Archive
01/06/2012 – Ephemeris – GTAS meeting and viewing night tonight
Friday, January 6th. The sun will rise at 8:19. It’ll be up for 8 hours and 58 minutes, setting at 5:17. The moon, 3 days before full, will set at 6:50 tomorrow morning.
The Grand Traverse Astronomical Society will have its first meeting of the year tonight at 8 p.m. at the Northwestern Michigan College’s Rogers Observatory. Following will be a public viewing night featuring the moon and Jupiter. This year the first viewing night of the month will come at the end of the society meeting at 9 o’clock. Come for both. The presentation for the meeting will be NMC Astronomy Club member Storm Strausheim and her topic will be those mysterious stellar cannibals – Black Holes. The observatory is located on Birmley Road between Keystone and Garfield roads. April through October this year there will be a second viewing night at the observatory later in the month.
* Times, as always are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.
01/05/2012 – Ephemeris – Viewing planets with that new telescope
Thursday, January 5th. The sun will rise at 8:19. It’ll be up for 8 hours
and 57 minutes, setting at 5:16. The moon, half way from first quarter to full, will set at 5:59 tomorrow morning.
Trying out that new Christmas telescope can be challenging on cold winter nights. Set it up indoors first and get used to it. The moon and planets are the easiest targets for the new telescope owner. Locate the moon first if it’s out as it is tonight and make sure that small telescope or reflex finder that pots a red dot on the object is aligned with the telescope. Then you can go off and locate the planets. Venus is nice and bright in the southwest early in the evening. A telescope will show a tiny nearly circular orb. But wait a couple of months and it will become a large crescent. Jupiter is always a great sight with its four moon shuttling from one side to the other of the planet from night to night. And don’t forget Jupiter itself with its cloud bands.
* Times, as always are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.
01/04/2012 – Ephemeris – The planets this week and the earth at perihelion
Wednesday, January 4th. The sun will rise at 8:19. It’ll be up for 8 hours and 56 minutes, setting at 5:15. The moon, 3 days past first quarter, will set at 5:03 tomorrow morning.
It’s the first Wednesday of 2012 and time again to take a look at the whereabouts of the bright planets. The planet Venus is brilliant in the southwestern sky after sunset setting at 8:07. Jupiter is the most prominent planet of the evening sky, once Venus sets. It’s located high in the south and is seen against the stars of the constellation Aries. It will pass due south at 7:41 p.m. It will set at 2:26 a.m.. Mars will rise at 10:52 p.m in the east northeast and is below the hind end of the constellation Leo the lion. It is 92.4 million miles away and closing. Saturn will rise at 2:07 a.m. just to the left of the bright star Spica in the east southeast. The sun is its closest to earth of the entire year today. Only 91.3 million miles away.
* Times, as always are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.
01/03/2012 – Ephemeris – The Quadrantid meteor shower tomorrow morning
January 3rd. The sun will rise at 8:19. It’ll be up for 8 hours and 55 minutes, setting at 5:14. The moon, 2 days past first quarter, will set at 4:04 tomorrow morning.
Tomorrow morning will see the peak of the Quadrantid meteor shower. They will be best seen after 4 a.m. and before twilight starts at 6:34. The radiant will appear high in the sky then near the handle of the Big Dipper. The meteors or shooting stars will appear to come from there but will appear all over the sky. The shower is named for the constellation that they appear to come from, unfortunately the constellation didn’t survive. It was supposed to represent a mural quadrant, and old astronomical measuring tool that was built into a north-south wall to measure the altitude of stars as the crosses due south before the advent of the telescope. The Quadrantids can be a spectacular shower and viewing can be endangered by cold feet and hands.
* Times, as always are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.
Addendum
01/02/2012 – Ephemeris – The moon and Jupiter and telescope tips
Monday, January 2nd 2012. The sun will rise at 8:19. It’ll be up for 8 hours and 54 minutes, setting at 5:13. The moon, 1 day past first quarter, will set at 3:04 tomorrow morning.
Tonight the bright planet Jupiter will appear below the moon. This is a great time to try out that new telescope or binoculars, or dig that old one out of the closet or attic. With a telescope use the lowest power to locate the moon and get an overview. The bright southern part of the moon, which may appear at the top of the image, because telescopes normally invert the image is heavily cratered. The other part has several dark nearly flat structures called seas. These are really huge craters that caused the internal lava to well up, making the smooth floors. Recently some astronomers hypothesized that a second moon was created with ours and that it crashed into our moon creating the lunar seas.
* Times, as always are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.

