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EI2GYB > ASTRO    22.09.23 12:52l 114 Lines 7590 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 20017_EI2GYB
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Subj: This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 22 - October 1
Path: IW8PGT<I3XTY<GB7COW<KE0GB<N3HYM<VE3CGR<N5MDT<EI2GYB
Sent: 230922/1042Z 20017@EI2GYB.DGL.IRL.EURO LinBPQ6.0.24

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This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 22 - October 1

By: Alan MacRobert September 22, 2023

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22

Ý Tonight is equinox night. Fall begins in the Northern Hemisphere at 2:50 a.m. tonight EDT, 11:50 p.m. PDT. That's when the Sun (now on the opposite side of Earth from us) crosses the equator heading south for the season. The days keep getting shorter.

Ý Coincidentally, when summer turns to fall is about when Deneb takes over from brighter Vega as the zenith star shortly after nightfall (for skywatchers at mid-northern latitudes).

Ý First-quarter Moon; exactly so at 3:32 p.m. EDT. After dark it's just over the spout of the Sagittarius Teapot, as shown below (for North American observers). If you're in the Pacific time zone, the Moon sets close to the time of the equinox.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23

Ý Now the Moon shines by the Teapot's handle, as shown above.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 24

Ý High above the Moon this evening, by 3 or 4 fists at arm's length, shines Altair, the southernmost star of the Summer Triangle. The other two, Vega and lesser Deneb, are nearly overhead.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25

Ý By 10 or 11 p.m. bright Jupiter is high and shines precisely east. (The exact time of that depends on your location.)

Look lower left of Jupiter, by about 1« fists at arm's length, for the Pleiades.

A similar distance below the Pleiades, Aldebaran has risen or soon will.

Nearly three fists left of the Pleiades shines Capella, second in brightness here only to Jupiter.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26

Ý Look a little upper left of the Moon early this evening for Saturn, as shown below. By mid- to late evening Saturn stands straight above the Moon.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27

Ý This is the time of year when, by mid-evening, the dim Little Dipper in the north "dumps water" into the bowl of the Big Dipper way down below. The Big Dipper will dump it back in the evenings of spring.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28

Ý Full Moon tonight and tomorrow. (It's exactly full at 5:58 a.m. Friday morning EDT, between those two evenings.)

Ý Arcturus shines in the west as twilight fades away. Capella, equally bright, is barely rising in the north-northeast (depending on your latitude; the farther north you are the higher it will be.) They're both magnitude 0.

Later in the evening, around 9 p.m., Arcturus and Capella shine at the same height. When will this happen? That depends on both your latitude and longitude.

When it does, turn around and look low in the south-southeast, far lower right of the bright Moon. There will be 1st-magnitude Fomalhaut at about the same height too - exactly so if you're at latitude 43ø north (Boston, Buffalo, Milwaukee, Boise, Eugene). Seen from south of that latitude, Fomalhaut will appear higher than Capella and Arcturus are. Seen from north of there, it will be lower.

That bright light more than a third of the way from Capella to Fomalhaut is Jupiter.

Higher above Fomalhaut is Saturn, glowing steadily and pale yellowish.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29

Ý Even as the stars come out in late twilight, Cassiopeia is already higher in the northeast than the sinking Big Dipper is in the northwest. Later in the evening, Cassiopeia's broad W pattern wheels higher and stands on end (its fainter end).

Ý Also in early evening, look above the bright Moon to see if you can make out the Great Square of Pegasus through the moonlight. It's balancing on one corner (making it the Great Diamond of Pegasus?) and the line from its top corner through its bottom corner points down at the Moon.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30

Ý Vega is the brightest star very high in the west after nightfall. Arcturus, equally bright, is getting low in the west-northwest. The brightest star in the vast expanse between them, about a third of the way from Vega down toward Arcturus, is Alphecca, magnitude 2.2 - the crown jewel of Corona Borealis. Alphecca is a 17-day eclipsing binary, but its brightness dips are too slight for the eye to see reliably.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1

Ý Cygnus the Swan floats nearly straight overhead these evenings. Its brightest stars form the big Northern Cross. When you face southwest and crane your head up, the cross appears to stand upright. It's about two fists at arm's length tall, with Deneb as its top. Or to put it another way, when you face that direction the Swan appears to be diving straight down. Migrating away for fall?


This Week's Planet Roundup
Mercury stands out nicely now low in the east in early dawn. Look for it far to the lower left of bright Venus, as shown above. They're about 2« or 3 fists at arm's length apart. Mercury is brightening, from magnitude -0.5 on the morning of the 23rd to a showy -1.0 by the 30th.

Venus (a brilliant magnitude -4.7, in dim Cancer) is now about as high as its going to get as the "Morning Star." Look east before and during dawn. It rises more than two hours before dawn's first light - a weird UFO on the horizon, far under Castor and Pollux. In a telescope Venus is a thick crescent: 1/3 sunlit.

Mars is out of sight behind the glare of the Sun and will remain so for the rest of the year.

Jupiter (magnitude -2.8) rises in the east-northeast around the end of twilight. Watch for it to appear under the brightest stars of Aries. Jupiter dominates the eastern sky through late evening and shines highest in the south during the early-morning hours. 

Saturn (magnitude +0.6, in dim Aquarius) is the brightest "star" in the southeast in twilight. It's three weeks past opposition. Saturn shines at a good height for telescopic observing by about 9 p.m., while Fomalhaut twinkles two fists at arm's length below it. Saturn stands highest in the south around 11.

Uranus, magnitude 5.7 in Aries, is 8ø east of Jupiter.

Neptune, magnitude 7.8 at the Aquarius-Pisces border, is nice and high by mid-evening 24ø east of Saturn.

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 also known as UTC, GMT, or Z time.







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