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The Night Sky in and around Swindon - July 2024
July Mornings Looking East - Mars and Jupiter |
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Mars and Jupiter will be visable in early July near the ecliptic |
The
planets this month
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The
following data is drawn from Space.com
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Jupiter Jupiter will be quite brilliant with a silver-white luster in 2024. It starts the year in the constellation Aries the Ram, then crosses over into Taurus the Bull on April 28 where it will remain for the balance of the year. During evenings from Jan. 1 to April 26, it'll shine brightly, as well as during mornings from June 8 to Dec. 6. Evening viewing will be optimal again from Dec. 7 to December 31. |
Saturn The rings were at their maximum tilt toward Earth in Oct. 2017, but are now rapidly closing to our line of sight. They will turn edge-on to the Earth during the spring of 2025. The process will begin in 2024 within the boundaries of the constellation Aquarius, the Water Carrier, and the planet will remain there for the rest of the year. You can catch Saturn during evenings from Jan. 1 to Feb. 11, mornings from March 17 to Sept. 7, then evenings again from Sept. 8 to Dec. 31. Saturn's brightest in 2024 will fall between Aug. 25 to Oct. 1. Saturn will be in opposition to the sun on Sept. 8. Saturn and Venus will appear dramatically close to each other (with Saturn just 0.2-degree S) on the morning of March 21 and will be 0.4-degree S of Mars on April 10. |
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Mercury |
Mars |
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Venus Always brilliant, and shining with a steady, silvery light, you can catch Venus during mornings in the eastern sky at dawn from Jan. 1 to April 8; evenings in the western sky at dusk from July 30 to Dec. 31 |
Constellations
of the month
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Compiled
by Robin Wilkey & Prof Ian Morison
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Throughout July - The Summer Triangle |
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The
Summer Triangle Vega, Deneb and Altair light up the eastern
part of the evening sky and their blazing radiance is visible to the
unaided eye even for observers from the most light-polluted areas. The
Summer Triangle isnt a constellation but an asterism, which is
a noticeable group of stars, and consists of 3 stars in 3 constellations.
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Sight some noctilucent clouds - July |
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Many of us in the Northern Hemisphere can look out for noctilucent clouds during their peak season in June and July. Noctilucent clouds are clouds which appear to glow silver or blue during the late evening or early morning hours. This happens when the Sun is below the horizon but still illuminates the nighttime clouds from below. These clouds are formed in the mesosphere when ice crystals form on suspended dust particles. Although their occurrence is quite unpredictable, there are ways you can give yourself the best chance of seeing them. Look up an hour or two after sunset or before sunrise from somewhere with a flat horizon and a clear view of a wide patch of sky. In the evening, look west around 40 minutes after the Sun has set. In the early morning, look towards the northeast where the Sun will soon be rising. Credit: Royal Museums Greenwich |
The constellations Lyra and Cygnus |
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This month the constellations
Lyra and Cygnus are seen almost overhead as darkness falls with their
bright stars Vega, in Lyra, and Deneb, in Cygnus, making up the "summer
triangle" of bright stars with Altair in the constellation Aquila
below. (see sky chart above) Lyra is dominated by its brightest star Vega, the fifth brightest star in the sky. It is a blue-white star having a magnitude of 0.03, and lies 26 light years away. It weighs three times more than the Sun and is about 50 times brighter. It is thus burning up its nuclear fuel at a greater rate than the Sun and so will shine for a correspondingly shorter time. Vega is much younger than the Sun, perhaps only a few hundred million years old, and is surrounded by a cold,dark disc of dust in which an embryonic solar system is being formed! There is a lovely double star called Epsilon Lyrae up and to the left of Vega. A pair of binoculars will show them up easily - you might even see them both with your unaided eye. In fact a telescope, provided the atmosphere is calm, shows that each of the two stars that you can see is a double star as well so it is called the double double! |
![]() Epsilon Lyra - The Double Double |
Between Beta and Gamma Lyra lies a beautiful object called the Ring Nebula. It is the 57th object in the Messier Catalogue and so is also called M57. Such objects are called planetary nebulae as in a telescope they show a disc, rather like a planet. But in fact they are the remnants of stars, similar to our Sun, that have come to the end of their life and have blown off a shell of dust and gas around them. The Ring Nebula looks like a greenish smoke ring in a small telescope, but is not as impressive as it is shown in photographs in which you can also see the faint central "white dwarf" star which is the core of the original star which has collapsed down to about the size of the Earth. Still very hot this shines with a blue-white colour, but is cooling down and will eventually become dark and invisible - a "black dwarf"! Do click on the image below to see the large version - its wonderful! |
![]() M57 - the Ring Nebula Image: Hubble Space telescope |
M56 is an 8th magnitude Globular Cluster visible in binoculars roughly half way between Albireo (the head of the Swan) and Gamma Lyrae. It is 33,000 light years away and has a diameter of about 60 light years. It was first seen by Charles Messier in 1779 and became the 56th entry into his catalogue. |
![]() M56 - Globular Cluster |
Cygnus
Cygnus, the Swan, is sometimes called the "Northern Cross" as it has a distinctive cross shape, but we normally think of it as a flying Swan. Deneb,the arabic word for "tail", is a 1.3 magnitude star which marks the tail of the swan. It is nearly 2000 light years away and appears so bright only because it gives out around 80,000 times as much light as our Sun. In fact if Deneb where as close as the brightest star in the northern sky, Sirius, it would appear as brilliant as the half moon and the sky would never be really dark when it was above the horizon! The star, Albireo, which marks the head of the Swan is much fainter, but a beautiful sight in a small telescope. This shows that Albireo is made of two stars, amber and blue-green, which provide a wonderful colour contrast. With magnitudes 3.1 and 5.1 they are regarded as the most beautiful double star that can be seen in the sky. |
![]() Alberio: Diagram showing the colours and relative brightnesses |
Cygnus
lies along the line of the Milky Way, the disk of our own Galaxy, and
provides a wealth of stars and clusters to observe. Just to the left of
the line joining Deneb and Sadr, the star at the centre of the outstretched
wings, you may, under very clear dark skys, see a region which is darker
than the surroundings. This is called the Cygnus Rift and is caused by
the obscuration of light from distant stars by a lane of dust in our local
spiral arm. the dust comes from elements such as carbon which have been
built up in stars and ejected into space in explosions that give rise
to objects such as the planetary nebula M57 described above.
There is a beautiful region of nebulosity up and to the left of Deneb which is visible with binoculars in a very dark and clear sky. Photographs show an outline that looks like North America - hence its name the North America Nebula. Just to its right is a less bright region that looks like a Pelican, with a long beak and dark eye, so not surprisingly this is called the Pelican Nebula. The photograph below shows them well. |
![]() The North America Nebula |
Brocchi's Cluster An easy object to spot with binoculars in Cygnus is "Brocchi's Cluster", often called "The Coathanger",although it appears upside down in the sky! Follow down the neck of the swan to the star Albireo, then sweep down and to its lower left. You should easily spot it against the dark dust lane behind. |
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The constellation Orion |
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Orion, perhaps the most beautiful of constellations, will be seen in the south at around 11 - 12 pm during January. Orion is the hunter holding up a club and shield against the charge of Taurus, the Bull up and to his right. Alpha Orionis, or Betelgeuse, is a read supergiant star varying in size between three and four hundred times that of our Sun. The result is that its brightness varies somewhat. Beta Orionis, or Rigel, is a blue supergiant which, at around 1000 light years distance is about twice as far away as Betelgeuse. It has a 7th magnitude companion. The three stars of Orion's belt lie at a distance of around 1500 light years. Just below the lower left hand star lies a strip of nebulosity against which can be seen a pillar of dust in the shape of the chess-board knight. It is thus called the Horsehead Nebula. It shows up very well photographically but is exceedingly difficult to see visually - even with relativly large telescope. |
![]() The Horsehead Nebula: Anglo Australian Observatory |
Beneath
the central star of the belt lies Orion's sword containing one of the
most beautiful sights in the heavens - The Orion Nebula. It is a region
of star formation and the reddish colour seen in photographs comes from
Hydrogen excited by ultraviolet emitted from the very hot young stars
that make up the Trapesium which is at its heart. The nebula, cradling
the trapesium stars, is a beautiful sight in binoculars or, better still,
a telescope. To the eye it appears greenish, not red, as the eye is much
more sensitive to the green light emitted by ionized oxygen than the reddish
glow from the hydrogen atoms. The Orion Nebula |
![]() The Orion Nebula: David Malin |
The constellation of Ursa Major |
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The stars of the Plough, shown linked by the thicker lines in the chart above, form one of the most recognised star patterns in the sky. Also called the Big Dipper, after the soup ladles used by farmer's wives in America to serve soup to the farm workers at lunchtime, it forms part of the Great Bear constellation - not quite so easy to make out! The stars Merak and Dubhe form the pointers which will lead you to the Pole Star, and hence find North. The stars Alcor and Mizar form a naked eye double which repays observation in a small telescope as Mizar is then shown to be an easily resolved double star. A fainter reddish star forms a triangle with Alcor and Mizar. Ursa Major contains many interesting "deep sky" objects. The brightest, listed in Messier's Catalogue, are shown on the chart, but there are many fainter galaxies in the region too. In the upper right of the constellation are a pair of interacting galaxies M81 and M82 shown in the image below. M82 is undergoing a major burst of star formation and hence called a "starburst galaxy". They can be seen together using a low power eyepiece on a small telescope. |
![]() M81 and M82 |
Another, and very beautiful, galaxy is M101 which looks rather like a pinwheel firework, hence its other name the Pinwheel Galaxy. It was discovered in1781 and was a late entry to Messier's calalogue of nebulous objects. It is a type Sc spiral galaxy seen face on which is at a distance of about 24 million light years. Type Sc galaxies have a relativly small nucleus and open spiral arms. With an overall diameter of 170,000 light it is one of the largest spirals known (the Milky Way has a diameter of ~ 130,000 light years). |
![]() M101 - The Ursa Major Pinwheel Galaxy |
Though just outside the constellation boundary, M51 lies close to Alkaid, the leftmost star of the Plough. Also called the Whirlpool Galaxy it is being deformed by the passage of the smaller galaxy on the left. This is now gravitationally captured by M51 and the two will eventually merge. M51 lies at a distance of about 37 million light years and was the first galaxy in which spiral arms were seen. It was discovered by Charles Messier in 1773 and the spiral structure was observed by Lord Rosse in 1845 using the 72" reflector at Birr Castle in Ireland - for many years the largest telescope in the world. |
![]() M51 - The Whirlpool Galaxy |
Lying close to Merak is the planetary nebula M97 which is usually called the Owl Nebula due to its resemblance to an owl's face with two large eyes. It was first called this by Lord Rosse who drew it in 1848 - as shown in the image below right. Planetary nebulae ar the remnants of stars similar in size to our Sun. When all possible nuclear fusion processes are complete, the central core collpses down into a "white dwarf" star and the the outer parts of the star are blown off to form the surrounding nebula. |
![]() ![]() M97 - The Owl Planetary Nebula & Lord Rosse's 1848 drawing of the Owl Nebula |