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EI2GYB > ASTRO    08.01.23 17:13l 123 Lines 9661 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: This Week's Sky at a Glance, January 6 - 14
Path: IW8PGT<IZ3LSV<DB0ERF<DK0WUE<PE1RRR<VE3CGR<KE6CHO<KD6MTU<N5MDT<EI2GYB
Sent: 230108/1456Z 9010@EI2GYB.DGL.IRL.EURO LinBPQ6.0.23


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This Week's Sky at a Glance, January 6 - 14

By: Alan MacRobert January 6, 2023


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. See the illustration below.

The Moon also forms a nice, more or less isosceles triangle with Castor and Pollux, Gemini's head stars, to its left. Watch this triangle change shape a bit through the night as the Moon moves eastward along its orbit: toward the Moon for Jan. 7 in the scene below.


SATURDAY, JANUARY 7

Ý Now the bright Moon shines below Castor and Pollux in the evening, as shown above.

Ý After dinnertime, the enormous Andromeda-Pegasus complex runs from near the zenith down toward the west horizon. Near the zenith, spot Andromeda's high foot: 2nd-magnitude Gamma Andromedae, 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.

SUNDAY, JANUARY 8

Ý By 9 or 10 p.m. the waning gibbous Moon is well up in the east, at the Sickle of Leo. It forms another isosceles triangle with two stars: this time Regulus (lower right of it) and Algieba (lower left of it). These are the two brightest stars of the Sickle.

MONDAY, JANUARY 9

Ý Endless action at Jupiter: At 7:02 p.m. EST, Jupiter's inner moon Io crosses onto Jupiter's face from the east, seeming to merge with it. Eleven minutes later Ganymede appears out from behind that same side of the planet. No, that's not Io bouncing off Jupiter!

Then at 8:20 p.m. EST Io's tiny black shadow starts crossing Jupiter's face, following behind in Io's footsteps. At 9:16 EST Io itself finally buds off into open view from Jupiter's western side.

Then at 9:41 p.m. EST Ganymede, still close to Jupiter's eastern limb where it reappeared, slowly slips into eclipse by Jupiter's shadow and remains in it for the next 2« hours.

These dances around Jupiter have been carrying on steadily, day by day and hour by hour, since the solar system formed 4.6 billion years ago. Only in the last ten-millionth of that time has any living creature had a telescope to witness this happening at all. Consider yourself fortunate.

Meanwhile, on Jupiter itself, the Great Red Spot rotates into view and then crosses the planet's central meridian around 9:48 p.m. EST. For Easterners Jupiter will be very low by that time, but farther west it will still be fairly high.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 10

Ý The big Northern Cross in Cygnus, topped by Deneb, is roughly upright in the west-northwest after dinnertime. By 7 or 8 p.m. it's standing on the horizon. How straight it stands there depends on your latitude.

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11

Ý Now that the Moon is gone from the early evening sky, and if your sky is even moderately dark, try tracing out the winter Milky Way arching very high. In early evening it extends up from the west-northwest horizon along the Northern Cross of Cygnus, up and over to the right past dim Cepheus and then through Cassiopeia high in the north, then to the right and lower right through Perseus and Auriga, down between the feet of Gemini and Orion's dim club, and on down toward the east-southeast horizon between Procyon and Sirius.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 12

Ý As we enter the depths of winter, the bowl of the Little Dipper hangs straight down from Polaris around 7 or 8 p.m. - as if (per Leslie Peltier) 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 30 minutes before the center of the bowl.

The Big Dipper, meanwhile, is creeping up low in the north-northeast. Its handle is very low and its bowl is to the upper right.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 13

Ý Orion leans bravely upward in the east-southeast after dark this week, and by 7 p.m. he's nice and high in the southeast with Sirius shining below him. Orion stands upright and highest by 10 p.m.

Ý How well do you know Orion's Sword telescopically, beyond the familiar M42 and M43 nebulae and M42's Trapezium? Many double stars and groupings await along the sword. Use Ken Hewett-White's "Sword Scene" article, chart, photo, and list in the January Sky & Telescope, page 54. 


SATURDAY, JANUARY 14

Ý Last-quarter Moon tonight (exactly so at 9:10 p.m. EST). The Moon rises around midnight or 1 a.m., with Spica about half a fist to its upper right. Brighter Arcturus is two fists to the Moon's upper left. Even in cold January, spring stars come out of hiding if you go out late enough.

Ý Have you ever seen edge-on Mare Orientale peeking around the Moon's celestial eastern limb? And the Rook and Cordillera Mountains, Lacus Veris, and Lacus Autumni in its near-limb foreground? It takes a favorable lunar libration to tilt this region into telescopic view, and we get one of these for a few days around tonight. Or rather, tomorrow morning. The waning Moon, with its celestial-east limb sunlit, will be up in the hours before dawn. Best view will be not long before the start of your local dawn. Plan to take your scope out two hours before sunrise. The Moon will be shining nicely high in the southeast.

Use your Moon map and Tom Dobbins' "Observing on the Edge" article, with guide photo, in the January Sky & Telescope, page 52. Add a sea and a couple of lakes to your lunar life list. 


This Week's Planet Roundup

Mercury is hidden in the glow of sunrise.

Venus, very bright at magnitude -3.9, shines low in the west in twilight. It sets by twilight's end. As twilight fades and Venus gets lower, look for dimmer Saturn coming into view to Venus's upper right. They're drawing toward each other; 18ø separates Venus and Saturn on January 6th, only 10ø by the 13th. They're on their way to a close conjunction, 1/3ø apart, on January 22nd.

Mars, in Taurus, shines high in the east at dusk and near the zenith as you face south by 9 p.m. Mars continues to fade slowly, from magnitude -1.0 to - 0.8 this week, as it shrinks from 14 to 13 arcseconds wide. Mars-colored Aldebaran, mag +0.8, is about 8ø below it. 


Jupiter, magnitude -2.4 in Pisces, shines high in the south-southwest in twilight, then sinks toward the southwest. Jupiter sets around 11 or midnight. Telescopically, it has shrunk to 38 arcseconds wide.

Look for the Great Square of Pegasus to Jupiter's upper right through the evening. Extend the line of the Square's upper left side down past the planet. This week Jupiter is still a trace west of that line. It will cross the time on January 23rd. To help judge this, hold a straightedge up to the sky or stretch a string tightly between your two hands.


Saturn, magnitude +0.8 in Capricornus, is getting low in the southwest at nightfall, far lower right of Jupiter and closing in on Venus. Saturn sets around 7 or 8 p.m.

In late twilight look about two fists at arm's length to Saturn's left for Fomalhaut, and about three fists to Saturn's 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 3.6 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 9ø west of Jupiter, gets lower through the evening ahead of Jupiter. Go for it right after dark. Neptune is 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.

All descriptions that relate to your horizon - including the words up, down, right, and left - are written for the world's mid-northern latitudes. Descriptions and graphics that also depend on longitude (mainly Moon positions) are for North America.

Eastern Standard Time (EST) is Universal Time minus 5 hours. Universal Time is also called UT, UTC, GMT or Z time.







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