Saturday: Columbia
the dove, representing the bird Noah sent out to look for dry land as the floodwaters
receded, is perched just above the ridge south of Ellensburg. Its brightest
star Phact is about one fist held upright and at arm’s length above the south
horizon at midnight.
Sunday: The
Geminid meteor shower peaks for the next two nights. Meteor showers are named
after the constellation from which the meteors appear to originate. These
meteors appear to come from a point in Gemini the twins. This point is about
three fists above the east-northeast horizon at 9 p.m. tonight. You can follow
this point throughout the night, as it will remain near the bright star Castor,
the right hand star of the “twin” stars Pollux and Castor. This shower is
typically one of the best ones of the year producing bright, medium speed
meteors with up to 80 meteors per hour near the peak. This year, the waxing
crescent moon will set before the peak viewing time.
Most
meteor showers occur when the Earth passes through the orbital trail of a comet.
The broken off comet fragments collide with the Earth and burn up in the
atmosphere. Astronomers had searched for a comet source for this shower since
1862 when the shower was first observed. Finally, in 1983, astronomers
discovered the object that created the fragments that cause the meteor shower.
To their surprise, it was a dark, rock that looked like an asteroid, not a
shiny icy comet. Astronomers named this object Asteroid 3200 Phaethon. But,
they still don’t know if it an asteroid or if it is a comet with all of its ice
sublimated away by many close passes by the Sun. For more information about the
Geminid shower, go to http://earthsky.org/space/everything-you-need-to-know-geminid-meteor-shower. Now
that’s a self-explanatory URL!
Monday: Just
before Christmas, you look for junk to clean out of your closets so you can
re-gift it. I mean, so you can throw it out or recycle it. NASA’s Meter Class
Autonomous Telescope on Ascension Island is a key tool in a program tracking about
22,000 pieces space junk. Some of this junk is dangerous. The International
Space Station occasionally performs debris avoidance maneuvers to keep is
panels and sensitive instrument safe. For more information about the project,
go to http://goo.gl/Kxgihd.
Tuesday:
At 7 a.m., bright Venus is two fists above the southeast horizon, Mars is three
and a half fists above the south-southeast horizon, and Jupiter is four and a
half fists above the south-southwest horizon.
Wednesday:
“Lately, I’ve been, I’ve been losing sleep. Dreaming about the things that we
could be. But baby, I’ve been, I’ve been praying hard, said no more counting
dollars. We’ll be counting 9,096 stars, yeah we’ll be counting 9,096 stars.”
Luckily, artistic judgment prevailed over scientific precision in the OneRepublic
hit “Counting Stars”. According to the Yale Bright Star Catalog, there are
9,096 stars visible to the naked eye across the entire sky if you are observing
from a very dark site. In the northern United States, where a part of the sky
is never visible, that number drops to about 6,500. In the middle of a small
city at mid-latitudes, like Ellensburg, that number drops to a few hundred. No
wonder someone has been losing sleep. Learn more about the star count at http://goo.gl/nt8d80.
Thursday: Today
is Saturnalia, an ancient Roman festival in honor of their god Saturn, the god
of agriculture and time. The holiday featured a break from work and school, a
public banquet, and private gift giving. Some of these customs influenced the
secular aspects of Christmas celebrations. Celebrate Saturnalia at 7 a.m. by
viewing the planet Saturn, a half a fist above the southeast horizon. Seeing
the real Saturn on the morning of December 17? As Leonard said on The Big
Bang Theory, “It’s a Saturnalia miracle.”
Friday: This
is a great time of the year to go around and observe the holiday lights… from
SPACE. A NASA satellite has been tracking the spread of Christmas lighting for
the past three years. In that time, lights around major US cities shine 20 to
50 percent brighter from Thanksgiving to New Years Day than they do the rest of
the year. That makes power companies very happy. Some of the NASA images are
available at http://goo.gl/X8Vvuz.
The
positional information in this column about stars and planets is typically
accurate for the entire week. For up to date information about the night sky,
go to http://nightsky.jpl.nasa.gov/planner.cfm.
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