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Solar System Observing

Articles about how to understand, find and see solar system objects including planets, the Moon, the Sun, asteroids, meteors, and comets with binoculars, telescopes, and the naked eye.

Venus Returns as the “Morning Star”

September 11, 2015 by Brian Ventrudo Filed Under: Solar System

Venus, Mars, and Jupiter rise in the eastern sky before sunrise as seen on September 12, 2015. (Made with SkySafari 4).
Venus, Mars, and Jupiter rise in the eastern sky before sunrise as seen on September 12, 2015. (Made with SkySafari 4).

The planet Venus has returned to the sky at a “morning star”, shining brightly in the eastern sky before sunrise in the constellation Cancer, the Crab. Venus is by far the brightest object in the sky except for the Sun and Moon. It shines at magnitude -4.5, nearly as bright as it gets, and spans about 44″ when seen in a telescope. The face of the planet is a magnificent slender crescent shape just 18% illuminated by the Sun.

Venus is joined by Jupiter, which rises a little later and shines a little fainter. The two planets made a dramatic display in the evening sky earlier in 2015 and will now dominate the morning sky for the rest of the year. Too low in the sky to reveal much detail, Jupiter is still worth a look in binoculars or a small telescope, if just to see its fat disk and its four biggest moons make their way around the big planet. The planet now appears about 31″ across, much smaller than Venus, but fully illuminated.

Between the two bright planets, you also see the ochre glow of Mars, still relatively faint at magnitude +1.8 and just 3.8″ across. It’s far too small and distant to reveal any detail in a telescope. The planet will slowly brighten over the next 8 months on the way to opposition in May 2016. Just below Mars, closer to Jupiter, you see the icy white star Regulus in the constellation Leo, shining slightly brighter at magnitude +1.4.

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Filed Under: Solar System jupiter, leo, sunrise, venus

Ten Excellent Places to See the Total Solar Eclipse of August 2017

August 27, 2015 by Brian Ventrudo Filed Under: Celestial Events, Solar System

Anticipation is building for the great solar eclipse of August 21, 2017, the first total solar eclipse to be visible in the continental United States since 1979, and the first to run from coast to coast in nearly a hundred years. Most North Americans live within a one or two day drive of the eclipse path, so this will be one of the most watched astronomical events in history. Thousands of towns and highways lie along the path, which runs from Oregon to South Carolina. But where’s the best place to see this solar eclipse? Here are ten places, listed from east to west, to consider as you plan your eclipse-observing expedition for 2017:   [Read more…] about Ten Excellent Places to See the Total Solar Eclipse of August 2017

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Filed Under: Celestial Events, Solar System solar eclipse

The Pull of the Moon – Video

August 21, 2015 by Brian Ventrudo Filed Under: Science, Solar System

The Pull of the Moon from Alan Dyer on Vimeo.

Ocean tides are one of the few phenomena that bring the workings of the sky down to Earth.  The gravitational pull of the Moon, and to a lesser degree the Sun, tug on the world’s oceans while the Earth rotates under them, causing the ocean to appear to rise and fall twice each day. Isaac Newton applied his theory of gravitation to explain the tides. He reasoned that the Moon pulls on the ocean on the Moon-facing side of Earth, pulls on the Earth itself to a lesser degree because it’s further away, and pulls on the ocean on the far side of the Earth least of all. The effect is to cause the oceans to bulge slightly on a line towards the Moon as the earth rotates. So we see two tides each day spaced by 12 hours plus a little bit more to account for the Moon’s revolution around the Sun. Other than sunlight itself, tides are one of the most familiar astronomical phenomena we see around us.

In this time-lapse video by photographer Alan Dyer, you see the tides in action on the east coast of Canada, including the Bay of Fundy, a place in New Brunswick that boasts the highest tides in the world. It ends with a view of the Moon and Sun setting over the Bay of Fundy.

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Filed Under: Science, Solar System moon, solar system

Comet 67/P Springs a Leak at Perihelion

August 14, 2015 by Brian Ventrudo Filed Under: Solar System

A jet erupts from below the surface of Comet 67/P on July 29, 2015, two weeks before the comet reaches perihelion (credit: ESA).
A jet erupts from below the surface of Comet 67/P on July 29, 2015, two weeks before the comet reaches perihelion (credit: ESA).

Comet 67/P (Churyumov-Gerasimenko) reached its closest point to the Sun on August 14, 2015. It also became the first comet to enter the inner solar system and reach perihelion with a man-made companion, namely the magnificent Rosetta spacecraft operated by the European Space Agency. Rosetta has studied the comet for the past year, dropped the little Philae probe in late 2014 to land on the comet, and now enjoys a close-up view of the comet’s fulminating nucleus as it warms and ejects plumes of gas into space. Two weeks before perihelion, Rosetta captured a spectacular image of a brilliant jet erupting from “neck” of the bi-lobed comet (see above). The jet was the brightest yet seen by Rosetta, and the fireworks lasted nearly 20 minutes [Read more…] about Comet 67/P Springs a Leak at Perihelion

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Filed Under: Solar System comet

Astonishing View of Moon Transiting Earth

August 6, 2015 by Brian Ventrudo Filed Under: Solar System

NASA’s Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite captured an astonishing series of images of the Moon transiting Earth. In the above animation made from the still images, we see the far side of the Moon, illuminated by the Sun, as the Moon passes across the face of the rotating Earth from a distance of about one million miles [Read more…] about Astonishing View of Moon Transiting Earth

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Filed Under: Solar System earth, moon, solar system

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