Saturday: The Orionid meteor shower consists of the Earth colliding with pieces of the remains of Halley's Comet's tail. This shower peaks after midnight tonight and tomorrow night. This is not a meteor shower that typically results in a meteor storm. There will be about 15-20 meteors per hour, many more meteors than are visible on a typical night but not the storm that some showers bring. The Moon is just past the full phase, meaning it will obscure the dimmer meteorites that pass through the Earth’s atmosphere in the pre-dawn sky. Meteor showers are named after the constellation from which the meteors appear to originate. These meteors appear to come from a point in Orion, the hunter. This point is about one fist held upright and at arm’s length above due east at midnight. You can follow this point throughout the night as it will remain one fist above the prominent reddish star Betelgeuse (pronounced Bet'-el-jews). The Orionid meteors are fast - up to 40 miles per second. If you fall asleep tonight, you can catch the tail end of the shower every night until early November. For more information, go to https://earthsky.org/?p=27937.
Sunday: What time is teatime? Certainly not during an autumn
evening. The constellation Sagittarius the archer, with its signature teapot
shape, is sinking into the southwestern horizon. By 8:00 p.m., the handle is on
top, and the spout is touching the horizon ready to pour that last cup of tea.
Monday: Jupiter will be about a half a fist to the lower
right of the moon throughout the night. They rise in the east-northeastern sky
just before 9:00 p.m. By midnight, they are three fists above the eastern
horizon.
Tuesday: Venus is about a half a fist above due southwest at
6:30 p.m.
Wednesday: Mars will be about a fist below the moon
throughout the night. They are about one fist above the east-northeastern
horizon at midnight.
Thursday: Halloween is a week from today so make sure you
load up on peanut clusters, almond clusters, and open star clusters this week.
That last one will be easy (and cheap… actually free) because two of the most
prominent open star clusters in the sky are easily visible in the autumn sky.
The sideways V-shaped Hyades Cluster is two fists above due east at 10:00 p.m.
Containing over 300 stars; the Hyades cluster is about 150 light years away and
625 million years old. The Pleiades Cluster is a little more than three fists
above due east. It has three times as many stars as the Hyades Cluster and is
younger. Compared to our 5-billion-year-old Sun, the 100 million year age of
the Pleiades is infant-like.
Friday: Halloween weekend is a great time to celebrate the
dead. Dead stars, that is. Black holes are and neutron stars are the result of
super massive stars. But intermediate mass stars such as our Sun end up as
white dwarfs. After fusing hydrogen into helium for most of its life and fusing
helium into heavier elements for a relatively short period at the end of its
life, the Sun will end up with a core of carbon and oxygen that no longer
produces energy through nuclear fusion. Without the outward radiation pressure
from fusion resisting the inward pull of gravity, the Sun will end up as a
super-dense sphere of atoms in which the electrons are squished onto the
nuclei. It will be an object with nearly all its mid-life mass but in a volume
about the size of the Earth. The easiest white dwarf to see is in the triple
star system called Keid, from the Arabic word “qayd” meaning eggshells. Learn
more about Keid, also called 40 Eridani, including map of how to find it at
https://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/trick-or-treat-with-white-dwarfs/.
At midnight (scary), Keid is a little more than two fists above due southeast.
You’ll need a small telescope to see it. First find Rigel, the brightest star
in the constellation Orion. It is one and a half fists above the
east-southeastern horizon. Then use binoculars to find the right area. With
Rigel at the bottom of your field of view. There should be a star near the top
of your girls of view that is about one sixth as bright. This star is called
Cursa. Next, move your binoculars up and to the right about one and a half
field of view diameters. Look for two stars close together, each about one
third as bright as Cursa. Finally, move your binoculars straight over to the
right about one and a half field of view diameters. The lower of these two
stars is Keid or 40 Eridani A. You’ll need a telescope to see the white dwarf,
called 40 Eridani B.
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.
All times are Pacific Time unless noted.
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