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Ephemeris: 02/28/25 – Previewing March Skies
Ephemeris: 02/28/25 – Previewing March Skies
This is Ephemeris for Friday, February 28th. Today the Sun will be up for 11 hours and 8 minutes, setting at 6:29, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:19. The Moon, 1 day past new, will set at 7:34 this evening.
Let’s preview the month of March. In March the increase in daylight hours is at its greatest, with spring 3 weeks away. Daylight hours will increase from 11 hours and 11 minutes tomorrow to 12 hours and 44 minutes on the 31st. Along with that the altitude of the Sun at local noon will increase from 38 degrees tomorrow to 49 ½ degrees at month’s end. Local noon tomorrow, by the way, for Interlochen and Traverse City is 12:54 pm, which is mainly due to the fact that our standard time meridian happens to run through Philadelphia. That’s before daylight time starts on the 9th. On that date local noon will be 1:52 pm. Spring will begin later this month on the 20th when the Sun will pass overhead on the equator heading northward.
We change to Daylight Saving Time on the 9th. EST to EDT. Bah, Humbug!
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.
Addendum
Addendum
March Evening Star Chart

The planets and stars are plotted for the 15th at 10 p.m. EDT in the evening and 6 a.m. on the 16th for the morning chart. These are the chart times. Note that Traverse City is located approximately 45 minutes behind our time meridian. (An hour and 45 minutes behind our Daylight Saving Time meridian during EDT). To duplicate the star positions on a planisphere (rotating star finder) you may have to set it to 45 minutes or 1 hour 45 minutes earlier than your current time.
Note the chart times of 10 PM on the 15th, and 6 AM on the 16th. For each week before then, add ½ hour (28 minutes if you’re picky). For each week after then, subtract ½ hour. For planet positions on dates other than the dateshere, check the Wednesday planet posts on this blog.
March Morning Star Chart

For a list of constellation names to go with the abbreviations click here.
- Pointer stars at the front of the bowl of the Big Dipper point to Polaris the North Star.
- The leaky bowl of the Big Dipper drips on Leo.
- Follow the arc of the handle of the Big Dipper to the star Arcturus, and
- Extend it as a spike to Spica.
- The Summer Triangle appears in red.
Twilight Limits, Nautical and Astronomical
Omitted due to WordPress issues
NASA Calendar of Planetary Events
Date Time EST Event
Mar 1 Sa Venus: 30.4° E
1 Sa 12:40 AM Moon Ascending Node
1 Sa 4:18 PM Moon Perigee: 362000 km
1 Sa 6:18 PM Moon-Venus: 6.4° N
5 We 7:32 AM Moon-Pleiades: 0.6° S
6 Th 11:32 AM First Quarter
7 Fr 10:56 AM Moon North Dec.: 28.7° N
8 Sa 12:59 AM Mercury Elongation: 18.2° E
8 Sa 7:27 PM Moon-Mars: 1.8° S
EDT
9 Su 6:06 AM Moon-Pollux: 2.1° N
10 Mo 7:10 AM Moon-Beehive: 2.8° S
12 We 2:07 AM Moon-Regulus: 2.4° S
12 We 6:03 AM Saturn Conjunction
12 We 1:52 PM Mercury-Venus: 5.5° N
14 Fr 2:55 AM Full Moon
14 Fr 3:00 AM Total Lunar Eclipse
14 Fr 9:45 AM Moon Descending Node
16 Su 3:16 PM Moon-Spica: 0.4° N
17 Mo 12:37 PM Moon Apogee: 405800 km
19 We 6:20 PM Neptune Conjunction
20 Th 5:02 AM Vernal Equinox
20 Th 11:58 AM Moon-Antares: 0.5° N
22 Sa 2:47 AM Moon South Dec.: 28.7° S
22 Sa 7:29 AM Last Quarter
22 Sa 9:26 PM Venus Inferior Conj.
24 Mo 3:47 PM Mercury Inferior Conj.
28 Fr 12:29 PM Moon Ascending Node
29 Sa 6:48 AM Partial Solar Eclipse
29 Sa 6:58 AM New Moon
29 Sa 3:27 PM Mars-Pollux: 4° S
30 Su 1:26 AM Moon Perigee: 358100 km
Sky Events Calendar by Fred Espenak and Sumit Dutta (NASA’s GSFC),
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SKYCAL/SKYCAL.html
If you go to the above site you can print out a list like the above for the entire year or calendar pages for your time zone.
Note that the site is now kept up for archival purposes. Fred Espenak retired from NASA several years ago and has his own site, AstroPixels, which contains much the same information: http://astropixels.com/almanac/almanac.html.
Sun and Moon Rising and Setting Events
LU Ephemeris of Sky Events for Interlochen/TC
March, 2025 Local time zone: EST
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
| DATE | SUN SUN DAYLIGHT| TWILIGHT* |MOON RISE OR ILLUM |
| | RISE SET HOURS | END START |PHASE SET** TIME FRACTN|
+=======================================================================+
|Sat 1| 07:19a 06:31p 11:11 | 07:34p 06:16a | Set 08:55p 5%|
+------+-----------------------+----------------+-----------------------+
|Sun 2| 07:18a 06:32p 11:14 | 07:35p 06:15a | Set 10:17p 12%|
|Mon 3| 07:16a 06:33p 11:17 | 07:36p 06:13a | Set 11:40p 21%|
|Tue 4| 07:14a 06:35p 11:20 | 07:38p 06:11a | Set 01:02a 31%|
|Wed 5| 07:12a 06:36p 11:23 | 07:39p 06:09a | Set 02:21a 42%|
|Thu 6| 07:10a 06:37p 11:26 | 07:40p 06:08a |F Qtr Set 03:31a 53%|
|Fri 7| 07:09a 06:38p 11:29 | 07:41p 06:06a | Set 04:28a 64%|
|Sat 8| 07:07a 06:40p 11:32 | 07:43p 06:04a | Set 05:12a 74%|
+------+-----------------------+----------------+-----------------------+
| EDT | Time Change | | |
|Sun 9| 08:05a 07:41p 11:36 | 08:44p 07:02a | Set 06:45a 83%|
|Mon 10| 08:03a 07:42p 11:39 | 08:45p 07:00a | Set 07:11a 90%|
|Tue 11| 08:01a 07:44p 11:42 | 08:47p 06:59a | Set 07:32a 95%|
|Wed 12| 08:00a 07:45p 11:45 | 08:48p 06:57a | Set 07:49a 98%|
|Thu 13| 07:58a 07:46p 11:48 | 08:49p 06:55a | Set 08:06a 100%|
|Fri 14| 07:56a 07:48p 11:51 | 08:51p 06:53a |Full Rise 08:27p 100%|
|Sat 15| 07:54a 07:49p 11:54 | 08:52p 06:51a | Rise 09:30p 97%|
+------+-----------------------+----------------+-----------------------+
|Sun 16| 07:52a 07:50p 11:57 | 08:53p 06:49a | Rise 10:35p 93%|
|Mon 17| 07:50a 07:51p 12:01 | 08:55p 06:47a | Rise 11:40p 88%|
|Tue 18| 07:49a 07:53p 12:04 | 08:56p 06:45a | Rise 12:47a 81%|
|Wed 19| 07:47a 07:54p 12:07 | 08:57p 06:43a | Rise 01:53a 73%|
|Thu 20| 07:45a 07:55p 12:10 | 08:59p 06:42a | Rise 02:57a 64%|
|Fri 21| 07:43a 07:56p 12:13 | 09:00p 06:40a | Rise 03:55a 55%|
|Sat 22| 07:41a 07:58p 12:16 | 09:01p 06:38a |L Qtr Rise 04:45a 45%|
+------+-----------------------+----------------+-----------------------+
|Sun 23| 07:39a 07:59p 12:19 | 09:03p 06:36a | Rise 05:25a 35%|
|Mon 24| 07:37a 08:00p 12:22 | 09:04p 06:34a | Rise 05:58a 25%|
|Tue 25| 07:36a 08:02p 12:26 | 09:05p 06:32a | Rise 06:24a 16%|
|Wed 26| 07:34a 08:03p 12:29 | 09:07p 06:30a | Rise 06:47a 9%|
|Thu 27| 07:32a 08:04p 12:32 | 09:08p 06:28a | Rise 07:08a 3%|
|Fri 28| 07:30a 08:05p 12:35 | 09:10p 06:26a | Rise 07:29a 0%|
|Sat 29| 07:28a 08:07p 12:38 | 09:11p 06:24a |New Set 08:48p 0%|
+------+-----------------------+----------------+-----------------------+
|Sun 30| 07:26a 08:08p 12:41 | 09:12p 06:22a | Set 10:13p 4%|
|Mon 31| 07:24a 08:09p 12:44 | 09:14p 06:20a | Set 11:39p 10%|
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
* Nautical Twilight
** Moonrise or moonset, whichever occurs between sunset and sunrise
Created using my LookingUp for DOS output as text.
Ephemeris: 02/27/2025 – The spring constellations are rising
This is Ephemeris for Thursday, February 27th. Today the Sun will be up for 11 hours and 5 minutes, setting at 6:28, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:21. The Moon is new today, and won’t be visible.
Today, we are exactly 3 weeks from the start of spring. The temperatures this week are rising. Even though at 8:00 PM Orion is high in the south, looking off to the east the spring constellation of Leo the lion has risen, and the Big Dipper is standing on its handle in the northeast. To the Anishinaabe native peoples of this area the Big Dipper is part of Ojiig, the Fisher, who brought summer to the Earth and when he’s in this position in the northeastern skies standing on his tail it is a sign of the spring to come and the start of the maple sugaring season. This next week or so is especially the best time, all year, to see the planet Mercury in the evening twilight due west, shortly after sunset. Its greatest separation from the Sun will come March 8th.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.
Addendum
Ephemeris: 02/26/2025 – Where are the naked-eye planets this week?
This is Ephemeris for Wednesday, February 26th. Today the Sun will be up for 11 hours and 2 minutes, setting at 6:26, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:23. The Moon, 1 day before new, will rise at 7:25 tomorrow morning.
Let’s take our weekly look at the whereabouts of the naked-eye planets. At 7:15 PM this evening four of the five naked eye planets will be out. Starting from the west we have Venus the brightest of all. Far below it, near the horizon, will be the much dimmer Mercury, making its evening appearance, replacing Saturn. Jupiter, the second-brightest planet will be high in the south. It is slowly heading eastward now above the star Aldebaran. Farther below and left of it is the spectacular constellation of Orion the hunter. The 4th planet out is Mars, the third-brightest planet now, with its distinctive reddish hue in the east-southeast, to the right of the stars Castor and Pollux in Gemini.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.
Addendum




Ephemeris: 02/25/2025 – Eridanus, a river in the sky
This is Ephemeris for Tuesday, February 25th. Today the Sun will be up for 10 hours and 59 minutes, setting at 6:25, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:24. The Moon, 2 days before new, will rise at 7:00 tomorrow morning.
One of the more obscure constellations around is Eridanus, which depicts a river. At 8 PM the river starts near the lower right corner of Orion, near the bright star Rigel and flows to the lower right then zigzags back down to the south-southwestern horizon, it then heads below the horizon. One has to travel to the far south to see the southern terminus of the river, the bright star Achernar. Writers over the ages have seen here the Nile and the Earth circling river Ocean of the ancient flat earth days. Achernar is actually two stars, the brightest was discovered to be the flattest star known, due to its rapid spin. The dimensions of Achernar A has been determined to be twice as wide across its equator than from pole to pole. It’s 139 light years away.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.
Addendum
Ephemeris: 02/24/2025 – Mars stopped in its tracks!
This is Ephemeris for Monday, February 24th. Today the Sun will be up for 10 hours and 55 minutes, setting at 6:24, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:26. The Moon, 3 days before new, will rise at 6:30 tomorrow morning.
Today the planet Mars is said to be stationary. No, planets do not stop in their orbits of the Sun. It is because we are viewing them from the moving planet Earth. For the last few months Mars has been moving to the west, which is not its normal motion, so we call it retrograde motion. It does that because the Earth, moving faster on an inner orbit, is passing Mars moving slower on an outer orbit. This was a problem for the ancients of the western world because they thought all the moving objects, all seven of them, moved around a stationary Earth. Of those seven, two of them never went backwards, or westward against the stars. They were: the Moon which does orbit the Earth and the Sun which the Earth orbits.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.
Addendum


* For non astronomers: Inferior doesn’t refer to quality, but that the planet’s orbit is inside the Earth’s orbit. Superior planets orbit farther out from the Sun than the Earth.
Ephemeris: 02/21/2025 – Orion’s most distinctive feature
This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Friday, February 21st. Today the Sun will be up for 10 hours and 46 minutes, setting at 6:20, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:31. The Moon, 1 day past last quarter, will rise at 4:09 tomorrow morning.
Orion’s belt of three stars is one of the most noticeable star groupings in the sky. There are no other groups of three bright stars in a straight line visible anywhere else in the sky. The star’s names from left to right are Alnitak, Alnilam and Mintaka. They are actually a bit farther away than the other bright stars of Orion. Alnilam, the center star, is over three times the distance of red giant Betelgeuse above it and over twice as far as blue white giant star Rigel below it. Alnilam is 375 thousand times brighter than the Sun. These three stars were also known as Frigga’s Spindle by the Norsemen. Frigga, also known as Freya, is the goddess from whom we get the name of the day of the week we call Friday.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.
Addendum
Ephemeris: 02/20/2025 – Can you find the celestial unicorn?
This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Thursday, February 20th. Today the Sun will be up for 10 hours and 43 minutes, setting at 6:18, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:33. The Moon, at last quarter today, will rise at 3:06 tomorrow morning.
Among all the constellations in the sky of animals real and mythical, there is also a unicorn. It’s called Monoceros, and inhabits the southeastern sky at 8 p.m. mostly bounded by Orion on the right, Canis Major, the great dog below and Canis Minor, the little dog to the left and above. Unfortunately for observers without a telescope Monoceros, is devoid of any but the faintest stars. Maybe that’s why no one can find unicorns anymore. It has many faint stars because the Milky Way runs through it. For the astrophotographer it is a feast of star clusters and faint nebulae or clouds of gas and dust, the birthplace of stars, including the red rose of the Rosette Nebula. It also contains a beautiful telescopic triple star system, Beta (β) Monocerotis.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.
Addendum

Ephemeris: 02/19/2025 – All the naked-eye planets are seen in the evening this week
Ephemeris: 02/19/2025 – Where have the naked-eye planets wandered off to this week?
This is Ephemeris for Wednesday, February 19th. Today the Sun will be up for 10 hours and 40 minutes, setting at 6:17, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:34. The Moon, 1 day before last quarter, will rise at 1:59 tomorrow morning.
Let’s take our weekly look at the whereabouts of the naked-eye planets. At 7 PM this evening four of the five naked eye planets will be out. Starting from the West we have Venus the brightest of all in the west southwest. Far below it, near the horizon, will be the much dimmer Saturn, which we are about to lose, or may already have, to the evening twilight. Jupiter, the second-brightest planet will be high in the south. It has reversed course and is heading back eastward now. Farther below it is the spectacular constellation of Orion the hunter. The fourth planet out is Mars, the third-brightest planet now, with its distinctive reddish hue, west of the stars Castor and Pollux in Gemini, and in the east-southeast.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.
Addendum





Ephemeris: 02/18/2025 – Finding Orion’s greater hunting dog
This is Ephemeris for Tuesday, February 18th. Today the Sun will be up for 10 hours and 37 minutes, setting at 6:15, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:36. The Moon, 2 days before last quarter, will rise at 12:52 tomorrow morning.
The great winter constellation or star group Orion the Hunter, is located in the south-southeastern sky at 8 p.m. His elongated rectangle of a torso is almost vertical. In the center of the rectangle are three stars in a line that mark his belt. As a hunter, especially one of old, he has two hunting dogs. The larger, Canis Major can be found by following the three belt stars of Orion down and to the left. There lies the brilliant star called Sirius, also known as the Dog Star. It’s in the heart of a stick figure dog low in the southeast, facing Orion, that appears to be begging. There’s a fine star cluster, called M41, at the 5 o’clock position from Sirius, easily visible in binoculars or a small telescope.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.
Addendum

Ephemeris: 02/17/2025 – Follow the Drinking Gourd
This is Ephemeris for President’s Day, Monday, February 17th. Today the Sun will be up for 10 hours and 35 minutes, setting at 6:14, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:38. The Moon, 3 days before last quarter, will rise at 11:47 this evening.
In the decades before the Civil War, runaway slaves would travel, often at night, northward from the slave states in the south to the northern free states and Canada over the metaphorical Underground Railroad following the Drinking Gourd, the Big Dipper as their compass. For millennia, the North Pole of the sky had been passing near the handle of the Big Dipper or Great Bear’s tail and now up to the star Polaris in the Little Dipper. As an amateur astronomer, who loves the dark, starlit skies, I’ve noticed that everyone is the same color in the dark! This year the Grand Traverse Astronomical Society will, once again, team with the Sleeping Bear Dunes for more Sun and star parties.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.
Addendum





