04/04/2013 – Ephemeris – Can you spot Zodiacal Light?
Ephemeris for Thursday, April 4th. The sun will rise at 7:17. It’ll be up for 12 hours and 56 minutes, setting at 8:14. The moon, 1 day past last quarter, will rise at 4:34 tomorrow morning.
After you try to spot Jupiter tonight, or hang around outside at the end of astronomical twilight, about 10 p.m. look to the west at Taurus the bull and Gemini. Then broaden your gaze. There will be a very faint triangular glow with broad base at the horizon leaning a bit to the left, with its apex near Jupiter and the V of the face of Taurus the bull and the bright star Aldebaran to the right of Orion. This glow is called Zodiacal Light, caused by the reflected sunlight off a cloud of dust located in the plane of the solar system. Most of the large bodies of the solar system orbit the sun in a single plane. The one exception to this are comets, which orbit at all angles to the sun. Zodiacal Light is best seen on spring evenings and autumn mornings.
Addendum
It seems the only good photographs of zodiacal light I get is when there’s a comet in that direction. It happened a year before with Comet Hyakutake. The images here were taken later in the month when the Hyades and the Pleiades were lower in the sky.
Here’s a black and white image with enhanced contrast.

