Archive
07/09/2020 – Ephemeris – The constellation of Lyra the harp
Jul 9. This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Thursday, July 9th. Today the Sun will be up for 15 hours and 22 minutes, setting at 9:29, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:07. The Moon, 3 days before last quarter, will rise at 12:30 tomorrow morning.
High in the east at 11 p.m. can be found a bright star just above a small, narrow, but very distinctive parallelogram of stars. They are the stars of the constellation Lyra the harp. The bright star is Vega the 5th brightest night-time star. To the Romans the star Vega represented a falling eagle or vulture. Apparently they never made the distinction between the two. It is a pure white star and serves as a calibration star for color and brightness. The harp, according to Greek mythology, was invented by the god Hermes. The form of the harp in the sky, is as he had invented it: by stretching strings across a tortoise-shell. Hermes gave it to his half-brother Apollo, who in turn gave it to the legendary musician Orpheus.
The event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
06/12/2020 – Ephemeris – The Summer Triangle proclaims that summer is almost here
This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Friday, June 12th. Today the Sun will be up for 15 hours and 32 minutes, setting at 9:29, and it will rise tomorrow at 5:56. The Moon, 1 day before last quarter, will rise at 2:27 tomorrow morning.
Summer skies are coming. It’s only 8 days until summer officially arrives. It is a calendar day early this year because of the extra day added in February for the leap year. Looking to the eastern sky at 11 pm are three bright stars in a large triangle. The top star Vega is about half way up the sky to the zenith, and the brightest of the three. It’s in the small constellation of Lyra the harp. Lowest of the stars and just about due east is Altair in Aquila the eagle. Completing the triangle is Deneb in the northeast in the tail of Cygnus the swan or the head of the horizontal Northern Cross. These three stars make up the Summer Triangle. Be that as it may, the Summer Triangle will be in our evening sky moving slowly westward until December.
The event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
06/27/2019 – Ephemeris – The constellation of Lyra the lyre or harp
Ephemeris for Thursday, June 27th. Today the Sun will be up for 15 hours and 33 minutes, setting at 9:32, and it will rise tomorrow at 5:59. The Moon, 2 days past last quarter, will rise at 3:13 tomorrow morning.
High up in the eastern sky at 11 p.m. can be found a bright star just north of a small, narrow, but very distinctive parallelogram of stars. They are the stars of the constellation Lyra the harp. The bright star is Vega, one of the twenty one brightest first magnitude stars. Vega is actually the 4th brightest night-time star. The harp, according to Greek mythology, was invented by the Greek god Hermes. The form of the harp in the sky, is as he had invented it: by stretching strings across a tortoise shell. Hermes gave it to his half-brother Apollo, who in turn gave it to the great musician Orpheus. The Sun has a motion with respect to most stars around it. Its direction is towards the vicinity of Lyra.
The times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
07/16/2018 – Ephemeris – Lyra the harp, Hermes’ invention
Ephemeris for Monday, July 16th. Today the Sun will be up for 15 hours and 12 minutes, setting at 9:24, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:13. The Moon, 3 days before first quarter, will set at 12:02 tomorrow morning.
Very high up in the eastern sky at 11 p.m. can be found a bright star just north of a small, narrow, but very distinctive parallelogram of stars. They are the stars of the constellation Lyra the harp. The bright star is Vega, one of the twenty one brightest first magnitude stars. Vega is actually the 5th brightest night-time star. The harp, according to Greek mythology, was invented by the god Hermes. The form of the harp in the sky, is as he had invented it: by stretching strings across a tortoise shell. Hermes gave it to his half-brother Apollo, who in turn gave it to the great musician Orpheus. The Sun has a motion with respect to most stars around it. Its direction is towards the vicinity of Lyra.
The times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addenda

Animated Lyra finder chart. with Vega and the other named stars of the Summer Triangle. The lyre image not supplied by Stellarium but is from The World’s Earliest Music by Hermann Smith, Figure 60, A Project Gutenberg Ebook, and captioned “The Chelys or Greek Tortoiseshell Lyre”. Click on the image to enlarge Created using Stellarium and GIMP.
Last Saturday night’s wild Sun ‘n Star Party
Last Saturday night the Grand Traverse Astronomical Society, myself included, and the rangers and volunteers of the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore held our Sun ‘n Star Party at the Dune Climb. I live 20 miles southeast of the Dune Climb, and about half way between Traverse City and Interlochen. It’s also the location for which the Ephemeris sunrise and sunset times are calculated for. We rely on the GOES East satellite imagery to show us the cloud patterns and movement. Saturday morning was pretty overcast and hot. GOES East showed that a big clearing was heading for us. At 1 p.m. I emailed our members that the event was a GO, and began to pack up the car with my two telescopes, and assorted items. Meanwhile some raindrops were showing up on the windshield. A check with weather radar on my phone confirmed that some rainstorms were popping up between my location and Lake Michigan. This is rather normal when it’s hot and humid in the afternoon, and wouldn’t affect the Dune area close to the lake. In driving to the Dune Climb I drove through some rain showers, but the skies cleared by the time I got within 5 miles from the lake.
The solar observing from 4 to 6 p.m.was great, except for no sunspots. We had 2 solar telescopes that did reveal some prominences. The sky was clear. The storm clouds were receding to the east. Of course we couldn’t see much to the west because the dune was in the way. Its angular altitude averaged 12 degrees. Some of us stayed there and ate our dinner. By 7:30 the wind came up from the southwest. A check of the GOES East satellite showed us a large, roughly square cloud the width of the lake slowly moving northward that was just south of us. Just after 8 p.m. we noticed clouds looming from the south, then fog was overtaking the tops of the dunes to the southwest. Shortly thereafter we were socked in. At a little after 9 p.m. Marie Scott the ranger in charge of this event gave introductions, and handed the microphone to me, who introduced our members and went over what we were supposed to see that night. We couldn’t track this cloud anymore by satellite because it was between the daytime color imagery and the nighttime infrared imagery. However around 10 p.m. someone spotted Vega, nearly overhead. And while I was swinging my 11″ Dobsonian towards it, someone else called out Jupiter. Looking around the fog was lifting. The night was salvaged. We stayed over an hour after the official 11 p.m. to watch Mars rise near the end of the star party, and finally view some of the wonders of the dark summer sky.
This was the fourth of seven monthly star parties scheduled at the Dunes this year. It was the first we didn’t cancel due to weather. We generally cancel one or two of then a year, but to start the year with three was depressing.
5/15/2018 – Ephemeris – Two thirds thru spring
Ephemeris for Tuesday, May 15th. Today the Sun will be up for 14 hours and 49 minutes, setting at 9:04, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:13. The Moon is new today, and won’t be visible.
Here we are at the middle of May, nearly two-thirds through spring and in the west only a few winter stars remain. Castor and Pollux of Gemini are horizontal in the west, Procyon the Little Dog Star is below and left of them, Capella in Auriga is in the northwest, but for most of the IPR listening area it will never quite set. At 10:30 Betelgeuse in Orion the hunter will be setting, chased from the skies by Scorpius the scorpion, which is rising in the southeast. In one story it is the sting of this scorpion that killed him. Already at that time two-thirds of the stars of the summer Triangle are up. Bright Vega in Lyra the harp, and Deneb in Cygnus the swan. The Big Dipper reigns overhead as spring is in full bloom.
The times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
07/13/2017 – Ephemeris – Constellations of the Summer Triangle I: Lyra the harp
Ephemeris for Thursday, July 13th. Today the Sun will be up for 15 hours and 16 minutes, setting at 9:26, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:10. The Moon, 3 days before last quarter, will rise at 12:02 tomorrow morning.
Very high up in the eastern sky at 11 p.m. can be found a bright star just above a small, narrow, but very distinctive parallelogram of stars. They are the stars of the constellation Lyra the harp. The bright star is Vega, member of the Summer Triangle and one of the twenty one brightest first magnitude stars. Vega is actually the 5th brightest night-time star. The harp, according to Greek mythology, was invented by the Greek god Hermes. The form of the harp in the sky, is as he had invented it: by stretching strings across a tortoise-shell. Hermes gave it to his half-brother Apollo, who in turn gave it to the great musician Orpheus. The Sun’s motion with respect to most stars around it is towards the vicinity of Lyra.
The times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
06/29/2017 – Ephemeris – A closer look at the star Vega
Ephemeris for Thursday, June 29th. Today the Sun will be up for 15 hours and 31 minutes, setting at 9:31, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:00. The Moon, 1 day before first quarter, will set at 1:21 tomorrow morning.
The bright star high in the east is Vega, one of the stars of the Summer Triangle an informal constellation called an asterism. Vega belongs to the official constellation Lyra the harp, which includes a narrow parallelogram of stars to its south. Vega is regarded by astronomers as a standard calibration star. Though a first magnitude star, its actual magnitude is 0.03. It is a type A0 pure white star, and is 27 light years away. Astronomers however got a shock in 1983 when calibrating the Infrared Astronomy Satellite (IRAS) on it: Vega showed an excess of Infrared radiation that means the star is orbited by a disk of dust, perhaps a Kuiper belt of its own. Due to the slow wobble of the earth’s axis Vega will be our pole star in 14 thousand years.
The times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
06/22/2017 – Ephemeris – Now that it’s summer, lets check out the Summer Triangle
Ephemeris for Thursday, June 22nd. Today the Sun will be up for 15 hours and 33 minutes, setting at 9:31, and it will rise tomorrow at 5:57. The Moon, 1 day before new, will rise at 5:45 tomorrow morning.
We’re a day into summer, and the asterism or informal constellation called the Summer Triangle can be seen rising in the east as it gets dark. Highest of the three bright stars is Vega in the constellation Lyra the harp, whose body is seen in a narrow parallelogram nearby. The second star of the triangle is Deneb lower and left of Vega, It appears dimmer than Vega because it is by far the most distant of the three. The third star of the Summer Triangle is seen farther below and a right of Vega. It is Altair in Aquila the eagle, and the closest. Altair is 16.5 light years away, Vega is 27 light years while Deneb may be a whopping 2600 light years away. One light year is 6 trillion miles (9 trillion km).
The times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
07/25/2016 – Ephemeris – Hermes’ Harp
Ephemeris for Monday, July 25th. The Sun rises at 6:21. It’ll be up for 14 hours and 54 minutes, setting at 9:16. The Moon, 1 day before last quarter, will rise at 12:34 tomorrow morning.
High up in the eastern sky at 11 p.m. can be found a bright star just north of a small, narrow, but very distinctive parallelogram of stars. They are the stars of the constellation Lyra the harp. The bright star is Vega, one of the twenty-one brightest stars, first magnitude stars. Vega is actually the 5th brightest night-time star. The harp, according to Greek mythology, was invented by the Greek god Hermes. The form of the harp in the sky, is as he had invented it: by stretching strings across a tortoise shell. Hermes gave it to his half-brother Apollo, who in turn gave it to the great musician Orpheus. In binoculars, near Vega, two stars appear together. They barely appear to the unaided eye as one star, called Epsilon Lyrae.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum

Lyra as a tortoise shell harp. Created using Stellarium and free clip art.

Closeup on Vega and Epsilon Lyrae. Created using Stellarium.
06/23/2016 – Ephemeris – Tis the season to view the Summer Triangle
Ephemeris for Thursday, June 23rd. Today the Sun will be up for 15 hours and 34 minutes, setting at 9:32, and it will rise tomorrow at 5:58. The Moon, 3 days past full, will rise at 11:43 this evening.
Now that summer is here, the asterism or informal constellation called the Summer Triangle can be seen in the east as it gets dark. Highest of the three bright stars is Vega in the constellation Lyra the harp, whose body is seen in a narrow parallelogram nearby. The second star of the triangle is Deneb lower and left of Vega, It appears dimmer than Vega because its is by far the most distant of the three. The third star of the Summer Triangle is seen farther below and right of Vega. It is Altair in Aquila the eagle, and the closest. Altair is 16.7 light years away, Vega is 25 light years while Deneb may be a whopping 2600 light years away. With a light year at 6 trillion miles. That’s mind boggling to think in miles at least.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum

The Summer Triangle. Created using Stellarium and The Gimp.



