Saturday: Jupiter and Saturn line up in the southern sky at
9:30 p.m. Jupiter is one and a fists above due southeast and Saturn is two
fists to the right of it. Astronomers discovered volcanoes spewing water vapor
on Saturn’s moon Enceledus back in 2005. Just two years ago, scientists
published findings of similar activity on Jupiter’s moon Europa. It’s not
possible to see Enceladus with a small telescope. But you can see Europa using
a small telescope. If you look at 9:30 p.m., you’ll see all four large
moons: three on one side and one on the other. Io is by itself on one side of
Jupiter. On the other side of Jupiter, Europa is closest to Jupiter. Brighter
Ganymede is right next to Europa and Callisto is farther out. Depending on the
size of your telescope, Ganymede and Europa may look like a single point of
light. For more information about Europa’s geysers, go to https://earthsky.org/space/europa-water-vapor-geysers-goddard.
Sunday: Venus is a half a fist above the west-southwestern
horizon at 8:30 p.m. The bright star Spica is less than a fist to the left of
Venus.
Monday: Had the script been written a little differently for
a well-known Robin Williams movie, we might have heard Mr. Williams shout,
“Goooood Morning Orion the hunter”. Orion is typically thought of as a winter
constellation. But, it makes its first appearance in the early morning summer
sky. The lowest corner of Orion’s body, represented by the star Saiph
(pronounced “safe”), rises at 2:00 a.m., well before the Sun. By 5:30 a.m.,
Orion’s belt is three fists above the south-southeastern horizon.
Tuesday: Need a caffeine pick-me-up? Make it a double. Need
an astronomy pick-me-up? Make it a double double. Find Vega, in the
constellation Lyra the lyre, nearly straight overhead at 9:00 tonight. Less
than half a fist to the east (or left if you are facing south) of the bright
bluish star Vega is the “star” Epsilon Lyra. If you look at Epsilon Lyra
through binoculars, it looks like two stars. If you look at Epsilon Lyra
through a large enough telescope, you will notice that each star in the pair is
itself a pair of stars. Each star in the double is double. Hence, Epsilon
Lyra is known as the double double. The stars in each pair orbit a point
approximately in the center of each respective pair. The pairs themselves orbit
a point between the two pairs.
Wednesday: While you were looking through your underwear
drawer for clean socks, some citizen scientists were looking through sky maps
obtained by robotic telescopes to find brown dwarfs. The project, called
Backyard Worlds: Planet 9, allows anyone with a computer and internet
connection to search through thousands of images to find these strange objects
that are midway between being classified as large planets and small stars. Some
brown dwarfs can have surface temperatures of thousands of degrees Celsius, the
recently discovered ones are cooler than the boiling point of water and may
even have clouds of water vapor! Read more about the discovery and how you can
participate in this project at https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2020-159.
Thursday: “I’m a little teapot, short and stout. The
galactic center, I pour it out.” (I’m a Little Teapot, astronomy version, 2021.)
Despite its great size and importance, the center of our Milky Way galaxy and
its giant black hole remains hidden to the naked eye behind thick clouds of gas
and dust. By plotting the orbits of stars near the middle of the galaxy,
astronomers have determined that the black hole’s mass is equal to about 4.5
million Suns. While you can’t see the actual galactic center, you can gaze in
the direction of the center by looking just to the right of the teapot asterism
in the constellation Sagittarius. This point is about one fist above the
south-southwestern horizon at 9:00 p.m.
Friday: The Gemini Twins are right above the waning crescent
Moon in the eastern sky at 5:30 a.m. Pollux is a little more than a half a fist
above the Moon and Castor is another half fist up.
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 https://nightsky.jpl.nasa.gov/planner.cfm.
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