Funny thing, most of L.A. county seems to be fairly clear, but Monrovia,
sitting up against the Sierra foothills, is mired in moist air making
clouds over us. They don't show any sign of dissipating for some looks
at the moon tonight.
So no sidewalk astronomy tonight.
If you happen to be near the El Monte library on Monday evening, we'll
have at least one telescope there for looks at the moon.
Hope to see you next month, and maybe we'll have some Saturn late in the
session. :)
Cheers,
Mojo
--
Morris Jones, Monrovia, CA
http://bridgemojo.comhttp://otastro.orghttp://mojo.whiteoaks.com
It looks like it's going to be great couple of nights for sidewalk
astronomy this weekend. We'll have a bright first-quarter moon nearly
overhead, and probably our last look at bright Jupiter for this year,
before it disappears behind the sun. It sets a little earlier every day.
Jane and I plan to be in Old Town Pasadena tonight. We set up on
Colorado Blvd., somewhere in the two block stretch from Fair Oaks to
Pasadena Ave., depending on where we find to park. Our plan is to be
there from about 7:00 'til 9:00 p.m.
Tomorrow evening we plan to be at Library Park in Monrovia, on the
corner of Myrtle and Lime, from about 6:30 'til 9:00.
Cheers!
Mojo
--
Morris Jones, Monrovia, CA
http://bridgemojo.comhttp://otastro.orghttp://mojo.whiteoaks.com
Jane, and I had a great weekend in the desert along with our fellow
sidewalk astronomer Dave, and will quite possibly have another one this
coming weekend. I'll put it this way: We left the van packed. :)
We took pictures, terrestrial and astronomical, and I wrote about it here:
http://mojo.whiteoaks.com/2011/01/30/january-observing-a-monoceros-evening/
Our favorite spot is about 150 miles from Monrovia out I-10, so it's
quite a commitment to visit with us. Nevertheless, the invitation is
always open to come out to the desert, bring your own telescope and
binoculars, and mooch views from ours.
Our trips to the desert are mostly our own time to do some observing, so
it's not necessarily a good time to expect lots of entertainment or a
sky show. Even so, it is a social event, and we love the chat, sharing
views, having a little picnic, and helping folks find their way in an
amazing sky.
Our favorite spot has no services, and 4-wheel drive can be handy but
not required. We've had some difficulty in the past with heavy vehicles
or RVs on the sandy surface.
We generally don't announce our desert observing trips widely, so it's
up to you to find the Saturday evening closest to the new moon. Hint:
It's usually the weekend before our sidewalk astronomy weekends, which
feature a first-quarter moon. Another hint: This coming Saturday is a
good one, if the weather holds.
If this sounds like it's your cup of tea, drop me a note and I'll send
you more information.
On the other hand, for a more concentrated tour of the real night sky at
a location that includes some services (read: bathrooms), make plans to
join us in the Mojave National Preserve on April 22 and 23.
Meanwhile the Old Town Astronomers web site http://otastro.org has been
updated with likely sidewalk dates for the rest of 2011, starting with
Pasadena and Monrovia on February 11-12.
Best regards,
Mojo
--
Morris Jones, Monrovia, CA
http://bridgemojo.comhttp://otastro.orghttp://mojo.whiteoaks.com
I meant to say 5:30 'til 7:30, or maybe a little longer if the astronomers can cope. :)
Morris Jones <mojo(a)whiteoaks.com> wrote:
>The Old Town Astronomers will be at Myrtle & Lime tonight from about 5:30 'til 6:30 p.m. at Library Park. Drop by for what should be some great views of the moon and Jupiter!
>
>Mojo
>(Who is at Zion Nat'l Park right now with family!)
>_______________________________________________
>OTEvents -- Astronomy announcements for the Old Town Sidewalk Astronomers
>OTEvents(a)otastro.org
>http://mail.otastro.org/mailman/listinfo/otevents
The Old Town Astronomers will be at Myrtle & Lime tonight from about 5:30 'til 6:30 p.m. at Library Park. Drop by for what should be some great views of the moon and Jupiter!
Mojo
(Who is at Zion Nat'l Park right now with family!)
Hi everyone, we had several really successful November sidewalk
astronomy events, and now we're halfway through December. Some of our
members will be out at Monrovia's Library park both Saturday the 11th
and the 18th so stop by for views of Jupiter and the moon. 6:30 to 8:30
is the timeframe on both nights.
So what else is up this month?
Geminid meteor shower peaks the morning of the 14th PST. The night of
the 13th/morning of the 14th actually, with the best viewing after the
moon sets about 2am to dawn.
More info here: http://www.nasa.gov/connect/chat/geminids2010.html
And even more info here
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2010/06dec_geminids/
We have a total lunar eclipse on winter solstice, December 20/21. For
us on the west coast, totality lasts from about 11:30 p.m. to 12:45 am.
onthe 20th. Start watching at about 10:30 p.m. to see the earth's
shadow "bite" the moon. Look for a trio montage of lunar eclipse images
at the beginning of the podcast. They were taken by our own sidewalk
astronomer Dave Hasenauer of Monrovia! :-) You can just step outside
and look up, weather permitting. The moon will be nice and high!
The total lunar eclipse is the topic of my podcast this month, available
in these many formats:
The NASA page
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/podcasting/whatsup_index.html where you
can subscribe to it on iTunes
On the front of the JPL website: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/
YouTube http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=JPLnews#p/u/0/wRkCyfIxPpE
(this is easiest to share with friends, as it is just one click, my
folks like this one the best. )
The my NASA blog and podcast page has all the podcast in the series (now
halfway through the 4th year), educational activities, including a moon
cookie recipe this month, links to NASA's detailed Eclipse page and
more, plus the most versions (gif, to HD)
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/whatsup-archive.cfm
So happy late fall and winter skywatching, everyone!!
Monrovia, CA
My What's Up Podcast: December- A Lunar Eclipse!
NASA http://is.gd/igv0r Youtube http://is.gd/igv4X
Twitter: http://twitter.com/jhjones /CassiniSaturn /otastro
Blog: http://jane.whiteoaks.com/
Clear and a bit chilly, but should be great views of the moon and
Jupiter tonight and tomorrow.
Tonight (Friday) we'll set up in Old Town Pasadena, on Colorado Blvd.,
somewhere in the two-block stretch from Fair Oaks to Pasadena Ave. We
use the north side of Colorado in order to face the ecliptic (where the
moon and planets are) to the south. The exact spot kind of depends on
parking. Expect us to be there from about 7:00 'til 9:00.
But if you're really wanting to hang out with telescopes and
astronomers, pop over to Monrovia's Library Park on Saturday evening.
There we have room to spread out with several telescopes of every
imaginable configuration. You can compare views and chat with the
owners. It's much more relaxed than in Pasadena. I plan to arrive
about 6:00, with others joining us as the night goes on.
This month Jupiter is "that star" that's always there, bright and high
towards the south most of the evening. If you're up before dawn, you'll
see Venus has swung around to be the morning star for the next few months.
Favorite Twitter quote from the past month by "canislatrans," Chris Clarke:
"It's a beautiful night sky in Los Angeles. I just spent a little time
outside looking up at the star."
Best regards,
Mojo
--
Morris Jones, Monrovia, CA
http://bridgemojo.comhttp://otastro.orghttp://mojo.whiteoaks.com
Hi everyone, I'm heading out to Mojave National Preserve's Black Canyon
Group Campsite tonight for a star party! I've announced this before to
you all, and I doubt anyone will make the trek on Halloween eve, but the
weather is improving, and I'm packing right now! We'll be celebrating
the preserve's anniversary, creating awareness of the pristine desert
dark skies, and take star tours. We'll probably see some slow, yellow
Taurid meteors too! http://www.preservethemojave.org/index.php
Here are news and events:
Comet Hartley 2 was seen from La Canada Fintridge a few days ago. A
colleague of mine at JPL took out a medium-sized telescope the other
night at his house and he was able to see the comet. I haven't managed
to see it myself and it is my project for the desert tonight. It'll be
faint and unimpressive, but comets are always worth hunting down.
Here is a comet finding chart - the comet is skimming by the "feet" of
Gemini over the next few days. Look for Gemini rising in the east to
the left or north of Orion after 10:30 p.m, the later and higher the
better. Try with binoculars and telescope if you have one.
On November 2nd, Malcolm Hartley, the comet's discoverer will be giving
a public talk at JPL,
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/events/lectures_archive.cfm?year=2010&month=11#myCo…
Back on March 15, 1986, while observing in Siding Spring, Australia,
Hartley discovered the comet that would officially be designated Comet
103P/Hartley2 (Hartley 2). On November 4th, 2010, NASA's EPOXI mission,
the extended mission of the Deep Impact Spacecraft, will capture
close-up images and other data as it flies within 750 kilometers (460
miles) of the comet's nucleus, estimated to be about 1 kilometer (0.6
miles) in diameter.
My What's Up podcast for November is online, too.
Here's the many-versioned webpage, complete with recipes for edible
comets and spacecraft.
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/whatsup-view.cfm?WUID=604
Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=JPLnews#p/u/0/ZgtrPsXXqmg
Our next sidewalk astronomy night will be November 13th in Monrovia.
I'll be in Canada -- Winnipeg, Thompson, Nelson House, Churchill and
back to Winnipeg via the 1000 mile train ride for the next two weeks, so
I'll catch up with you in December. Jane
--
Jane Houston Jones
Monrovia, CA
My What's Up Podcast: November-Planets and Meteors
NASA http://is.gd/guuXF Youtube http://is.gd/eSMnh
Twitter: http://twitter.com/jhjones /CassiniSaturn /otastro
Blog: http://jane.whiteoaks.com/