If you only glance at
the sky now and then, you may think it's pretty much the same every night.
Regular sky watchers know better, and are aware of the constant changes the sky
undergoes.
Take the moon, for
example. Although most people know that the moon revolves around the Earth,
they may never have noticed this movement with their own eyes. This week we get
a chance to do exactly that.
The problem is that
much of the time the moon is in an open reach of sky, and there are no fixed
points to mark its movement. This week it passes close to the bright star Spica
and the planet Saturn in the constellation Virgo.
On Sunday night (July
14), the moon will be well to the right of Spica (in the northern
hemisphere...reverse left and right if you're south of the equator) in the
evening sky.
On Monday night (July
15), the moon will be immediately above Spica. In fact, if you live in Central
America or Africa, the moon will pass right in front of Spica, in what is
called a lunar occultation.
On Tuesday night (July
16), the moon will have moved well to the left of the moon, and will be just
below the planet Saturn.
On Wednesday night
(July 17), the moon will be well to the left of Saturn.
Let's go back to Monday
night, when the moon is closest to Spica. This will not be the only
astronomical encounter this night. Stay up until the wee hours of the morning,
and you'll see Mars and Jupiter rise an hour before sunrise. If you look at
Mars in binoculars or a small telescope, you will see that it is close to one
of the brightest star clusters in the sky, Messier 35 in Gemini.
Now we will see how the
planets move as well. Because they are farther away, they seem to move much
more slowly than the moon.
A few months ago we were watching Mars and
Jupiter fade into evening twilight as they moved behind the sun. Now they have
emerged into morning twilight to begin their next apparition in our night sky.
If you're an early riser, keep an eye on them over the next couple of weeks as
they approach each other, pass on the morning of July 22, and then draw apart
again.
Source:Yahoo news
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