Archive
11/03/2017 – Ephemeris – The Sun is the topic at tonight’s GTAS meeting
Ephemeris for Friday, November 3rd. The Sun will rise at 8:23. It’ll be up for 10 hours and 5 minutes, setting at 6:28. The Moon, 1 day before full, will set at 8:35 tomorrow morning.
This evening the Grand Traverse Astronomical Society will hold its monthly meeting at the Northwestern Michigan College’s Rogers Observatory at 8 p.m. with a program featuring member Don Flegel in a talk about the Sun. Don’s the keeper of our solar telescope and wanted a good excuse to learn more about the Sun, so he decided to study up and give this talk. That’s how I do it.
After the talk, at 9 p.m. there will be a star party, if it’s clear, to view the heavens including the Moon. The observatory is located south of Traverse City, on Birmley Road between Garfield and Keystone roads.
It’s time to change our clocks again at 2 a.m. Sunday. Turn your clocks back one hour. That’s Fall Back one hour for a bit of extra sleep.
The times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addenda

Don Flegel, in the foreground, with the society’s solar telescope assisting a person viewing the Sun at he Leland Heritage Festival 2017 at Fishtown. Man in the background in the blue cap is Gary Carlisle. The telescope in the middle is mine.
Occultation of Aldebaran by the Moon Sunday Night

Occultation Map for the occultation of Aldebaran by the Moon . Credit Occult 4 program from IOTA.org.
For the Traverse City/Interlochen area:
Aldebaran Occultation start 8:07 p.m. Nov 5th (01:07 UT Nov 6th)
Aldebaran Occultation end 9:00 p.m. Nov 5th (02:00 UT Nov 6th)
I’ll have an Ephemeris Extra posting, Sunday November 5th with more information.
09/12/2017 – Ephemeris – The Moon will hide the bright star Aldebaran after sunrise this morning
Ephemeris for Tuesday, September 12th. The Sun will rise at 7:18. It’ll be up for 12 hours and 40 minutes, setting at 7:58. The Moon, 1 day before last quarter, will rise at 12:13 tomorrow morning.
This morning during daylight at around 8:40*. the bright star Aldebaran will disappear behind the Moon. Binoculars or a small telescope can be used to spot Aldebaran, the bright star in the constellation Taurus the bull’s eye. Taurus and the rest of the winter constellations are visible before sunrise. The sky needs to be absolutely clear to be able to spot the event. The star will be seen to approach the bright side of the Moon. The star will reappear around 9:53 a.m.* on the dark western edge of the Moon. These events are called occultations. They come from the word occult, which means hidden. In actuality the solar eclipse of three weeks ago was a spacial case of an occultation for those in the path of totality.
The times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
* The disappearance and appearance times for Aldebaran are within a couple of minutes for Western Michigan. For other locations in the occultation path Stellarium will give pretty good times for the events by modeling the occultation as I did below. Like a solar eclipse where you are determines the timing of the event.
Addendum

Map of where the occultation is visible. For the area bounded in red, the occultation is visible in the daytime. Credit: Occult4 by IOTA.

Position of the Moon in the sky near the start of the occultation, 8:35 a.m. September 12, 2017. Created using Stellarium.

Aldebaran reappearing from behind the Moon at 9:53 a.m. September 12, 2017. Created using Stellarium.
03/03/2017 – Ephemeris – Astronomy talk and star party tonight and the occultation of Aldebaran tomorrow night
Ephemeris for Friday, March 3rd. The Sun will rise at 7:15. It’ll be up for 11 hours and 17 minutes, setting at 6:33. The Moon, 2 days before first quarter, will set at 12:36 tomorrow morning.
Tonight the Grand Traverse Astronomical Society will present a talk by Becky Shaw on international observatories at 8 p.m. at Northern Michigan College’s Rogers Observatory. Also tonight at the observatory, there will be viewing of the Moon and other wonders of the March skies. Tomorrow night shortly after 11 p.m. the bright star Aldebaran in Taurus the bull will be covered or occulted by the Moon for about half of the IPR listening area. It will be seen by observers south of a line from Leland to south of Mancelona centered on 11:13 p.m. The farther south one is the longer the occultation will last. Start looking by 11 p.m. and check my yesterday’s blog post for more information.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
03/02/2017 – Ephemeris – Saturday night’s occultation of the bright star Aldebaran
Note: this program is for a very specific location in the northern lower peninsula of Michigan. The occultation of Aldebaran is visible from most of the United States except Alaska and Central America. For predictions for your locations you can use a planetarium type program like Stellarium, Cartes du Ciel (Sky Charts), which can be downloaded free from the right column on this blog page, or the commercial planetarium program of your choice. Make sure the program is zoomed in so the Moon is actual size, and set for your location, and play around with the time.

Path of the occultation of Aldebaran for March 4-5, 2017. Note where the top edge of the path goes. Right through northern Michigan.
On to the program:
Ephemeris for Thursday, March 2nd. The Sun will rise at 7:17. It’ll be up for 11 hours and 14 minutes, setting at 6:32. The Moon, 3 days before first quarter, will set at 11:26 this evening.
Saturday night just after 11 p.m. the upper right edge of the Moon will just cover the bright star Aldebaran, the angry red eye of Taurus the bull. That is for some of us. For those of us south of a line from Leland to just south of Mancelona and off across the state the Moon will occult or hide the star. For those north of that line Aldebaran will just miss the Moon. Start looking at 11 p.m. or so. The center of the occultation as it I called is about 11:13 p.m. The farther south of that line you are the longer the occultation will last. At 11 p.m. the star will be just off the upper right edge of the Moon.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addenda

The north limit of the occultation zone as it passes through the Grand Traverse Region. Locations north of the green line will not see an occultation, Locations south of that line will see the occultation. Map credit Google Earth.
The file to load for this occultation map overlay is: http://ephemeris.bjmoler.org/ZC692-2017-Mar-5.kmz.

The point of the mid occultation from the NMC Observatory. Note that in reality Aldebaran would be completely covered by the Moon. This is the Moon and Aldebaran as they would be seen in the west at that time. Created using Cartes du Ciel (Sky Charts).

The occultation of Aldebaran as seen from three sample locations in the IPR listening area. Credit IOTA’s Occult4 program. The Moon is shown in equatorial orientation.
Here’s the legend for the labels:
# H M S (Mag)
#: 1 First contact, Aldebaran disappears
2 Middle of the occultation
3 Last contact, Aldebaran reappears
H: hour UT, 4 = 11 p.m. EST
M: Minute
S: Second
Mag: Magnitude of the star, 0.9 (First magnitude star)
An article I wrote about this occultation in the March 2017 issue of the Grand Traverse Astronomical Society newsletter The Stellar Sentinel:
The Grazing Occultation of Aldebaran, March 4th
Late Saturday night March 4th the Moon will pass in front of, or not the bright star Aldebaran. The “or not” depends on where you are.
The event is called an occultation. The word comes from occult, which, despite its baggage, simply means hidden. When one celestial body moves in front of another and completely covers it an occultation occurs. In actuality a total solar eclipse is an occultation. However a lunar eclipse is still an eclipse as we see it, but an occultation as the Sun sees it.
Above there’s a map of the Leelanau and Old Mission peninsulas and a bit of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan with a line drawn across it from north of Leland to just south of Mancelona. That is the calculated northern limit of the occultation. Observers within a mile of so of that line could see Aldebaran winking in and out as it’s light encounters mountains and passes through valleys at the northern limb of the Moon.
Even though we’ve landed humans on the Moon and have mapping satellites orbiting it, there is still a need to add more data to the accumulated knowledge we have of the surface and position of the Moon. Observers in a coordinated effort can be set up perpendicular to the graze line and using coordinated time signals produce a map of the edge of the Moon.

Plot of the results of a grazing occultation of Delta Cancri on May 9-10, 1981. Each horizontal line is one observer’s timings. From “An Introduction to Grazing Occultations” at http://www.lunar-occultations.com/iota/Graze.htm.
02/16/2017 – Ephemeris – The Winter Circle
Ephemeris for Thursday, February 16th. The Sun will rise at 7:40. It’ll be up for 10 hours and 32 minutes, setting at 6:12. The Moon, 2 days before last quarter, will rise at 12:17 tomorrow morning.
The winter skies are blessed with more first magnitude stars than any other season. These are the twenty-one brightest stars in the sky. Six of these stars lie in a large circle centered on the seventh. This circle is up all evening now that we are in the heart of winter. Starting high overhead is Capella in Auriga the charioteer. Moving clockwise, we come to Aldebaran in the face of Taurus the Bull. Then down to Orion’s knee we find Rigel. Down and left is the brightest star of all Sirius the Dog Star in Canis Major Orion’s large hunting dog, lowest of these stars in the south. Moving up and left there is Procyon in Canis Minor, Then above it is Pollux in Gemini the twins. All are centered on Betelgeuse in Orion.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
12/12/2016 – Ephemeris – The Moon will cover the eye of the bull tonight
Ephemeris for Monday, December 12th. The Sun will rise at 8:11. It’ll be up for 8 hours and 51 minutes, setting at 5:02. The Moon, 1 day before full, will set at 7:21 tomorrow morning.
Late tonight the nearly full moon will pass in front of the bright star Aldebaran. This will be a difficult event to spot due to the brightness of the Moon. It will take a telescope at least to spot Aldebaran, the bright star the is the bloodshot eye in the face of Taurus the bull. It might help to spot Aldebaran an hour or two early, while it’s some distance left of the Moon. Aldebaran will disappear at the Moon’s left edge, while its a tiny distance from the bright edge of the Moon at around 10:54 p.m. Aldebaran will reappear at about 12:09 a.m. Make sure to start observing several minutes early since these are low precision times, plus your location affects the times. These times are most accurate in the Western Lower Peninsula of Michigan.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
The Moon moves from west to east, so the occultation events will happen earlier to the west and later to the east. Planetarium programs can be used to simulate the position of the Moon and stars and can be used to estimate the occultation start and end times. To be accurate your location longitude and latitude must be entered in the program.
The times I developed are from the free program Cartes du Ciel and are within a minute of that provided by the more accurate program Occult4, which can be downloaded for free at the site below. Planetarium programs are close enough, however. Occult4 is somewhat difficult to use.
If you’re out keep a look out for some bright Geminid Meteors. Their shower will reach its peak tomorrow night.

Start of the occultation at 11:54 p.m EST December 12, 2016. The grid is altitude and azimuth. Created using Cartes du Ciel.

End of the occultation at 12:09 a.m EST December 13, 2016. The grid is altitude and azimuth. Created using Cartes du Ciel.

Path of the occultation. Locations between the bright boundaries would see the occultation at night. Created by the software program Occult4 by the International Occultation Timing Association.

An animation created by Occult4 of the occultation of Aldebaran and some of the dimmer stars of the Hyades.
Eclipse and occultation information and software can be accessed at http://occultations.org/ the website of IOTA, the International Occultation Timing association.
12/08/2016 – Ephemeris – Aldebaran, the follower
Ephemeris for Thursday, December 8th. The Sun will rise at 8:07. It’ll be up for 8 hours and 54 minutes, setting at 5:02. The Moon, 1 day past first quarter, will set at 2:26 tomorrow morning.
The central constellation of winter, Orion, is low in the east-southeast at 9 p.m. Above it is Taurus the bull. The bright orange star in Taurus is Aldebaran. Aldebaran appears at the bottom left tip of a letter V group of stars lying on its side that is the face of the bull. Aldebaran isn’t actually part of the group, called the Hyades star cluster. The cluster is about 151 light years away, while Aldebaran is a bit less than half that. The star has an orange hue because its surface is cooler than the Sun’s. However Aldebaran is 44 times larger in diameter, and shines 350 times brighter than the Sun. Next Monday night the 12th, the Moon will pass in front of Aldebaran in an event called an occultation I’ll have more information on it then. The name Aldebaran means The Follower, since it follows the Pleiades across the sky as the Earth rotates.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum

Aldebaran in the ‘V’ shape of the Hyades (The face of Taurus the bull) with the Pleiades above. Created using Stellarium.
11/28/2016 – Ephemeris – The Hyades the star cluster in the face of Taurus the bull
Ephemeris for Monday, November 28th. The Sun will rise at 7:57. It’ll be up for 9 hours and 7 minutes, setting at 5:04. The Moon, 1 day before new, will rise at 7:45 tomorrow morning.
Rising in the east now is the bright star Aldebaran an orange star that’s at one end of the sideways letter V of stars that is the head of Taurus the bull. Above it is the jewel-like Pleiades or Seven Sisters star cluster. There’s more to Taurus, like it’s freakishly long horns and front part of its body. But you can say you’ve seem Taurus, if you can spot his face. That V of stars is actually a star cluster called the Hyades, and in Greek Myth were the half-sisters of the Pleiades, also fathered by the god Atlas. Both the Hyades and Pleiades are being pursued by Orion, which as Robert Frost put it is throwing a leg over the eastern horizon at 8 to 9 pm. He isn’t the only one following the Pleiades, the name Aldebaran means “The Follower”.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
07/28/2016 – Ephemeris – Two upcoming meteor showers plus an occultation tomorrow morning
Ephemeris for Thursday, July 28th. The Sun rises at 6:25. It’ll be up for 14 hours and 47 minutes, setting at 9:12. The Moon, 2 days past last quarter, will rise at 2:31 tomorrow morning.
We have a couple of meteor showers of note coming up. The first is the Southern Delta Aquariids which will peak on the 30th. The radiant point for these meteors will rise around midnight in the southeast. Their numbers and their brightness are not very great. The Perseid meteor shower peak will have interference from the waxing gibbous moon drowning out all but the brightest meteors on the evening of August 11 and morning of he 12th. However the Perseids have a long run up to their peak, so their numbers will grow after the moon sets. The Perseid radiant is circumpolar for Northern Michigan, meaning it never sets, so some Perseid meteors can always be seen at night. Their radiant will be low in the northeastern sky in the evening and much higher in the northeast just before dawn.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addenda

Approximate Radiant of the South Delta Aquariid meteor shower. The radiant does move over the several weeks of the shower to the east. Created using my LookingUp program.

Perseid Meteor Shower radiant after midnight. Created using my LookingUp program.
Update: Occultation of Aldebaran tomorrow morning

The area where the occultation of Aldebaran will be visible. The area bordered by the white lines is where the occultation will occur with the Sun below the horizon. Credit IOTA’s Occult 4 program.
There will be an occultation of Aldebaran by the Moon centered on 11:16 UT (7:16 a.m. EDT) July 29, 2016. Our area (Michigan) cannot see the event, being too far north. It will be visible south of a line containing the state of Maine down through Texas. Universe Today has information on grazing occultation possibilities: http://www.universetoday.com/129841/spectacular-aldebaran-graze-july-29/
04/08/2016 – Ephemeris – Daytime occultation of Aldebaran Sunday the 10th
Apr 8. This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Friday, April 8th. The Sun will rise at 7:09. It’ll be up for 13 hours and 9 minutes, setting at 8:19. The Moon, 1 day past new, will set at 10:03 this evening.
The Moon will pass in front of the bright star Aldebaran Sunday evening. However it will still be daylight out. So this will be a challenge for the observer with binoculars, or better yet, telescope. The moon will appear as a washed out crescent in the blue sky. It will require an exceptionally clear sky to see Aldebaran, which once the Sun sets will appear just below the Moon and is part of the Face of Taurus the bull. For the IPR listening area Aldebaran will disappear at the Moon’s dark upper left edge at 6:29 p.m. plus or minus a minute, depending on your location. The star will reappear at 7:38 p.m., give or take a minute, on the right edge of the Moon, just below the dark oval of the Sea of Crises. This is second of 4 Aldebaran occultations visible from here this year.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
Ingress: 6:29 p.m.

Aldebaran ingress at approximately 6:29 p.m. April 10, 2016. Created using Stellarium.
Egress: 7:38 p.m.

Aldebaran egress at approximately 7:38 p.m. April 10, 2016. Created using Stellarium.
Occultation Visibility Map

Occultation Map for Aldebaran. Bright outline of occultation path is where it occurs at night. Credit IOTA program Occult 4.
Aldebaran will most likely need a telescope to spot once the Moon is located. The representations above via Stellarium will show the star as being too bright. It will be quite dim in relation to the sky brightness. The Moon too will be washed out. Start searching before the occultation start to make sure the star can be located. Even a little haze will make seeing the event impossible.
The actual time of the ingress and egress will vary by several minutes depending on your location in Michigan. Stellarium or other planetarium programs can be used to predict the timings to within a minute. IOTA the http://www.lunar-occultations.com/iota/iotandx.htm has a free Windows program Occult 4 which will give accurate occultation and transit of Mercury predictions.



