Archive
05/29/2023 – Ephemeris Extra – Clouds will cause the Star Party, tonight, to be canceled, however…
The Grand Traverse Astronomical Society members will not come out this afternoon and evening to The Dune Climb at Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore if it stays cloudy. However, the park rangers will be there unless it is raining with alternate activities.
The next scheduled Sun & Star Party will be May 27, the Saturday of the Memorial Day weekend.
04/28/2023 – Ephemeris – International Astronomy Day is tomorrow
This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Arbor Day, Friday, April 28th. Today the Sun will be up for 14 hours and 6 minutes, setting at 8:43, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:36. The Moon, 1 day past first quarter, will set at 4:23 tomorrow morning.
Tomorrow is International Astronomy Day. The Grand Traverse Astronomical Society (GTAS) will celebrate the event with a Sun and Star Party at the Dune Climb area of the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore. There will be a solar viewing period from 6 pm to about 7:30 pm or so, when the Sun will set over the dune. The society has two hydrogen alpha solar telescopes, and members have another two, to view the Sun’s chromosphere and prominences. Plus, other members have white light filtered telescopes to view sunspots on the face of the Sun. Night viewing will start at 9 pm with the Moon and Venus featured, along with the brighter telescopic wonders of spring. But only if the skies are clear or mostly clear.
The next GTAS event at the Sleeping Bear Dunes will be Saturday, May 27th, with a program like this Saturday’s. What we call a Sun ‘n Star Party.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT –4 hours). They may be different for your location.
Addendum
04/27/2023 – Ephemeris – Astronomy Day is this Saturday, April 29, 2023
This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Thursday, April 27th. Today the Sun will be up for 14 hours and 3 minutes, setting at 8:42, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:37. The Moon, at first quarter today, will set at 3:59 tomorrow morning.
It is the latter part of April or first part of May that the spring celebration of International Astronomy Day occurs. It’s generally the Saturday closest to first quarter moon. That puts it to this Saturday, two days hence. This year, the Grand Traverse Astronomical Society will celebrate the event with a Sun and Star Party at the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, more specifically at the Dune Climb. More on the schedule tomorrow, but only if weather permits. The time around first quarter is the best time to view the Moon, if you aren’t out to view a specific lunar feature. The rugged highlands to the south and the smooth maria or seas to the north are seen at their best near the sunrise line, we call the terminator, due to the long shadows that are cast.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT –4 hours). They may be different for your location.
Addendum

The Moon for Astronomy Day, 2023, two days after first quarter or 9 days old. Some of the more prominent features labeled. Created using Virtual Moon Atlas, GIMP and LibreOffice Draw.
Translations of some lunar feature names according to Virtual Moon Atlas
Lacus Somniorum – Lake of Dreams
Mare Crisium – Sea of Crises
Mare Frigoris – Sea of Cold
Mare Humorum – Sea of Moisture
Mare Imbrium – Sea of Showers
Mare Nubium – Sea of Clouds
Mare Serenitatis – Sea of Serenity
Mare Tranquillitatis – Sea of Tranquility
Mare Vaporum – Sea of Vapors
Montes Alpes – Alps Mountains
Montes Apenninus – Apennines Mountains
Oceanus Procellarum – Ocean of Storms
Sinus Asperitatis – Golfe des Asperites
Sinus Iridium – Bay of Rainbows
Sinus Medii – Central Bay
04/26/2023 – Ephemeris – Let’s find where the naked-eye planets have wandered off to this week
This is Ephemeris for Wednesday, April 26th. Today the Sun will be up for 14 hours even, setting at 8:41, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:39. The Moon, 1 day before first quarter, will set at 3:28 tomorrow morning.
Let’s find where the naked-eye planets have wandered off to this week. Venus is our blazing Evening Star, seen in the west all evening. It will set after midnight. It’s in Gemini, below the namesake stars of the twins Castor on the right and Pollux on the left. Pollux is a bit below and to the right of the Moon tonight. Mars is above and left of Venus. Venus is closing the gap between them, but will never quite reach Mars while they are in the evening sky. The closest they will get is three and a half degrees or 7 moon diameters apart, before Venus pulls back toward the Sun faster than Mars. They won’t cross paths until February of next year. Saturn is emerging from morning twilight, rising at 4:33 am in the east-southeast. Both Jupiter and Mercury are too close to the direction of the Sun to be seen.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT –4 hours). They may be different for your location.
Addendum

Evening planets and stars looking westward at 10 pm tonight, April 26, 2023. Click or tap on the image to enlarge it. Created using Stellarium and GIMP.

The Moon, one day before first quarter tonight, April 26, 2023, with prominent features labeled. Created using Stellarium, GIMP and LibreOffice Draw.

Telescopic Venus and Saturn (north up) as they would be seen in a small telescope, with the same magnification. Apparent diameters: Venus 16.51″ and is 68.1% illuminated; Saturn 16.23″, its rings 37.80″. Mars is too small to be represented here. It is 5.5″ in diameter. Created using Cartes du Ciel (Sky Charts).
04/25/2023 – Ephemeris – The Moon is passing Mars today
This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Tuesday, April 25th. Today the Sun will be up for 13 hours and 57 minutes, setting at 8:40, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:40. The Moon, 2 days before first quarter, will set at 2:50 tomorrow morning.
Tonight, the Moon and the planet Mars will appear close to each other. The Red Planet will appear just below and left of the waxing crescent Moon. Mars is a lot dimmer than it was last December. That’s because it is a lot farther away than it was back then, 157 versus 51 million miles (253 versus 82 million kilometers). Mars is the planet with the greatest distance variation percentage over its synodic period, that is, from opposition to the next opposition. It also has the longest synodic period, at 26 months on average. That’s why opportunities to launch spacecraft only occur every 26 months. The least energy it takes to get to Mars occurs when a spacecraft is launched a few months before opposition, when Mars is at its closest, to arrive several months after opposition.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT –4 hours). They may be different for your location.
Addendum
04/24/2023 – Ephemeris – The reason for the Moon’s phases
This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Monday, April 24th. Today the Sun will be up for 13 hours and 55 minutes, setting at 8:38, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:42. The Moon, 3 days before first quarter, will set at 2:02 tomorrow morning.
The Moon’s changing appearance over the month may seem to be mysterious at first glance. Maybe because one may think that the objects in the sky are somehow different from the familiar objects we see around us on the Earth. In ancient times, especially the Greeks, thought that everything in the heavens was perfect and spotless. They explained the definite markings we see as the man-in-the-moon as a reflection of the Earth by a spotless Moon. The Moon’s phases are simply light and shadow on a ball in the sunlight. Sometime, when the Moon appears in the daytime, take a small ball, like a golf ball and hold it up to the Moon, while the ball is also in sunlight, and the small ball will exhibit the same phase as the Moon.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT –4 hours). They may be different for your location.
Addendum

This is the best diagram of the Moon’s phases and how the it appears from the Earth. Credit http://planetfacts.org/phases-of-the-moon/ which I recommend.

A demonstration of the Moon’s crescent phase with the styrofoam moon ball we use for Project Astro held up to a light off frame to the right. The line between the bright (day) and dark (night) side of the ball, moon or planet is called the terminator. The night side of the ball is illuminated a bit by the translucency of the ball, and the reflection off my hand. Note the roughness of the ball is visible only at the terminator, where the shadows are longest. I photographed this outside at night to minimize the ball’s nighttime illumination.
04/21/2023 – Ephemeris – The first major meteor shower of spring reaches peak this weekend
This is Ephemeris for Friday, April 21st. Today the Sun will be up for 13 hours and 46 minutes, setting at 8:35, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:47. The Moon, 1 day past new, will set at 10:44 this evening.
Saturday night and Sunday morning will see the peak of the Lyrid meteor shower. This is the first of two major meteor showers of spring. The other one in two weeks will have to compete with a full Moon. This meteor shower will be visible all night. At the end of twilight the radiant of the shower, where the meteors will seem to come from, will be low in the northeast, to the right of the bright star Vega in the constellation of Lyra the harp, for which the meteor shower is named. The radiant point is actually between the constellations of Lyra and Hercules. Only 15 to 20 meteors an hour will be expected when the radiant is nearly overhead as morning twilight starts in the 5 am hour. The most famous meteor shower, for us, is the Perseids of August reaching peak on the morning of the 13th of August which will be seen in dark skies for most of the night.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT –4 hours). They may be different for your location.
Addendum
04/20/2023 – Ephemeris – There’s a hybrid solar eclipse happening today*
This is Ephemeris for Thursday, April 20th. Today the Sun will be up for 13 hours and 43 minutes, setting at 8:33, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:48. The Moon is new today, and won’t be visible.
Last night and in the early morning hours this morning, for us, there was a solar eclipse visible from the Indian Ocean, through Indonesia and ending in the Pacific Ocean. This was a type of eclipse that I haven’t talked about before, a hybrid eclipse. It started at sunrise with the Moon too far away to completely cover the face of the Sun, as an annular eclipse. The central part of the eclipse path, due to the fact that the Earth is a sphere, was nearly four thousand miles closer to the Moon than at sunrise and sunset, evolves into a total eclipse. As the Moon’s shadow falls off toward the limb of the Earth, the increasing distance of the shadow to the Earth’s surface, causes the Moon to shrink enough to revert to an annular eclipse once again.
Next eclipse season, more specifically October 14th, there will be an annular eclipse, whose path crosses the US from the Oregon-California border to Texas. We will get a partial eclipse out of it. The big event will occur in the next eclipse season when a total solar eclipse will occur to cross the US from Texas to Maine on April 8, 2024. The path of totality will clip the southeast corner of Michigan.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT –4 hours). They may be different for your location.
* By the time you read this, the eclipse is either happening right now, or it’s over.
Addendum

World solar eclipse map for the hybrid eclipse, April 20, 2023. The central path is in red, while the total eclipse part of the path is highlighted in blue. The image is of the world solar eclipse map for the hybrid eclipse, April 20, 2023. Taken from https://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEplot/SEplot2001/SE2023Apr20H.GIF. Credit: NASA’s GSFC, Fred Espenak.
04/19/2023 – Ephemeris – Let’s find where the naked-eye planets have wandered off to this week
This is Ephemeris for Wednesday, April 19th. Today the Sun will be up for 13 hours and 40 minutes, setting at 8:32, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:50. The Moon, 1 day before new, will rise at 7:04 tomorrow morning.
Let’s find where the naked-eye planets have wandered off to this week. Since I left you in February, Jupiter passed behind the Sun 8 days ago and moved to the morning side of the Sun. Though it will be more than a month before it is far enough from the Sun to be spotted before sunrise. Venus is our blazing Evening Star, seen in the west all evening. It will set shortly after midnight. It’s in Taurus, with the bright star Aldebaran below and left of it and the Pleiades below and right of it. Mars is above and left of Venus. Venus is closing the gap, but will never quite reach Mars while they are in the evening sky. The closest they will get is three and a half degrees or 7 moon diameters apart, but won’t cross paths until February of next year. In the morning sky, Saturn is now visible by 6 am in the east-southeast.
Addendum

Evening planets Venus and Mars among the bright stars of winter at 9:30 pm with Mercury about to set, April 19, 2023. Created using Stellarium.
04/18/2023 – Ephemeris – Orion rotates 90 degrees from rising to setting
This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Tuesday, April 18th. Today the Sun will be up for 13 hours and 37 minutes, setting at 8:31, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:52. The Moon, 2 days before new, will rise at 6:43 tomorrow morning.
As the constellation of Orion the hunter, that dominated our winter skies, moves into the west in the evening, it will have rotated 90 degrees from its rising orientation. As we saw it rising last November, its three belt stars were nearly vertically aligned. Now, as Orion nears the western horizon, those belt stars have rotated to be almost horizontal. The same is true of Gemini’s two brightest stars, Castor and Pollux. They are the two stars above red Mars, which is now halfway through Gemini on its eastward travels. Orion, a minor Greek hero, is most famous for how he died. I know of three versions, all different. The one that fits Orion’s current setting is that he was killed by the sting of a giant scorpion. So he must flee the sky before Scorpius the scorpion rises, which is around midnight tonight.
This amount of rotation between rising and setting is only true for latitudes near 45 degrees north or south, such as Northern Michigan, and objects near the celestial equator. The rotation for other latitudes would be 2 x (90 – latitude) for equatorial celestial objects. The name given for the term (90 – latitude) is colatitude. 90 degrees is the latitude of the Earth’s poles.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT –4 hours). They may be different for your location.
Addendum

When Orion is rising, its belt stars are nearly vertically aligned. Castor and Pollux, too, appear nearly vertically aligned. This was for November 30, 2022, at 9 pm. Mars was near opposition then and quite close to the Earth, so it had shown quite brightly. Created using Stellarium and LibreOffice Draw.

Orion’s belt stars show that the constellation has rotated about 90 degrees from their rising orientation. This is for 10 pm, April 18, 2023. Note that Venus is the Evening Star now, and Mars is much dimmer, as the Earth has moved ahead and away from it. Created using Stellarium and LibreOffice Draw, for the added labels.








