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December 2009
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Direct download: AAGG_sky_tour_Dec_2009.mp3
Category:Sky Tours -- posted at: 2:48 PM

Monthly notes are up!  Audio will be up tomorrow!
Category:Sky Tours -- posted at: 7:26 AM

Astronomy a Go Go! December Sky Tour



This tool displays the approximate Moon phases for a given month(images are close approximations). For official phase times and dates for this month and past months are available from the U.S. Naval Observatory.

Astronomical Online Glossary

Download this month's sky map!

Skymaps.com is our favorite monthly skymap provider. Download either the Northern hemisphere, Equatorial, or Southern Hemisphere sky map so you can follow along with our viewing sessions.
Creator: Kym Thalassoudis

 

Southern Hemisphere Additional Information

As Astronomy a Go Go! finds its home in the higher Northern latitudes those of you who live south of the equator will benefit from these two Southern Hemisphere sites: Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand's Southern Hemisphere Calendar RASNZ site (absolutely outstanding) and
Southern Sky Watch.

 

December Morning Planets
(click images to enlarge)

 


December morning sky



December evening sky


 

December late night

  • Mercury- the "evening star" through December much better viewing the further South your viewing site -0.5 mag (1st) to -0.4 mag (21st)
  • Venus- too close to the Sun for reliable viewing -3.8 mag (1st) to -3.8 mag (21st)
  • Mars- in Western Leo (between Cancer and Leo) look very late evening or very early morning. Mars will slowly creep towards the 'mouth' of the Lion all month -0.1 mag (1st) to -0.5 mag (21st)
  • Jupiter- in Capricorn in the early evening. Bright in the SW for a few hours after Sunset look for Mercury, Jupiter and the Moon together on the 18-19th. -2.3 mag (1st) to -2.2 mag (21st)

  • Saturn- in Virgo all month rising after midnight and about 4 hours after Mars 1.1 mag (1st) to 1.1 mag (21st)
  • Uranus- Hovering just inside the Aquarius side of the Aquarius/Pisces border crossing back into Pisces in mid-January 5.7 mag (1st) to 5.7 mag (21st)
  • Neptune- In Capricorn all month. Jupiter slides eastward south of Neptune with a close, moon-less encounter on Dec. 24-25 7.9 mag (1st) to 7.9 mag (21st)
  • Ceresand Eta - Finder chart from the New Zealand RAS (RASNZ) great charts! Northern Hemisphere observers this time you get to flip the chart or stand on your head!
    Vesta chart temporarily missing...use this one until site is corrected

Key Dates for December 2009

Days and Times in UT: (help with time)
Observations are for 8 pm for Northern Hemisphere and 10 pm for the Southern Hemisphere.
Today's sunrise and sunset times or plan ahead using the US Naval Observatory Website

Occultation information can be found at the IOTA website!

Astronomical Highlights - December 2009

1 - Algol at minimum (6:15 UT) Moon 0.03 deg S of Pleiades (M45)
2 - Uranus stationary
3 - Jovian moon phenomena: Io occults Europa (2:08 UT) Transit of the Great Red Spot 10 minutes later
- Full Moon (7:30 UT)
4 - Moon at perigee (363479 km)
6 - Moon near Beehive Cluster (M44)
7 - Mercury at greatest heliocentric lat. South
- Mars 5 deg N of the Moon
9 - Last Quarter (0:13 UT)
10 - Saturn 8 deg N of Moon
14 - Geminid meteor shower peak, with little Moon and an early rising of Gemini should make this a favorable shower. Expect up to 80 bright, medium-speed meteors per hour.
16 - New Moon (12:02 UT)
18 - Mercury 1.4 deg S of Moon and greatest elongation East
20 - Venus in descending mode
- Jupiter 0.6 deg S of Neptune
- Moon at apogee (405731 km)
21 - Double shadow transit on Jupiter (1:34 UT)
- Jupiter 4 deg S of Moon
- Mars stationary
- Solstice (17:47 UT) The Sun reaches its furtherest point South of the Celestial Equator. Summer for the Southern Hemisphere, Winter for the Northern. A description can be found here.
22 - Jovian moon phenomena: Europa occults Io (2:48 UT) Transit of the Great Red Spot (3:07 UT)
24 - First Quarter (17:36 UT)
- Pluto in conjunction with the Sun
26 - Mercury at ascending node
31 - Mercury at perihelion
- Full Moon a "Blue Moon"
- Partial lunar eclipse penumbral grazing the umbra visible through most of Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia

Date information courtesy of: RASC Observer's Handbook, Skymaps.com, Astronomical Calendar 2009, CalSky, Skymaps.com. sunrise and sunset times for your home*
Comparative lengths of day and night

    Monthly Messier*

    This will be a fairly easy month on the tour. We will view two small, but bright globular clusters, two open star clusters, and the grandest galaxy in the sky along with it's two companions. All of these objects are possible to find in binoculars, most are fairly easy.

    M2
    This is a small, bright globular cluster in Aquarius. To find it in binoculars look for a fuzzy star in a star poor field. A low power telescope field will show a round fuzzy patch, brighter in the center and fading to the edge, in a field with no other bright objects.
    M15
    This globular cluster in Pegasus is very similar to M2 in size and brightness, except it is surrounded by several bright stars. Fairly easy to find in binoculars but the best view is through a telescope at medium to high power.
    M29
    This galactic cluster is a small, sparse group of stars in Cygnus. It appears as a small fuzzy patch amongst a rich star field in binoculars. A telescope will easily resolve the members of this cluster. The shape of the cluster reminds me of the Pleiades as viewed through binoculars.
    M39
    Dark skies will allow this large, bright cluster in Cygnus to be seen with the naked eye as a hazy patch of light. Binoculars easily resolve this cluster into it's bright and widely scattered members, and provide a better view than can be seen with most telescopes.
    M31
    This is the famous Andromeda Galaxy, our closest galactic neighbor, and the largest, brightest galaxy to be seen in the northern sky. The ability to see M31 with the naked eye provides a good test of the darkness of your skies. M31 is so large that binoculars provide the best view, allowing the entire galaxy to be seen in one field of view. Look for an elongated patch of light, with a bright, round central core.
    M32
    This is an elliptical companion galaxy to M31. Through a telescope look for a slightly oval ball of fuzz in the same low power field as the core of M31. M32 is very possible to find in binoculars as a star like point of light.
    M110
    Another elliptical companion galaxy to M31, lying on the opposite side of the core as M32. Through a telescope look for a large, oval patch of light. Although M110 is as bright as M32 it is much larger and thus has a lower surface brightness making it a difficult object in light polluted skies. M110 is a very difficult binocular object requiring dark transparent skies, and trained eyes to have a chance at finding it.

    From the Astronomical Connection and the Moncton Center in Canada

    From the Tony Cecce, Corning, NY - Twelve Month Tour of The Messier Catalog

    Comets for December 2009

    More comet information at Seiichi Yoshida's comet website. Also checkout Gary Kronk's comet and meteor pages
    Skyhound Comet pages

    Historical and Current Events

    ...Did you know?

    Mark has developed his own website so let's all trot on over and see the pages of wonderful history he has for us this month!

    Help us out by leaving a donation in the ol' PayPal hat

    or write us a favorable review in iTunes of Podcast Pickle or iPodder!

     

    Music Scottish Guitar Quartet -"Romance Within You"
    Black Lab- "See the Sun"
    Anne Farnsworth- "Saturday Morning"

     

    Great Astronomy Activities!

    Citizen Sky

    For those in Northern Hemisphere, Capella, the "She Goat" in Aurigae, is circumpolar. At my 47 deg North, Capella disappears behind the tree line, and into the light polluted horizon, but she pops up in a few hours and is easy to find. Also easy to find are epsilon Aurigae (al Maaz the Billy Goat) and "The Kids" which make a small, long, triangle of stars just to the Southwest of Capella.

    For the next 21 months Epsilon Aurigae, usually the brightest of the trio, will start behaving quite differently than it has for the past 27 years. Epsilon Aurigae is a type of variable star called an eclipsing binary. Epsilon Aurigae and some unknown dark partner, rotate around a common center of mass and every 27 years that dark companion eclipses the giant F-type star. August marks the anticipated beginning for that eclipse which will last for 714 days, dimming from 3.0 mag to about half of its brightness.

    So why am I calling this a great astronomy activity? Epsilon Aurigae has some definite quirks and more eyes are needed to help scientist figure out what Epsilon Aurigae's invisible partner really is! We need help...WE NEED YOU!! Anyone can participate; we need people to observe epsilon Aurigae, folks to look at the data for quirks, patterns, or voids, artist to help present the data to the public, friends willing to get the word out to others! To find out more visit:



    Earth's major motions for 2009

    Perihelion
    Jan 4 15(UT)
    First Cross Quarter Day
    Feb 2-6
    Equinox
    Mar 20 11:44(UT)
    Second Cross Quarter Day
    May 4-7
    Solstice
    June 21 05:45(UT)
    Aphelion
    July 4 02h (UT)
    Third Cross Quarter Day
    Aug 5-8
    Equinox
    Sept 22 21:18(UT)
    Fourth Cross Quarter Day
    Nov 5-8
    Solstice
    Dec 21 17:47(UT)

    Planet Positions for 2009


    2009 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
    Venus Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Tau Gem Cnc Vir Vir Sco Sgr Cap
    Mars Sgr Cap Aqr Psc Psc Ari Tau Tau Gem Cnc Cnc Leo
    Jupiter Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap Cap
    Saturn Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Leo Vir Vir Vir Vir

     

    Interesting Planet Pairing for 2009

    • December 31, 2008 - Jupiter and Mercury - After sunset a little more than one degree apart in Sagittarius. Pull out the binos and telescopes because Mercury will be a mere 15 arcminutes from the globular cluster M75. All three will be together in one field of view in most home binoculars.
    • January 22nd - Venus and Uranus - After sunset 1.3 degrees apart a few days later on the 29th they are joined by a waxing crescent moon.
    • February 23rd - Jupiter, Mars and Mercury - In the early morning sky just before sunrise the trio are in a space about 2 degrees wide. Binoculars will be helpful but beware the quickly rising Sun. The Moon, almost invisible, will be between Mars and the Sun.
    • March 23rd - Mars, Moon, Neptune, and Jupiter - Makes a nice line-up in the morning sky with Neptune just off the tip of the waning crescent moon.
    • April 21st - Venus, Mars, Uranus, waning crescent Moon, Neptune and Jupiter - all in the pre-dawn sky together. First the right triangle of Venus, Mars, and Uranus followed by the waning crescent Moon and then finally by Neptune and Jupiter. Mars will be a faint 1.41 mag so binoculars will be helpful. The next day, possible occultation of Venus by the Moon. Check the IOTA website for occultations in your area.
    • May 25th - Jupiter and Neptune - Jupiter is less than 1/2 degree South of Neptune in the morning sky. If you have ever had problems finding Neptune this would be a good time to try, between now and June.
    • June 19th - Venus and Mars - In the pre-dawn sky just south of a waning crescent Moon. Closer to the Sun is Mercury and the Pleiades.
    • August 17th - Saturn and Mercury - Very close to the Sun low in the evening sky. Much better view for Southern viewers.
    • September 3rd UT 4:43 - Jupiter hides its Galilean moons. Not until 2019 will all of Jupiter's Galilean moons orbit in such a way.
    • September 4th - Saturn - Not exactly a pairing but the Earth will cross the plane of the rings from south to north making the rings invisible
    • October 16th - Mercury, Venus, and Saturn - All lined up in the pre-dawn sky close to the horizon. A faint waning crescent is just south of the trio.
    • December 24th - Jupiter and Neptune - Just after sunset Jupiter and Neptune sit side-by-side just north of delta Capricornus and east of the "42,44,45 Cap Wall"

    Phases of the Moon 2009


    (click to enlarge)

    Universal Time

          NEW MOON    FIRST QUARTER       FULL MOON     LAST QUARTER
    
           d  h  m          d  h  m         d  h  m          d  h  m
           
                     JAN.   4 11 56   JAN. 11  3 27   JAN.  18  2 46
    JAN.  26  7 55   FEB.   2 23 13   FEB.  9 14 49   FEB.  16 21 37
    FEB.  25  1 35   MAR.   4  7 46   MAR. 11  2 38   MAR.  18 17 47 
    MAR.  26 16 06   APR.   2 14 34   APR.  9 14 56   APR.  17 13 36  
    APR.  25  3 23   MAY    1 20 44   MAY   9  4 01   MAY   17  7 26
    MAY   24 12 11   MAY   31  3 22   JUNE  7 18 12   JUNE  15 22 15
    JUNE  22 19 35   JUNE  29 11 28   JULY  7  9 21   JULY  15  9 53  
    JULY  22  2 35   JULY  28 22 00   AUG.  6  0 55   AUG.  13 18 55  
    AUG.  20 10 02   AUG.  27 11 42   SEPT. 4 16 03   SEPT. 12  2 16
    SEPT. 18 18 44   SEPT. 26  4 50   OCT.  4  6 10   OCT.  11  8 56  
    OCT.  18  5 33   OCT.  26  0 42   NOV.  2 19 14   NOV.   9 15 56  
    NOV.  16 19 14   NOV.  24 21 39   DEC.  2  7 30   DEC.   9  0 13  
    DEC.  16 12 02   DEC.  24 17 36   DEC. 31 19 13
    
    

    Eclipses for 2009

     

    2009 January 26
    [ Solar: Annular ]
    2009 February 09
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 07
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 July 21-22
    [ Solar: Total ]
    2009 August 05-06
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]
    2009 December 31
    [ Lunar: Penumbral ]

     

    January 26 - Annular Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): The first solar eclipse of 2009 occurs at the Moon's ascending node in western Capricornus. An annular eclipse will be visible from a wide track that traverses the Indian Ocean and western Indonesia. A partial eclipse will be seen within the much larger path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes the southern third of Africa, Madagascar, Australia except Tasmania, southeast India, Southeast Asia and Indonesia.

     

    February 09 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The first lunar eclipse of 2009 is one of four such events during the year. The first three eclipses are penumbral while the last (on Dec. 31) is partial. The Feb 09 event is the deepest penumbral eclipse of the year with a penumbral magnitude of 0.899. It will be easily visible to the naked eye as a dusky shading in the northern half of the Moon. The times of the major phases are listed below.

    July 07 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times.): July's penumbral eclipse is only of academic interest since the magnitude is just 0.156. Although the Moon will be above the horizon from most of Canada, the eclipse is so minor as to be completely invisible to the naked eye.

    July 21-22 - Total Solar Eclipse ( see map, times, and animation!): To make up for the anemic lunar eclipse earlier in the month, a major total eclipse of the Sun occurs two weeks later. The path of the Moon's umbral shadow extends across India, China, a handful of Japanese islands and the South Pacific Ocean (Espenak and Anderson, 2008). A partial eclipse is seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes most of eastern Asia, Indonesia, and the Pacific Ocean.

    August 05-06 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): A shallow penumbral eclipse occurs 15 days after the total solar eclipse. Since its magnitude is only 0.402, it will not be visible to the naked eye.

    December 31 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse ( see map, times): The last eclipse of 2009 occurs on New Year's Eve. This minor partial lunar eclipse takes place in Gemini, and is visible primarily from the Eastern Hemisphere (Figure 8). Greatest eclipse takes place at 19:23 UT when the eclipse magnitude will reach 0.0763.

    Eclipse information from: NASA Eclipse Homepage, Eclipses Online (HM Nautical Almanac Office, UK in coordination with the U.S. Naval Observatory)

    2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower Activity Period Maximum Radiant Velocity r ZHR Class Moon
        Date S. L. R.A. Dec. km/s        
    Antihelion Source (ANT) Dec 14-Sep 07 - - - - 30 3.0 3 II -
    Quadrantids (QUA) Dec 26-Jan 13 Jan 03 283°16 15:20 +49° 42 2.1 120 I 6
    Alpha Centaurids (ACE) Jan 28-Feb 21 Feb 07 319°2 14:00 -59° 56 2.0 5 II 12
    Delta Leonids (DLE) Feb 15-Mar 10 Feb 25 336° 11:12 +16° 23 3.0 2 II 0
    Gamma Normids (GNO) Feb 25-Mar 22 Mar 13 353° 16:36 -51° 56 2.4 4 II 16
    Lyrids (LYR) Apr 16-Apr 27 Apr 23 033° 18:12 +33° 46 2.1 18 I 27
    Pi Puppids (PPU) Apr 15-Apr 28 Apr 23 033°5 07:20 -45° 18 2.0 var III 27
    Eta Aquarids (ETA) Apr 27-May 23 May 07 047° 22:36 -01° 68 2.4 60 I 12
    Eta Lyrids (ELY) May 06-May 14 May 10 050° 19:22 +43° 43 3.0 3 II 15
    June Bootids (JBO) Jun 22-Jul 02 Jun 27 095°7 14:56 +48° 18 2.2 var III 5
    Piscis Austrinids (PAU) Jul 15-Aug 10 Jul 28 125° 22:44 -30° 35 3.2 5 II 7
    Alpha Capricornids (CAP) Jul 12-Aug 08 Jul 28 125° 20:20 -10° 24 2.5 4 II 7
    Delta Aquarids (SDA) Jul 21-Aug 30 Jul 30 127° 22:42 -17° 43 3.2 20 I 9
    Perseids (PER) Jul 13-Aug 26 Aug 12 140° 03:12 +58° 59 2.6 100 I 20
    Kappa Cygnids (KCG) Aug 03-Aug 25 Aug 17 145° 19:04 +59° 25 3.0 3 II 25
    Alpha Aurigids (AUR) Aug 28-Sep 03 Sep 01 158°6 06:06 +39° 65 2.6 7 II 11
    September Perseids (SPR) Sep 06-Sep 13 Sep 10 168° 03:12 +40° 65 2.9 5 II 19
    Delta Aurigids (DAU) Sep 18-Oct 10 Sep 29 186° 05:52 +49° 64 2.9 2 II 13
    Draconids (GIA) Oct 06-Oct 10 Oct 08 195°4 17:28 +54° 20 2.6 var III 18
    Southern Taurids (STA) Sep 18-Nov 26 Oct 11 198° 02:18 +09° 29 2.3 5 II 21
    Epsilon Geminids (EGE) Oct 18-Oct 21 Oct 20 207° 06:48 +28° 71 3.0 2 II 2
    Orionids (ORI) Sep 28-Nov 10 Oct 21 208° 06:22 +16° 68 2.5 23 I 3
    Leo Minorids (LMI) Oct 17-Oct 27 Oct 23 209° 10:40 +37° 61 2.7 2 II 4
    Northern Taurids (NTA) Oct 20-Nov 29 Nov 13 231° 03:52 +22° 29 2.3 5 II 25
    Leonids (LEO) Nov 07-Nov 28 Nov 18 236° 10:16 +22° 71 2.5 var III 1
    Alpha Monocerotids (AMO) Nov 15-Nov 25 Nov 21 239°32 07:48 +01° 65 2.4 var III 4
    Dec Phoenicids (PHO) Nov 28-Dec 09 Dec 06 254°25 01:12 -53° 18 2.8 var III 18
    Puppid/Velids (PUP) Dec 01-Dec 15 Dec 07 255° 08:12 -45° 40 2.9 10 I 19
    Monocerotids (MON) Dec 06-Dec 20 Dec 07 255° 06:32 +09° 41 3.0 2 II 10
    Sigma Hydrids (HYD) Nov 22-Dec 23 Dec 09 257° 08:24 +03° 60 3.0 3 II 21
    Geminids (GEM) Dec 05-Dec 19 Dec 14 262°2 07:36 +32° 35 2.6 120 I 26
    Coma Berenicids (COM) Dec 10-Jan 25 Dec 19 268° 11:40 +25° 64 3.0 5 II 3
    Ursids (URS) Dec 16-Dec 25 Dec 22 270°7 14:34 +75° 32 3.0 10 I 5

    Information and Table Template Courtesy The American Meteor Society, International Meteor Organization, and Meteors Online.

    Explanation of the 2009 Meteor Shower Calendar

    Shower: named for the constellation or closest star within a constellation where the radiant is located at maximum activity.

    Activity Period: the dates when the ZHR (Zenith Hourly Rates) are equal to or greater than one.

    Maximum: the date on which the maximum activity is expected to occur.

    S.L.: the equivalent solar longitude of the date of maximum activity. Solar longitude is measured in degrees (0-359) with 0 occurring at the exact moment of the spring equinox, 90 at the summer solstice, 180 at the autumnal equinox, and 270 at the winter solstice.

    Radiant: the area in the sky where shower meteors seem to appear from. This position is given in right ascension (celestial longitude) and declination (celestial latitude).

    Velocity: the velocity at which shower meteors strike the Earth's atmosphere. The velocity depends on the angle meteoroids (meteors in space) intersect the Earth. Meteoroids orbiting in the opposite direction of the Earth and striking the atmosphere head-on are much faster than those orbiting in the same direction as the Earth. This velocity is measured in kilometers per second.

    r: The Population Index, An estimate of the ratio of the number of meteors in subsequent magnitude classes. Simply stated: the lower the "r" value, the resulting overall mean magnitude of each shower will be brighter. "r" usually ranges from 2.0 (bright) to 3.5 (faint).

    ZHR: Zenith Hourly Rate, the average maximum number of shower meteors visible per hour if the radiant is located exactly overhead and the limiting magnitude equals +6.5. Actual counts rarely reach this figure as the zenith angle of the radiant is usually less and the limiting magnitude is usually lower. ZHR is a useful tool when comparing the actual observed rates between individual observers as it sets observing conditions for all to the same standards.

    Class: A scale developed by Robert Lunsford to group meteor showers by their intensity:

    Class I: the strongest annual showers with ZHR's normally ten or better.

    Class II: reliable minor showers with ZHR's normally three or better.

    Class III: showers with widely variable rates. They may be strong one year and totally inactive the next.

    Class IV: weak minor showers with ZHR's rarely exceeding three. The study of these showers is best left to experienced observers who use plotting and angular velocity estimates to determine shower association. Observers with less experience are urged to limit their shower associations to showers with a rating of I to III. These showers are also good targets for video and photographic work.

    Moon: the age of the moon in days where 0 is new, 7 is first quarter, 14 is full, and 21 is last quarter. Meteor activity is best seen in the absence of moonlight so showers reaching maximum activity when the moon is less than 10 days old or more than 25 are much more favorably observed than those situated closer to the full moon.

    Information from the "Observer's Handbook 2009" RASC



    Category:Sky Tours -- posted at: 7:20 AM