just a few hours, is predicted for around 11 p.m. EST; 7 p.m. PST. The radiant, near the Bootes-Draco border, is circumpolar in the north - but it remains low until the early-morning hours. So the timing of the peak is best for western Europe.

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4

Ý This evening the Moon shines between the horntips of Taurus: Beta Tauri 2ø or 3ø to the Moon's upper left, and fainter Zeta Tauri roughly twice as far to the Moon's lower right.

And the Moon is also midway between brighter Capella to its upper left and Betelgeuse to its lower right: about 20ø (two fists) from each.

Ý Algol should be at its minimum brightness for a couple hours centered on 7:31 p.m. EST.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 5

Ý As we enter the deep of winter, the bowl of the Little Dipper hangs straight down from Polaris around 8 p.m., as if from a nail on the cold north wall of the sky.

The brightest star of the Little Dipper's dim bowl is Kochab, at the bowl's lip. It's the equal of Polaris. Kochab itself passes precisely below Polaris about 20 minutes earlier.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 6

Ý Full Moon (exact at 6:08 p.m. EST). The Moon rises in the east-northeast just before sunset. After nightfall you can see that it shines between the hearts of the Gemini stick figures, if you use binoculars to help piece out the constellation through the moonlight.

The Moon forms a nice, almost isosceles triangle with brighter Castor and Pollux, Gemini's head stars, to its left. Watch this triangle change shape through the night as the Moon moves eastward along its orbit. The Moon moves against the stars by about its own diameter every hour.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 7

Ý Now the bright Moon shines below Castor and Pollux in the evening.

Ý After dinnertime, the enormous Andromeda-Pegasus complex runs from near the zenith down toward the western horizon.

Near the zenith, spot Andromeda's high foot: 2nd-magnitude Gamma Andromedae (Almach), slightly orange. Andromeda is standing on her head. Almost halfway down from the zenith to the west horizon is the Great Square of Pegasus, balancing on one corner. Andromeda's head is its top corner.

From the bottom corner run the stars outlining Pegasus's neck and head, ending at his nose: 2nd-magnitude Enif, due west. It too is slightly orange.

This Week's Planet Roundup

Mercury and Venus are very low in the southwest in twilight. Try for them with binoculars 20 or 30 minutes after sunset. Venus is by far the brightest at magnitude -3.9, and it gets a trace higher through the week. But Mercury is dropping and fading fast: from a difficult mag. +0.9 on Friday December 30th (look for it 3ø to Venus's right) to an impossible mag. +2.2 just three days later.

Mars continues to fade slowly, from magnitude -1.2 to - 1.0 this week, as it shrinks from 14.8 to 13.7 arcseconds wide. It's a firespark high in the east as the stars come out, still much brighter than orange Aldebaran, mag +0.8, about 8ø to its lower right.

Mars gains altitude until culminating nearly overhead, where the telescopic seeing is best, around 9 or 10 p.m.

Jupiter shines high in the south in twilight, then sinks toward the southwest. At magnitude -2.4 it vastly outshines the dim background stars of Pisces. Look for the Great Square of Pegasus above it as the stars come out, and upper right of it later through the evening. It sets around 11 or midnight. Telescopically, Jupiter is down to 39 arcseconds wide.

Saturn, magnitude +0.8 in Capricornus, is getting low in the southwest at nightfall, far to the lower right of Jupiter. It sets around 8 p.m.

Look about two fists at arm's length to Saturn's left for Fomalhaut, and three fists or so to its right for Altair.

Uranus, magnitude 5.7 in Aries, moves high across the south during evening. It displays a tiny, very slightly blue-greenish gray disk 3.7 arcseconds wide. It a telescope at high power it's obviously non-stellar. See the Uranus finder charts in the November Sky & Telescope, page 49.

Neptune, magnitude 7.9 at the Aquarius-Pisces border about 8ø west of Jupiter, gets lower through the evening ahead of Jupiter. It's just 2.3 arcseconds wide, again non-stellar in a telescope but requiring more effort than Uranus. It's slightly bluish gray, if you have enough aperture to show color at all in something this faint. See the Neptune finder charts in the September Sky & Telescope, page 49. 






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