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EI2GYB > ASTRO 04.07.23 13:46l 114 Lines 8929 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: This Week's Sky at a Glance, June 30 - July 9
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This Week's Sky at a Glance, June 30 - July 9
By: Alan MacRobert June 30, 2023
Supernova in the Pinwheel Galaxy. Supernova 2023ixf, in M101 off the Big Dipper, is still in view of amateur telescopes. It's fading slowly; as of July 3rd it was magnitude 12.0, down from its May 25th peak of 11.1. It's also slightly "reddening" - actually, yellowing.
Supernovae usually stay bright for weeks - sometimes with surprise variations, though this one has shown none yet. See Bright Supernova Blazes in M101, the Pinwheel Galaxy, with charts and comparison magnitudes.
FRIDAY, JUNE 30
Ý The Moon shines among the stars of upper Scorpius. The brightest of these is orange Antares about 2ø or 3ø to the Moon's lower left (for North America). Next brightest is Delta Scorpii, farther to the Moon's upper right. Binoculars help through the moonlight and summer haze.
Ý Mars and Venus are now at their minimum separation for this apparition, 3.6ø apart, as shown below. Mars will remain in low twilight view for more than a month to come. Venus will drop away faster.
Whenever Mars moves into the same general part of the sky as vivid Venus, Mars dwindles into a puny, pathetic little thing. Why does this always happen?
It's because 1) Venus is an inner planet, so we can never see it very far from the Sun in our sky, and 2) Mars is an outer planet, so when we see it anywhere near Venus - i.e. not very far from the Sun - it's on the far side of its orbit from us on the other side of the Sun, nearly as distant as it can ever get.
SATURDAY, JULY 1
Ý Now the Moon shines midway between upper Scorpius to its west and the Sagittarius Teapot to its east.
Ý To casual starwatchers or those with an obstructed northern view, Cassiopeia in July may sound as wrong as Christmas in July. But already Cas has passed its lowest evening position of the year and is gradually gaining altitude in preparation for the coming fall and winter. Look for its flattened W shape low in the north-northeast and no longer quite so level.
SUNDAY, JULY 2
Ý Full Moon tonight (exactly full at 7:39 a.m. Monday morning EDT). The Moon shines inside the Sagittarius Teapot this evening for North America. Use binoculars to piece out the Teapot through the moonlight. Note: The Teapot is about twice the width of a typical binocular's field of view, so expect to sweep around a bit to find it all.
MONDAY, JULY 3
Ý Different people have an easier or harder time seeing star colors, especially subtle ones. To me, the tints of bright stars show a little better on a bright sky background than a dark one.
For instance, the two brightest stars of summer are Vega, very high now in the east at dusk, and Arcturus, very high in the southwest. Vega is white with just a touch of icy blue. Arcturus is a yellow-orange giant. Do their colors stand out a little better for you against the deep blue of late twilight? How about against the colorless gray of the moonlight after dark?
Binoculars, of course, always make star colors much easier.
TUESDAY, JULY 4
Ý Low in the north-northeast after dark, the upright W of Cassiopeia is slowly beginning to tilt and climb. Cassiopeia is supposed to represent an ancient queen of Ethiopia, or maybe her chair. Above her is the house-shaped constellation pattern of her dimmer husband, King Cepheus. Or maybe that's his blocky head in profile. See the evening constellation map in the July Sky & Telescope. Turn the map around so its "Facing NE" horizon is down.
WEDNESDAY JULY 5
Ý We now get a brief window of moonless dark between the end of twilight and moonrise roughly a half hour later (depending on your location). Use it to see how well you can trace out the huge arch of the Milky Way looming up across the eastern half of the sky. It runs from the spout of the Sagittarius Teapot in the south-southeast, upper left to cross the bottom of the Summer Triangle high in the east, then down to Cassiopeia and Perseus in the north-northeast.
THURSDAY, JULY 6
Ý The waning Moon rises just a few degrees below Saturn late tonight. They're high in the south as dawn begins in the sky of Friday morning the 7th.
FRIDAY, JULY 7
Ý Upper left of Venus in twilight, Mars is now less than 2ø from Regulus, which is slightly brighter. See the scene below. Once you've spotted Venus after sunset (or possibly even before sunset), how much longer until you definitely detect the star, then the planet? Regulus is magnitude 1.4, Mars is 1.7, meaning Mars is one-third fainter.1
SATURDAY, JULY 8
Ý Three doubles at the top of Scorpius. The head of Scorpius - the near-vertical row of three stars upper right of Antares - stands due south right after dark. The top star of the row is Beta Scorpii or Graffias, a fine double star for telescope, separation 13 arcseconds, magnitudes 2.8 and 5.0.
Just 1ø below it is the very wide naked-eye pair Omega1 and Omega2 Scorpii, not quite vertical. They're 4th magnitude and a wide ¬ø apart. Binoculars show their slight color difference; they're spectral types B9 and G2.
Upper left of Beta by 1.6ø is Nu Scorpii, separation 41 arcseconds, magnitudes 3.8 and 6.5. In fact it's a telescopic triple. High power in excellent seeing reveals Nu's brighter component itself to be a close binary, separation 2 arcseconds, magnitudes 4.0 and 5.3, aligned almost north-south.
SUNDAY, JULY 9
Ý Mars and Regulus, upper left of Venus, are finally in conjunction this evening and tomorrow evening: 0.7ø apart.
This Week's Planet Roundup
Mercury is out of sight in the glare of the Sun.
Venus (magnitude -4.7, in Leo under the Sickle) is the brilliant "Evening Star" in the west during twilight. It's getting lower day by day and sets around twilight's end.
In a telescope Venus is a lovely, dazzling white crescent, thinning and enlarging. It's now about 35 arcseconds from pole to pole and 28% sunlit. Get your telescope on it as early after sunset as you can, or better yet, in the afternoon blue sky when it's higher in steadier seeing. Watch Venus change daily. It will continue to swell in diameter and thin in phase as it drops lower and finally becomes lost from sight in mid- to late July.
Mars (magnitude 1.7, also in Leo) glows weakly 4ø to Venus's upper left. They're very gradually beginning to draw apart. Look for Regulus, a bit brighter than Mars, somewhat farther upper left. Mars is moving closer to Regulus every day.
In a telescope Mars is just a tiny little blob 4.2 arcseconds in diameter, since it's on the far side of its orbit from us. And it's a small planet to begin with.
Jupiter (magnitude -2.2, in Aries) rises around 1 or 2 a.m. in the east-northeast. By the beginning of dawn it's shining well up in the east.
Saturn (magnitude +0.8, in dim Aquarius) rises around 11 p.m. By the beginning of dawn it's at its highest, steadiest telescopic view in the south. The 1st-magnitude star about two fists below it is Fomalhaut.
Uranus, magnitude 5.8 in Aries, is in the east-northeast by the beginning of dawn (about 11ø lower left of Jupiter).
Neptune, magnitude 7.9 at the Aquarius-Pisces border, is high in the southeast before dawn begins. It's 20ø east along the ecliptic from 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 sometimes called UTC, GMT, or Z time.
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