Tag Archives: Skywatchers

Annular solar eclipse of 2023 wows skywatchers with spectacular ‘ring of fire’ (photos, video) – Space.com

  1. Annular solar eclipse of 2023 wows skywatchers with spectacular ‘ring of fire’ (photos, video) Space.com
  2. Terre Haute Children’s Museum hosts Eclipse Extravaganza | News | wthitv.com WTHITV.com
  3. Angelenos Memorialize ‘Ring Of Fire’ Solar Eclipise On Social Media LAist
  4. Highlights From the 2023 ‘Ring of Fire’ Solar Eclipse The New York Times
  5. Photo Gallery: Eclipse offers solar spectacle for locals along Natchez bluff – Mississippi’s Best Community Newspaper | Mississippi’s Best Community Newspaper Natchez Democrat
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Planets Mars, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn to align in cosmic treat for skywatchers. Here’s how to spot them

Skywatchers are in for a cosmic treat this month: a rare alignment of four planets in the predawn sky.

Beginning around Sunday morning, stargazers will be able to see Mars, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn appear in a straight line across the southeastern sky before sunrise.

The midmonth alignment is a relatively unusual opportunity for people to see multiple planets in the sky with the naked eye — and it’s a prelude to an even rarer planetary alignment that will happen later this year.

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To see the planetary quartet, skywatchers in the Southern Hemisphere should head outside about an hour before the sun comes up and gaze southeast, in the direction of the sunrise.

Looking east at a flat horizon, Jupiter, Venus, Mars and Saturn will appear “strung out in a line across the morning sky,” according to NASA.

If conditions are clear, all four planets will be bright enough to see with the naked eye, without the aid of binoculars or telescopes.

Sky chart showing the close conjunction of Venus and Jupiter before sunrise on April 30. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

In the Southern Hemisphere, the sun’s path in the sky is at a steeper angle to the horizon, compared to in the Northern Hemisphere, which means the string of planets will unfurl higher above the sunrise point.

The same alignment is viewable before sunrise in the Northern Hemisphere.

In both cases, Jupiter will be the second-brightest planet in the celestial gathering but will appear lowest on the horizon, which could make it tricky to spot. That will change as the month goes on, according to NASA.

“Heading into the last week of April, Jupiter will be high enough above the horizon in the hour before sunrise to make it more easily observed,” the space agency said in its monthly roundup of skywatching tips.

The Big Dipper is an asterism – a well-known pattern of stars – within the constellation Ursa Major. Credit: Preston Dyches/NASA

Though this month’s skywatching event makes it look like the planets form a neat line in space, it’s actually just a matter of perspective.

Each planet in the solar system circles the sun on the same flat plane, which means that as they occasionally swing past each other in their orbits, they appear to form a straight line in Earth’s skies.

This tidy positioning, however, would look very different from any other vantage point in space.

The planets will be viewable in the predawn sky all month, and April’s alignment will set the stage for an even more spectacular skywatching event this winter.

From late June to early July, five planets — Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn — will be visible in the sky before sunrise in a major alignment that only occurs every few years.

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Jupiter hit by another space rock in rare views captured by Japanese skywatchers

It’s tough to be the biggest planet in the solar system, and this fall Jupiter is taking a beating.

On Friday (Oct. 15), skywatchers in Japan observed a flash in the atmosphere of the planet’s northern hemisphere likely caused by an asteroid slamming into Jupiter, just over a month after a skywatcher in Brazil made a similar observation.

“The flash felt like it was shining for a very long time to me,” Twitter user @yotsuyubi21, who photographed the flash with a Celestron C6 telescope, told Space.com.

Related: Jupiter just got smacked by a space rock and an amateur astronomer caught it on camera

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They confirmed the observation with a team led by Ko Arimatsu, an astronomer at Japan’s Kyoto University who takes part in the Organized Autotelescopes for Serendipitous Event Survey (OASES) project.

According to a tweet posted by the project, that observation included two different types of light, visible and infrared, giving Jupiter an eerie pink glow.

An observer captured a flash on Jupiter on Oct. 15, 2021, as seen in Japan with a Celestron C6. (Image credit: Twitter user @yotsuyubi21)

Jupiter regularly experiences such impacts because of the powerful gravitational tug associated with its mass: Smaller objects, like the asteroids that litter the solar system, can easily end up pulled into the planet’s thick, turbulent atmosphere.

Some research suggests that objects at least 150 feet (45 meters) across hit Jupiter every few months on average, although observational constraints mean that even the most thorough monitoring program might be able to catch just one impact or so per year.

According to Sky & Telescope, the Oct. 15 flash hit the planet’s North Tropical Zone, near the southern edge of the North Temperate Belt.

Observers aren’t yet sure whether the impact left a debris field that scientists can monitor; the September flash did not, and several factors including the object’s size and the impact’s location factor into observability.

Email Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or follow her on Twitter @meghanbartels. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.



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Skywatchers see SpaceX’s Dragon cargo craft streak across the night sky as it returned to Earth

Late Thursday night (Sept. 30) in the southeastern United States, anybody looking up could have glimpsed a brilliant streak, trailing down into the Atlantic Ocean off Florida’s east coast. It was actually a SpaceX Dragon cargo resupply spacecraft returning to Earth after a trip to the International Space Station (ISS).

The Dragon, which flew to the ISS as part of SpaceX’s 23rd cargo resupply mission for NASA (CRS-23), had been in space since August. It went to the ISS carrying several tons of supplies, equipment and science experiments for the Expedition 65 crew. Those experiments included a student project from Hasselt University in Belgium and the island country of Malta’s first-ever contribution to the ISS: probing the microbes inside the skin of foot ulcers.

Related: SpaceX Dragon launches big science haul to space station for astronaut health, plant stress and more

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After over a month in space, CRS-23 returned to Earth on Thursday. The capsule undocked from the ISS at 9:12 a.m. EDT (1312 GMT), as it was flying over the Pacific Ocean. At 10:07 p.m. EDT (0207 GMT on Friday), the capsule fired its engines to knock itself out of Earth’s orbit and begin its descent into the atmosphere.

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Over the next several minutes, the Dragon crossed east over North America, leaving a bright trail in its wake that was visible from all across the Southeastern United States. As it crossed over Florida and Georgia, Earthlings could even hear its loud sonic boom. At 10:57 p.m. EDT (0257 GMT), less than an hour after its first burn, it splashed down into the Atlantic Ocean.

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Now, SpaceX and NASA will set about recovering the Dragon capsule and the souvenirs it’s brought back from the ISS: several tons’ worth of equipment and the results of a few more science experiments. Then, the reusable capsule will be cleaned up and prepared for its next launch; already, this is the second time this particular capsule has flown to space and back again.

SpaceX’s Cargo Dragon spacecraft is lifted aboard a recovery vessel after splashing down in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Florida on Thursday, Sept. 30, 2021.  (Image credit: SpaceX)

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