07/04/11 – Ephemeris – Red, white and blue stars
Independence Day, Monday, July 4th. Today the sun will be up for 15 hours and 27 minutes, setting at 9:30. The moon, 3 days past new, will set at 11:22 this evening. Tomorrow the sun will rise at 6:03.
Today’s Independence Day so let’s look for some red, white, and blue stars. Red is easy, the red star Antares is seen in the south at 11 p.m. White is easy too, the official white calibration star Vega high in the east at 11 p.m. The blue star is really blue-white. The brightest of these out at 11 p.m. is Spica, low in the southwest. The color is best seen in binoculars. Star colors are quite subtle, and are an indicator of the temperature of their outer gaseous layers. The temperature of a stars outer layers, in order of their increasing temperatures, red, white and blue, is not related to the temperature in their cores. Of these three the coolest on the outside, Antares is really the hottest inside, using helium as fuel.
* Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.