Below is a text version of the new Gettysburg Astrominute, with some iillustrations. You can listen to the astrominute here and several times a week on WZBT.
Here is your
Gettysburg astrominute for the first half of October, 2015. On October 8 (the
middle of our astrominute period) the sun will rise at 7:12 and set at 6:41,
eastern daylight time. The moon will not be in the evening sky – it reaches Last
Quarter on October 4 and New on the 13th. As it gets dark, the
Summer Triangle is overhead, dominating the sky. Meanwhile, look for the Great
Square of Pegasus in the east. [Check out www.skymaps.com for a downloadable monthy map.]
The best show right now, however, is in the
morning sky. Venus stands brilliantly in the east before sunrise, and below it
the planet Jupiter is coming into view. Though fainter, Mars and the star
Regulus are both nearby. Better yet, the waning crescent moon will be passing
through on the 8th through the 10th. Look for the
crescent moon, 17% illuminated, near Venus on the 8th.
As it gets
closer to the sun each morning, it will be near Jupiter and 11% illuminated on
the 9th, and below Jupiter and only 6% illuminated on the 10th.
That is still 70 hours before new moon on the 13th, so quite visible
if you go out before 6AM. If you’re an early riser, you might also notice that
Jupiter and Venus are drawing close together. They will be very close indeed at
the end of the month. More on that next time. The astrominute is a production
of Gettysburg College’s Hatter Planetarium and WZBT. For a text of the
astrominute, with illustrations, visit the Gettysburg Skies Blog.
10/8, 5:45 AM. 10 deg. = fist at arm's length. |
Images created with Stellarium.
10/10. |
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