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Report for 2003-07-04 |
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Brought to you from beautiful Park City, "View-tah". |
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Contents |
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Astronomical Times (Mountain Standard) |
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Star Party |
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| On Saturday night, July 5th, Utah Skies and The Snyderville Basin Recreation District will be hosting an evening under the stars at Park City's Trailside Park. The event will run from 10:00pm until 2:00am. Come and view the wonders of the summer Milky Way from the darkest skies in town. Bring your own telescope, or view through any of the numerous scopes that'll be on-hand. | |||||||||||||||
Viewing Outlook |
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Skies over Park City
have been quite beautiful lately. As is typical for this time of year, days have been hot and sunny and nights have been warm and clear. Clear skies and seasonally warm temperatures are expected for tomorrow nights season opening star party. Whether you attend the star party or not, make sure you get out and observe the beautiful summer skies. No optical equipment is required, though you'll benefit greatly from even the smallest telescope or binoculars.I took the accompanying image last Friday night from my favorite campe site in Utah's Uinta Mountains. At 9400', the campsite offers incrediblly dark skies and great horizons. This shot is centered in this weeks constellation, Sagittarius. |
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Mission Update |
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Opportunity,
the second of two identical rovers to be launched by NASA, will rendezvous with it's twin in January when they
both arrive at their final destination, Mars. The two probes will land on
opposite sides of the planet and begin their work... looking for signs that life
exists... or once existed on Mars. |
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Solar System |
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Space Weather Update |
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Sunspot activity continues at a good clip. Giant sunspot #375 is in the midst of a return engagement. Now, with over 30 tiny sunspots surrounding it, the giant sunspot spans an area of over 10 Earth-diameters. .
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Planetary Report |
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Mercury, the 1st Planet |
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Mercury has left the building... ok... it's left our view. Mercury has begun it's swing behind the Sun. It will return to the evening sky in the next few days or so. By next weekend, we should be able to see it easily above the western horizon shortly after sunset.
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Venus, the 2nd Planet |
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Venus is now rising less than an hour before the sun. If you'd like to check
it out... You'll have a tough time. Venus will be tough to spot in the bright morning sky. It will soon disappear completely from the morning sky
and reappear in the evening sky by late summer or early fall. As it
sinks, it grows in phase (currently 98%) and shrinks in overall size and brightness. At this
point, it is considerably past its maximum on all counts. It has shrunk
from over 1' in diameter to only 11"... less than 1/5 of it's largest. It has
also dimmed from over mag-4.6 to under mag-3.9... This beautiful shot of Venus was taken in January of 2004 by Utah Skies own Don Brown with his trusty Takahashi FS-102 and SBIG STV CCD camera. Need to no more about Venus? Checkout this article by The Planetary Society.
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Earth, the 3rd Planet |
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![]() Summer in Utah's Uinta Mountains This is a typical summer view in Utah's Uinta Mountains. Wildflowers everywhere... blue skies... dense forests.
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Lunar Phase |
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The moon will reach First Quarter on Sunday. Tonight, we'll be under a
waxing crescent moon with 25% of the moon's visible surface illuminated
when it rises around 11:00am. The moon's reasonably early departure from the scene should
give ample opportunity to explore the beautiful summer Milky Way.
This
shot captures the Moon and Jupiter much as they appeared on Wednesday evening. Visit our Lunar Information Page for even more images and information |
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Mars, the 4th Planet |
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Mars
continues to grow at an incredible rate of over 1" per week. In apparent size and brightness the
changes from week to week are simply amazing.
Mars now spans over 17”… this is over 50% larger than at the start of
May. Mars has also brightened to mag –1.53… making it the brightest
object in the morning sky. I got several chances to view The Red Planet
this past week. Predawn skies were fairly steady and ... details were
definitely there for the taking. Most impressive (from my point of view anyway)
was that the Martian
Polar Ice Caps were clearly visible. Mars is getting just plain big. Even at low power, the planets disk is unmistakeable. As you increase the power (sky conditions permitting), details that a few weeks ago were invisible simply jummp right out at your.
If
you’d like to checkout Mars for yourself, all you need to do is look high
and towards the south before sunrise. Mars is so bright that you just
can’t miss it. Since Mars will be closest to Earth this summer... what better time to launch a spacecraft to study the planet? Answer: There is no better time... that's why there'll be a total of 5 spacecraft launched in the coming months to study the Red Planet. The first of these, The Mars Express, took off on Tuesday. Carrying a space probe known as Beagle 2, the mission will dig into the Martian surface and analyze it's makeup for signs of life. The accompanying image was captured by Utah Skies own Don Brown on Sunday morning (June 29, 2003). There's some serious detail in that image... and... If you start viewing right now, you can jump in mid-stream and catch some of the most incredible views of the Red Planet for yourself! It'll be several hundred years before Mars approaches this summers size and brightness, so... Don't miss it :) |
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Jupiter, the 5th Planet |
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Checkout this beautiful shot of Jupiter and it's moons Io and Ganymede taken by Ed Grafton. In this image the moon Io is in transit across Jupiter and it's shadow can be seen on the south equatorial belt. At the same time Jupiter's moon Ganymede was just disapearing behind Jupiter and is seen partially eclipsed on the lower left portion of the globe. Pretty Cool, huh? Ed is a former Utah Skies Astrophotographer of the Month.
Taking advantage of clear skies recently, Don and I viewed a shadow transit. When we setup, we saw three moons... We wondered where #4 might be... after a bit of searching, we noticed the shadow. This of course meant that the 4th moon had to be transiting the planet. Shortly thereafter, we noticed a little bright pimple on the leftmost edge of the planet. Io had left the building :-) These types of events happen fairly regularly. So, if you get out every once in a while, you should have no trouble viewing on yourself. Let me just tell you... viewing a shadow transit is pretty easy. Viewing one of the moons against the background of Jupiter on the other hand requires very steady skies and a telescope with good optics. To find Jupiter look slightly west of overhead shortly after dark. Jupiter is the brightest star-like object in the night sky. Need a bit more help? Checkout this star chart.
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Saturn, the 6th Planet |
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Saturn's
rings are now tilted wide open to us... roughly 27° from edge-on. Over
the next 15 years, they will move from wide open.. to edge-on to wide open
revealing the other pole. This and next year will be the best time to study
Saturn's beautiful ring structure for some time, so... get out there and do
it.
Saturn is now rising about 6:00am and is pretty much lost for the season at this point. Saturn will return to the morning sky later this summer. Be sure to stay tuned. This beautiful image of the 6th planet was taken Utah Skies own Don Brown back in January.
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Uranus, the 7th Planet |
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Interested
in viewing the 7th planet? Now would be a great time to begin trying. Uranus
is rising shortly after midnight... putting it high in the sky just before
sunrise. It's also recently jumped from 3" to 4" in apparent
diameter. This is just about as big and bright as Uranus gets... So... take
advantage of it.This beautiful image of the 7th planet was taken by The 2 Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS). Note the beautiful aquamarine color and the handful of moons orbiting the planet.
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Neptune, the 8th Planet |
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Springtime
on Neptune? Yup... that's what the latest observations seem to indicate. The
southern portion of the 8th planet is having some spring like
conditions. Spring is always a fun time of year.. and that's a good
thing, because spring last for over 40 Earth years on Neptune. 40 years?
Yup... Because it takes Neptune 165 years to orbit the Sun, seasons last
just a smidge over 40 earth years.
How's this for a cool shot of Neptune? This was taken recently by the orbiting Hubble Space Telescope. It clearly shows the cloud tops of the 8th planet.
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Pluto, the 9th Planet |
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Take
this bit of planetary information either as an interesting side note, or an
observing challenge. Pluto is in the constellation Ophiuchus, less than °1
southwest of NGC6309 aka The Bug Nebula. I viewed The Bug this past weekend, so... photons from Pluto must have hit my retina :-) At magnitude 13.9, Pluto is basically out of reach
of smaller telescopes... Even in the big scope... it's difficult to be sure that you've seen Pluto. One way to verify that you have found Pluto is to
sketch the star patterns over several nights. If you have actually found
Pluto, one of the the faint star-like objects will have moved over the
course of a few nights. This is Pluto.
This high resolution image was created
from images taken by The Hubble Space Telescope. |
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Deep Sky |
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Hubble Vision |
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| The Hubble Space Telescope has distinguished itself as a premier source of astronomical images. Amazing HST images have graced the covers of major magazines and newspapers worldwide. In recognition of the amazing advances in astronomy and physics which have come from Hubble discoveries, we'd like to devote a section of this report to some of these incredible images, and share some of them with you. Our latest comes directly from the Hubble Heritage Team. | |||||||||||||||
Hubble Sees Gas Shell Around Nova CygniA NASA Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image of a tepidly ballooning bubble of gas blasted off a star. The shell surrounds Nova Cygni 1992 which erupted on February 19, 1992. The shell is so young it still contains a record of the initial conditions of the explosion. The HST image was taken in ultraviolet light with the European Space Agency's Faint Object Camera (FOC) on May 31, 1993, 467 days after the explosion. The FOC reveals a remarkably circular yet slightly lumpy ring-like structure. The ring is the edge of the bubble's shell of hot gas. The shell is only 37 billion miles across, or 400 times the diameter of the solar system. A beam of light could cross the shell in less than 2-1/2 days. A striking relic of the explosion is an unusual bar-like structure across the middle of the ring. It might mark the edge-on plane of the orbits of the two members of the binary star system that triggered the nova. An alternative possibility is that the bar is produced by twin jets of gas ejected from the star and spanning the distance between the shell and the star. A nova is a thermonuclear explosion that occurs on the surface of a white dwarf star in a double star system. By knowing the shell's diameter, as calculated from a comparison between its angular size and it expansion velocity (as measured from ground-based observations) astronomers can precisely measure the distance to Nova Cygni, which turns out to be 10,430 light-years. Nova Cygni is located in the summer constellation Cygnus. Credit: Francesco Parasce, STScI and NASA |
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If you are able to find all of these objects, you may be one of the
few, the proud, the Deep Sky Obsessed. |
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IDA-Utah Light Pollution Update |
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Stay up to date on astronomical happenings by regularly checking the Utah Skies website at http://www.UtahSkies.org |
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