Look Up: What's in the Sky This Week?

2009_0816_venus.jpg
Photo by philliefan99. Venus and the crescent Moon in January 2007. Not exactly what you'll see before dawn this week, but similar.
As we mentioned last week, Jupiter reached opposition last Friday. At this point, the Sun and Jupiter are on opposite sides of the Earth (like when the Moon is full), making it the brightest it ever appears in the sky. Since it's only a couple days off, it should still be a distinctly bright spot rising at sunset and lasting all night.

Did you see any of the meteor shower? D.C. had a few cloudy nights during the Perseid's peak this year, but you still might take a look up into the night sky and try to catch one as the Earth orbits away from Comet Swift-Tuttle's debris trail.

If you're unfamiliar with the layout of the night sky, there's a great teaching tool to use during the month of August. The Summer Triangle is directly overhead for the next few weeks and is a great starting point for mapping out constellations and celestial objects. Face north and look straight up -- you should see the three very bright stars that make up the Triangle, which is not a constellation, but the brightest stars in three nearby constellations. The northernmost star is Deneb, the head of Cygnus, the swan -- although most skywatchers prefer the asterism, the Northern Cross. Deneb is at the tip of the cross, which reaches back into the Triangle. Next, the bright star southeast of Deneb is Vega, part of Lyra, the lyre or harp. The constellation reaches southeast from Vega in a small diamond. Lastly, the southern tip of the Triangle is Altair, the head of Aquila, the eagle. Its wings and tail stretch out south of the Triangle.

Finding the Summer Triangle leaves you with a great starting point to reach farther outward and place more constellations in the sky. Once you're comfortable with the skymap, find someone with a telescope and use these markers to find deep sky objects, like the Ring Nebula located in Lyra.

Last week commenter Tyrannous told us about Stellarium, a program for Mac, PC, and Linux systems -- consider us addicted! This full screen map of the sky is totally interactive and runs in real time. You can enter any location in the world and any time (but "here" and "now" are most useful, of course) with options for constellation names and outlines, planets, deep-sky objects, and more. You can check out the Summer Triangle constellations before you head outside so you know what they really look like first. Regular star maps are notoriously hard to read and good ones are difficult to find on the Internet; Stellarium is easily the best resource for daily skygazing we've seen in a long time.

Venus is living up to its "Morning Star" name, so early risers will be able to see it in the East about an hour before dawn, just below the waning crescent Moon. As a bonus, Mars is also up at this ungodly hour, also to the East, but higher than the Moon and Venus in the sky. The New Moon is Thursday, which means it's the best day of the month to do a little skygazing.

Space Debris:

  • Every Wednesday at Noon, the National Air and Space Museum holds their "Ask an Expert" series. Free, see their schedule for more info.
  • Keep an eye on Scorpius, which is high in the sky this time of year: astronomers are anticipating a supernova in this area in 2009.
  • Like ginourmous rockets? The Ares I-X test rocket was fully assembled in the VAB this week -- at over 320 feet tall it's twice as big as the Space Shuttle assembly. It's targeted to launch in late October.

Get more weekly skygazing info at Sky and Telescope.

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If U Scorpii were actually a supernova, I'd REALLY be excited. Alas, it's just a recurrent nova.

Ha, fair enough, but if recurrent novae bore you that much, I dare say you're doing astronomy wrong. :)

Heh, novae are nice, but when you suggest a supernova in our galaxy, which we haven't seen in 400 years, that would REALLY be something! As long as it's not too close. ;)

Marveled at Jupiter and meteor showers over the weekend down in the Outer Banks. Happy you had this article so I can share. Most people thought I was just drunk and seeing birds. Birds don't fly in straight lines at high speed at high altitude. Looks like I wasn't the "drunk one".

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