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EI2GYB > ASTRO    19.12.22 13:00l 130 Lines 10633 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: This Week's Sky at a Glance, December 16 - 24
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Sent: 221219/1138Z 8098@EI2GYB.DGL.IRL.EURO BPQ6.0.23


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This Week's Sky at a Glance, December 16 - 24

By: Alan MacRobert December 16, 2022


FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16

Ý The little Pleiades cluster shines high in the southeast after dinnertime, upper right of Mars by about a fist at arm's length, as shown below. It's the size of your fingertip at arm's length. Its six brightest stars form a miniature dipper standing on its handle.

How many Pleiads can you count with your unaided eye? Take your time and keep looking. Most people with good vision can count those 6. But with sharper eyesight, a good dark sky, and a steady gaze, you may make out 8 or 9. Binoculars show several dozen.


SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17

Ý Have you ever watched a Sirius-rise? Find an open view right down to the east-southeast horizon, and watch for Sirius to come up about two fists below Orion's vertical belt. Sirius rises sometime around 8 p.m. now, depending on your location.

About 15 minutes before Sirius-rise, a lesser star comes up barely to the right of there: Beta Canis Majoris or Mirzam. Its name means "the Announcer," and what Mirzam announces is Sirius. You're not likely to mistake them; the second-magnitude Announcer is only a twentieth as bright as the king star soon to make his entry.

When a star is very low it tends to twinkle slowly, and often in vivid colors. Sirius is bright enough to show these effects well, especially with binoculars.


SUNDAY, DECEMBER 18

Ý This is the time of year when M31, the Andromeda Galaxy, passes your zenith soon after dark (if you live in the mid-northern latitudes). The exact time depends on your longitude. Binoculars will show M31 just off the knee of the Andromeda constellation's stick figure; see the big evening constellation chart in the center of Sky & Telescope.

Lie on your back with the binocs and look straight up. M31 crosses smack through your zenith if you're at 41ø north latitude.

MONDAY, DECEMBER 19

Ý After the Pleiades and Hyades, what's the next most attractive star cluster in Taurus? Maybe it's big, loose NGC 1647, between the horns of Taurus just a few degrees from Aldebaran and the Hyades. Matt Wedel, Sky & Telescope's Binocular Highlights columnist, calls it "a wonderful object for binoculars," but that's in a really dark sky.

The cluster's location, at least, is easy: It forms a not quite equilateral triangle with Aldebaran and the other tip of the Hyades V. (The cluster is centered 1ø southeast of, i.e. currently below, the point that would make the equilateral triangle perfect.) Just off the cluster's south edge you'll find "a fine optical double star," Matt writes, very wide and unequal, both orange, magnitudes 6.0 and 7.5.

Some, however, would instead give the rank of third-place Taurus cluster to the NGC 1746 complex, also between the Taurus horns. It's larger, sloppier, and a little more photogenic and eye-catching. Look for it 3/5 of the way from Aldebaran to Beta Tauri. (NGC 1647 is 1/5 of the way along that same line.)

NGC 1746 and 1647 often get confused, not least because their NGC numbers are the same digits swapped.

And in fact, what gets called "NGC 1746" is actually a rough, messy superposition of three distinct loose clusters. No wonder it looks big and lopsided.

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 20

Ý Around the end of twilight, face north and look very high. Cassiopeia is now a flattened M shape there, canted at about a 45ø angle (depending on where you live). Just two hours later, the M is horizontal! Constellations passing near the zenith appear to rotate rapidly with respect to your direction "up."

Ý You are remembered, Carl Sagan (November 9, 1934 - December 20, 1996).

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21

Ý Jupiter's Great Red Spot should transit the planet's central meridian around 8:59 p.m. EST. A light blue or green filter at the eyepiece helps a bit.

Features on Jupiter are nearer to the central meridian than the limb for 50 minutes before and after they transit.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22

Ý The Summer Triangle sinks lower in the west as evening proceeds, and Altair is the first of its stars to go (for mid-northern skywatchers).

Start by spotting bright Vega, magnitude zero, the brightest star in the northwest soon after dark. The brightest one above Vega is Deneb. Altair, the Triangle's third star, is farther to Vega's left. How late into the night, and into the advancing season, can you keep Altair in view?

Ý On the opposite side of the sky, Orion shines in the east-southeast after dinnertime. He's well up now, but his three-star Belt is still nearly vertical. The Belt points up toward Aldebaran and, even higher, the Pleiades. In the other direction, it points down to where bright Sirius will rise around 7 or 8 p.m. to twinkle furiously.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23

Ý Above Orion shines orange Aldebaran with the large, loose Hyades cluster in its background. Binoculars are the ideal instrument for this cluster given its size: its brightest stars (4th and 5th magnitude) span an area about 4ø wide. (Fainter ones extend much farther.) Higher above, the Pleiades are only a little more than 1ø across counting just the brightest stars.

The main Hyades stars famously form a V. It's currently lying on its side, open to the left. Aldebaran forms the lower of the V's two tips.

With binoculars, follow the lower branch of the V to the right from Aldebaran. The first thing you come to is the House asterism: a pattern of stars like a child's drawing of a house with a peaked roof. The house is currently upright and bent to the right like it got pushed.

The House includes three binocular double stars that form an equilateral triangle, with each pair facing the others. The brightest pair is Theta1 and Theta2 Tauri. You may find that you can resolve the Theta pair with your unaided eyes.

Ý New Moon (exact at 5:17 am EST on this date).

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 24

Ý Starting 20 minutes after sunset, use binoculars to look low above the southwest horizon for Venus. Once you get it, watch for Mercury 4ø to its upper right (well less than a binocular field width), and a very thin fingernail clipping of a crescent Moon a similar distance to Mercury's lower right. See the scene below.

The Moon is only 1« days old when seen from the longitudes of the Americas. Can you see the earthshine on the Moon's dark portion?


Ý Writes Gary Seronik in the December Sky & Telescope, "Enjoy some extra holiday cheer [soon after dusk] courtesy of a 90ø string of lights. It includes, from south to west-northwest, Fomalhaut, Saturn, Altair, and Vega. The quartet are similarly bright - only a touch more than a magnitude distinguishes the brightest light in the string (Vega) from the faintest (Fomalhaut)." They're about equally spaced.

ÿ
This Week's Planet Roundup

Mercury and Venus glimmer very low in the southwest in bright twilight. Try for them with binoculars 20 or 30 minutes after sundown. Venus is by far the brightest at magnitude -3.9. Mercury, about 5ø to Venus's upper left all week, is only mag -0.6. They both get a little higher and easier day by day.

Mars fades a bit from magnitude -1.7 to -1.5 this week as it recedes from opposition, and it shrinks from 16.4 to 15.2 arcseconds wide. It shines like a firespark in the east as the stars come out. It gains altitude until culminating nearly overhead around 10 or 11 p.m. Mars still outshines Sirius (which rises around 8 p.m.). Mars's fiery yellow-orange color always helps give it away.

Mars is between Aldebaran to its lower right in the evening, and Capella almost three times as far to Mars's upper left. The planet passed exactly between them on December 14th, moving west. Watch it creep farther out of this alignment day by day. It will reverse and go back directly between them stars in February. Bonus points: Can you say why? Answer at the bottom of this page.*

Jupiter blazes white high in the south in twilight, then sinks toward the southwest. At magnitude -2.5 it vastly outshines the background stars of dim Pisces. Look for the Great Square of Pegasus above it as the stars come out, and upper right of Jupiter as the evening advances.

Telescopically, Jupiter is down to 41 or 40 arcseconds wide.

Saturn, magnitude +0.8 in Capricornus, glows in the southwest as twilight fades to night. Left of it, by two fists at arm's length, sparkles Fomalhaut. Catch Saturn as early as you can; it sets around 8 or 9 p.m.

Uranus, magnitude 5.7 in Aries, moves high across the south during evening. It displays a tiny, very slightly blue-greenish gray disk 3.7 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 7ø west of Jupiter, is getting lower in the evening. It's 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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