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EI2GYB > ASTRO    10.03.23 15:37l 129 Lines 10202 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: This Week's Sky at a Glance, March 10 - 19
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This Week's Sky at a Glance, March 10 - 19

By: Alan MacRobert March 10, 2023


FRIDAY, MARCH 10

Ý Venus and Jupiter continue to separate in the western evening twilight, as Jupiter sinks lower and Venus moves a little higher. We nor see them 9ø from each other, as shown below. The gap between them continues widening by about 1ø per day.

Although they look like a pair, Jupiter is currently 4.5 times farther away.


SATURDAY, MARCH 11

Ý Bright Sirius now stands due south on the meridian just as twilight fades into night. Sirius is the bottom star of the equilateral Winter Triangle; the others are orange Betelgeuse to Sirius's upper right (Orion's shoulder) and Procyon to Sirius's upper left. At this time of year, the Winter Triangle balances on Sirius soon after dark. The top of the triangle is perfectly level shortly thereafter.

Ý Daylight-saving time begins at 2 a.m. tonight for most of North America. Clocks spring ahead an hour.

SUNDAY, MARCH 12

Ý More about Sirius and Canis Major. In a good dark sky, the Big Dog's stick figure is fairly plain to see with the naked eye. The dog is in profile prancing to the right on his hind legs, with Sirius as the shiny dog tag on his chest. The stars of his triangular, pointy-nosed head are dim (4th magnitude).

But for most of us, only his five brightest stars show through our light-polluted skies. These form the unmistakable Meat Cleaver. Sirius and Murzim (to its right) are the wide top end of the Cleaver, with Sirius sparkling on its top back corner. Down to Sirius's lower left is the Cleaver's other end including its short handle, formed by the triangle of Adhara, Wezen, and Aludra. The Cleaver is chopping toward the lower right. Its stubby handle is Canis Major's tail.

MONDAY, MARCH 13

Ý This is a fine week to look for the zodiacal light if you live in the mid-northern latitudes, now that the evening sky is moonless and the ecliptic is tilting high upward from the western horizon at nightfall. From a clear, clean, dark site, look west at the very end of twilight for a vague but huge, tall pyramid of pearly light. It's tilted to the left, aligned along the constellations of the zodiac.

What you're seeing is sunlit interplanetary dust orbiting the Sun near the ecliptic plane.

Ý After dark, Capella shines brightly high in the northwest. Between it and Polaris, 43ø to its lower right due north, is a very dull region of sky - in fact blank for those of us with significant light pollution. This is the enormous celestial terrain of Camelopardalis, the Giraffe. Even if you can't see any of its dim, rather indecipherable star pattern, now you know the whereabouts of another constellation.

TUESDAY, MARCH 14

Ý Last-quarter Moon (exactly last-quarter at 10:08 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time).

The Moon doesn't rise tonight until around 3 a.m. daylight-saving time on the 15th. It comes into view to the lower left of Antares and the head of Scorpius. Before dawn on the 15th, spot the Sagittarius Teapot sitting low and level closer to the Moon's own lower left; see above. The Teapot is about the size of your fist at arm's length.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15

Ý It's mid-March. So when the stars come out, the Big Dipper is as high in the northeast as Cassiopeia has descended to in the northwest. Midway between them, as always, is Polaris.

Ý Follow the curve of the Big Dipper's handle down and around, by a little more than a Dipper-length, to find bright Arcturus, the Spring Star. Or the place where it's about to rise! Arcturus comes up around the end of twilight, depending on your location.

THURSDAY, MARCH 16

Ý Pollux and Castor in Gemini pass nearly overhead around 9 p.m. daylight-saving time this week if you live in the world's mid-northern latitudes. They go smack overhead as seen from near latitude 30ø north: Austin, Houston and the US Gulf Coast, northernmost Africa, Tibet, and Shanghai.

Ý Gemini's feet wade in the Milky Way. The trailing foot of the Castor stick figure carries the big, showy open star cluster M35 just above it. The cluster, a favorite of deep-sky observers, is a dim, diffuse glow in binoculars and a rich spangle of faint stars in a telescope. Much farther, and thus much smaller and dimmer, is the open cluster NGC 2158, just a little way to M35's southwest.

But what about the other sights around here? Such as The Quad asterism, and just off the end of Castor's foot, the Toes? Lots of telescopic double stars also await, including the relatively bright pair ?S 134 in M35 itself. See Ken Hewitt-White's "Best Foot Forward" guide in the March Sky & Telescope, page 54.

FRIDAY, MARCH 17

Ý Spring arrives very soon (the equinox is on the 20th), so Orion stands upright high in the south-southwest as the stars come out. He's about to start his long spring tilt and departure down toward the west - as the hours pass in the evening, and as the weeks pass in the changing season.

SATURDAY, MARCH 18

Ý On the traditional divide between the "winter" and "spring" sky is the dim constellation Cancer. It's between Gemini to its west and Leo to its east.

Cancer holds something unique: the Beehive Star Cluster, M44, in its middle. The Beehive shows dimly to the naked eye if you have little or no light pollution. With binoculars it's easy even under fairly poor conditions. Look for it a little less than halfway from Pollux in Gemini to Regulus in Leo. And see Fred Schaaf's "Sighting the Beehive" in the March Sky & Telescope, page 45.

SUNDAY, MARCH 19

Ý The "twin" heads of the Gemini figures are fraternal twins at best. Pollux is visibly brighter than Castor and pale orange. And as for their physical nature, they're not even the same species.

Pollux is a single orange giant. Castor is a binary pair of two smaller, hotter, white main-sequence stars, a fine double in amateur telescopes. If Pollux were a basketball, white Castor A and B would be a tennis ball and a baseball about a half mile apart.

Moreover, each Castor star is closely orbited by an unseen red dwarf - marbles in our scale model, only a foot or so from the tennis ball and the baseball.

And a very distant tight pair of red dwarfs, Castor C, is visible in amateur scopes as a single, 10th-magnitude speck 70 arcseconds south-southeast of the main pair. In our scale model, they would be a pair of marbles only about 3 inches apart at least 10 miles from Castor A and B. Double stars come in a vast range of true separations - from nearly a light-year apart down to actually touching.

This Week's Planet Roundup

Mercury is hidden deep in the glow of sunrise.

Venus and Jupiter shine in the west at dusk. Venus is the brightest at magnitude -3.9. Jupiter, at magnitude -2.1, is one fifth as bright. And as Jupiter gets lower, it's increasingly dimmed by atmospheric effects: atmospheric extinction, and apparent "dimming" by being seen on a brighter sky background.

They get farther apart every day. On Friday March 10th they's separated by 9ø as shown at the top of this page. By the 17th they widen to 15ø apart.

Telescopically, Venus is a shimmering little gibbous ball 13 arcseconds in diameter and 83% sunlit. Jupiter is 34 or 33 arcseconds wide, about as small as we ever see it; Jupiter is nearly on the other side of the solar system from us now. Moreover, Jupiter is a getting very blurry in a telescope as it sinks to an ever-lower altitude.

Mars is in eastern Taurus, heading east against the stars toward Gemini. Look for it high in the southwestern sky in early evening, lowet in the west later.

Mars continues to fade, from magnitude +0.5 to +0.7 this week, pretty similar to Mars-colored Aldebaran (+0.9) some 17ø below it and Mars-colored Betelgeuse (currently +0.4) roughly the same distance to Mars's lower left.

Mars passes between the horntip stars of Taurus on March 11th, shining closer to Beta Tauri (on its right) than to dimmer Zeta Tauri (on Mars's left). Watch the planet creep away from the line between the two stars thereafter.

In a telescope Mars is now only 7 arcseconds wide. That's too small to show visual details in most telescopes on most nights, aside from its gibbous shape (90% sunlit; see below).


Saturn is still hidden low in the sunrise.

Uranus, magnitude 5.8 in Aries, is in the west right after dark, above Venus. See the Uranus finder charts in the November Sky & Telescope, page 49.

Neptune is in conjunction behind the Sun.

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. Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) is UT minus 4 hours. (UT is also called UTC, GMT or Z time.)






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