12/20/11 – Ephemeris – Procyon, the “Little Dog Star”
Tuesday, December 20th. The sun will rise at 8:15. It’ll be up for 8 hours and 48 minutes, setting at 5:04. The moon, 3 days past last quarter, will rise at 4:45 tomorrow morning.
Visible low in the east at 9 p.m. appears the star Procyon to its lower left is Sirius the brightest night time star. Procyon is the bright star in the constellation Canis Minor, or lesser dog. I can find only one other star in Canis Minor. Perhaps it’s a hot dog. If Sirius, in Canis major is the Dog Star then Procyon should be the Little Dog Star. However Procyon is an interesting name. It means “Before the dog”, which is an allusion to the fact that Procyon, though east of Sirius actually rises before it. This is due to Procyon’s more northerly position. This effect doesn’t work south of the equator, however. Procyon is a star much like Sirius but farther away. [It’s 11.41 to Sirius’ 8.6 light years away. And like Sirius it even has a small white dwarf star in its system.]
* Times, as always are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. Text in brackets was omitted in the audio program due to time constraints.
Addendum
The grid lines are right ascension and declination, analogous to longitude and latitude on the earth. Looking eastward the right ascension lined run from the upper left to the lower right. Thus Procyon is definitely farther east than Sirius.

Between 4 and 5AM this morning, the crescent moon was ‘suspended’ between and below two bright objects. What were they?
Here is an image link:
http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/716/moonstars122011.jpg/
Thanks,
Hi,
The “star” on the left is the planet Saturn. The one on the right is the star Spica in the constellation Virgo. A close look at both will reveal that Saturn has a cream color, while Spice is blue-white. They will stay close to each other next year.
Bob