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EI2GYB > ASTRO    19.05.23 17:30l 121 Lines 9689 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: This Week's Sky at a Glance, May 19 - 28
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Sent: 230519/1515Z 14370@EI2GYB.DGL.IRL.EURO LinBPQ6.0.23

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This Week's Sky at a Glance, May 19 - 28

By: Alan MacRobert May 19, 2023


FRIDAY, MAY 19

Ý With spring advancing, bright Vega is nicely up in the east-northeast after darkness is complete. Look for its faint little constellation Lyra hanging down from it, with its bottom canted to the right. Lyra's stars form a little equilateral triangle (Vega is one corner) and a parallelogram that hangs from the triangle's bottom.

Ý New Moon (exact at 11:53 a.m. EDT).

SATURDAY, MAY 20

Ý With summer still a month away (astronomically speaking), the last star of the Summer Triangle doesn't rise above the eastern horizon until about 10 or 11 p.m. That's Altair, the Triangle's lower right corner. Watch for Altair to clear the horizon three or four fists at arm's length to Vega's lower right.

The third star of the Triangle is Deneb, less far to Vega's lower left.

SUNDAY, MAY 21

Ý This is the time of year when Leo the Lion starts walking downward toward the west right after dark, on his way to departing into the sunset in early summer. After nightfall, spot the brightest star fairly high in the west-southwest. That's Regulus, his forefoot.

Regulus is also the bottom of the Sickle of Leo: a backward question mark about a fist and a half tall that outlines the lion's leading foot, chest, and mane.

MONDAY, MAY 22

Ý The waxing crescent Moon shines lower right of Venus this evening, as shown below. The widening trio of Mars, Pollux, and Castor floats above them.


TUESDAY, MAY 23

Ý In the 24 hours since last evening, the Moon has moved along its orbit to shine upper left of Venus - as seen from North America. Halfway between these evenings the Moon passed just a couple degrees from Venus, when the scene was on twilight display for the longitudes from easternmost Europe to Central and South Asia.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 24

Ý Spot Mars a little below the Moon this evening, as shown above. Mars is actually twice the diameter of the Moon, but it's currently 730 times farther away.

Ý What is the oldest thing you have ever seen? For everyone in the world it's at least the Sun and other objects of the solar system, age 4.6 billion years. Most everything on or near Earth's surface is much younger.

Next is Arcturus, which most people have surely seen whether they know it or not, since it's one of the brightest stars in the sky. It's a Population II orange giant, age about 7 billion years, just passing through our region of the Milky Way. There it is, very high toward the southeast or south these evenings.

Amateur astronomers have globular clusters. Most are older still, at least in part. The familiar M4 in Scorpius has been dated at 12.7 ñ0.7 billion years by means of white dwarfs within it.

But individual stars that you can observe? For that you want Bob King's article In Search of Ancient Suns with its finder charts. Assigning dates to individual stars that have been around since the first eras after the Big Bang is still iffy; astronomers have to work from the near-absence of heavy elements in their spectra. But a 6th-magnitude star in Bootes and a 7th-magnitude star in Libra, both in binocular range, await you these May and June nights. They probably date from about 12« billion and at least 13 billion years ago, respectively. These will probably be the oldest things you have ever seen, or ever will. The Big Bang itself is well dated at 13.8 billion years.

One could pick nits. Pick a proton, any proton right in front of you, and it has very likely remained intact since forming in the Big Bang's first millionth of a second. And what a variegated history it has seen!

THURSDAY, MAY 25

Ý Vega is the brightest star in the east-northeast after dark. Look 14ø (about a fist and a half at arm's length) to Vega's upper left for Eltanin, the 2nd-magnitude nose of Draco the Dragon. Closer above and upper left of Eltanin are the three fainter stars forming the rest of Draco's stick-figure head, also called the Lozenge. Draco always points his nose to Vega.

The faintest star of Draco's head, opposite Eltanin, is Nu Draconis. It's a fine, equal-brightness double star for binoculars (separation 61 arcseconds, both magnitude 4.9). The pair is 99 light-years away. Both are hot, chemically peculiar type-Am stars somewhat larger, hotter, and more massive than the Sun.

FRIDAY, MAY 26

Ý The Moon, very nearly first quarter, shines in the Sickle of Leo after dusk. It's almost between the Sickle's two brightest stars: Regulus, lower left of the Moon, and fainter Gamma Leonis or Algieba, to the Moon's upper right.

Ý Have you ever seen Alpha Centauri? At declination -61ø our brilliant, magnitude-zero neighbor is permanently out of sight if you're north of latitude 29ø. But if you're at the latitude of San Antonio, Orlando, or points south, Alpha Cen skims just above your true southern horizon for a little while late these evenings.

When does this happen? Just about when Alpha Librae, the lower-right of Libra's two brightest stars, is due south over your landscape. At that time, drop your gaze straight down from there.

SATURDAY, MAY 27

Ý First-quarter Moon (exact at 11:22 a.m. on this date EDT). This evening the Moon shines under Leo's midsection, not quite halfway from Regulus, lower right of the Moon, to Beta Leonis or Denebola, the Lion's tailtip to the Moon's upper left. 

SUNDAY, MAY 28

Ý Bright Capella sets low in the northwest fairly soon after dark these evenings (depending on your latitude). That leaves Vega and Arcturus as the brightest stars in the evening sky. Vega shines in the east-northeast. Arcturus is way up very high toward the south.

A third of the way from Arcturus to Vega, look for semicircular Corona Borealis, the Northern Crown, with 2nd-magnitude Alphecca as its one moderately bright star. It's the jewel on the front of the tiara.

Two thirds of the way from Arcturus to Vega is the dim Keystone of Hercules, now lying almost level. Use binoculars or a telescope to examine the Keystone's top edge. A third of the way from its left end to the right is 6th-magnitude M13, one of Hercules's two great globular star clusters. In binoculars it's a tiny glowing cotton ball. A 4- or 6-inch scope begins to resolve some of its speckliness. Located 22,000 light-years away far above the plane of the Milky Way, it consists of several hundred thousand stars in a swarm about 140 light-years wide.



This Week's Planet Roundup

Mercury is deep in the glow of sunrise.

Venus (magnitude -4.3, in Gemini) is the brilliant "Evening Star" in the west from twilight into late evening. It still shines nearly as high in the dusk as it ever gets, and it doesn't set until about 2 hours after dark.

In a telescope Venus is a dazzling globe hardly more than half lit (about 54% illuminated) and 21 arcseconds in diameter. It's enlarging a little more every day while waning in phase. Next week it'll appear half lit, then it will become a bigger, dramatically thinning crescent dropping low from mid-June through mid-July.

Mars (magnitude 1.6, in Cancer) glows weakly to the upper left of Venus by an ever-shrinking distance: 15ø on the evening of May 21st, 12ø by the 28th. That's hardly more than a fist at arm's length.

But no conjunction is in store. Mars and Venus will reach a minimum separation of 3.6ø on June 30th, then they'll start to draw apart again as Venus plunges down toward the sunset. This is called a quasi-conjunction, because they don't pass each other although they do get within 5ø of each other.

In a telescope Mars is just a tiny blob 5 arcseconds in diameter. Don't be too disappointed.

Jupiter (magnitude -2.1, in Aries) is beginning to emerge from the bright glow of sunrise. Look for it very low in the east in about 40 minutes before sunup.

Saturn (magnitude +1.0, in dim Aquarius) is moderately low in the southeast before and during early dawn. 


Uranus and Neptune are still too low in the east before dawn begins.

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

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