This is our sidewalk astronomy
weekend. Join us in Pasadena Friday night from 7-10 p.m.
somewhere along colorado Blvd in Old Town Pasadena, and Saturday Night
from 7-9:30 in Monrovia. Weather looks good!
Also, on Saturday night in Hollywood
there is a local Yuri's Night Celebration at Cinespace 6356
Hollywood Blvd. Tickets can be purchased
at www.groovetickets.com.
Saturday the 12th is also
International Sidewalk Astronomy Night
http://www.sidewalkastronomynight.com/ and there are some more local
events posted on the website's world map. At the Marine Mammal
Center in San Pedro, and at Keystone and Chandler in Burbank , and
also at San Fernando and Palm (near Ben and Jerry's) in Burbank. If
these are more convenienbt than our locations, join these nice
sidewalk astronomers at some other events this weekend.
:-)
In the spirit of Yuri's Night,
celebrating the anniversary of human exploration of space, here is a
map of the moon showing all the landing sites.
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=804
And finally, there is a good ISS
pass on Saturday night 8:23 p.m. PDT - the space station
will be visible in the north and will pass right through the big
dipper's bowl - at 52 degrees above the horizon. It will enter
Earth shadow at 8:27 p.m. to the East below Saturn. More challenging,
and closer to the horizon is the Hubble Telescope pass on Saturday
night. Beginning at 9:07 p.m. look low in the west 10 degrees
above the horizon. It reaches maximum altitude 25 degrees above
the horizon, and also enters Earth's shadow at 9:13, when it is near
the bright star Sirius in the SSW. The Hubble Telescope is
much fainter than the ISS.
ISS:
http://www.heavens-above.com/PassSummary.aspx?satid=25544&Session=kebgcpakgcbkogilchegnelk
Hubble:
http://www.heavens-above.com/PassSummary.asp?satid=20580&Session=kebgcpakgcbkogilchegnelk
April 2008
Highlights
Saturn is the major
planet visible in April. Nothing elicits a wow like Saturn does! It's
visible all night now, and it is higher in the sky and visible right
after sunset. Mars dims a bit this month, but it's still nice and high
in the sky and well worth a look.
What's Up for March talks about these, plus a fun planetary nebula
recently studied by Spitzer, and visible through medium sized
telescopes.
http://education.jpl.nasa.gov/amateurastronomy/index.html
Here's a fun project
for you - if you can see some bright stars from your home, then you
may be able to see the winter circle of stars. No telescope
required - just look up! The winter stars rotate towards the
west, making room for the galaxies of spring. The constellation of
Orion and its neighbors contain what is called the Winter Circle of Stars
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Wintersky.jpg. Most of these bright stars
are even visible from the city! Look on any star chart and find
Orion, Canis Major, Canis Minor, Gemini, Auriga and Taurus, circling
westward as winter ends. These six constellations contain a visible
"circle" of very bright and colorful stars. If you can
imagine the circle as a clock, we'll begin with Capella, yellow like
our sun in the one o'clock position. Capella is the bright yellow star
in the constellation Auriga, found above the shoulders of Orion. Red
Aldebaran, the eye of the bull Taurus is at the three o'clock
position. Red stars are the oldest and coolest. At five o'clock stands
Rigel, the brilliant blue knee of Orion, the hunter. Rigel is young
and very hot! Diamond white Sirius, the brightest star in the sky, is
below Orion in the constellation Canis Major, the great dog. It fills
the seven o'clock position. At nine o'clock is Procyon, another yellow
star like our sun, in the constellation Canis Minor. The Gemini Twins,
Castor and Pollux complete the circle at 10 o'clock. Castor is white
and Pollux (the brighter of the twins) is red. Within the circle are
red Betelgeuse, the shoulder of Orion, and blue/purple stars Alnitak
and Mintaka, the pretty belt stars of the constellation
Orion.
Yearning for more
views? Spring galaxies require dark skies. We occasionally drive to
the Colorado Desert South of of Joshua Tree National Park. Where we go
is off I-10 about 30 miles east of Indio, on a 2-mile dirt road on BLM
land, with no "facilities." There is not room for a lot of
cars, but if you are interested, contact me or Mojo for details. Or
join the regularly scheduled dark sky parties held by the Andromeda
Society
http://www.andromedasociety.org/ in Joshua Tree National Park. April
4, May 5, May 31, July 5, August 2 are the next star party
dates. This location is more
public friendly with a paved parking lot, restrooms, and a nearby
campground.
Jane
--
Jane Houston Jones
Senior Outreach Specialist, Cassini Program
JPL - 4800 Oak Grove Drive, MS 230-205
Pasadena, CA 91109 818-393-6435
jane.h.jones@jpl.nasa.gov
Cassini SOC http://soc.jpl.nasa.gov/index.cfm
What's Up?
http://education.jpl.nasa.gov/amateurastronomy/index.html