SkyEye

Welcome to SkyEye, your guide to this month's celestial events.

November 2012

The Calendar

Date 45° N 30° S Event
1 Thu Moon at apogee
2 Fri Moon occults Jupiter: visible from South Africa from 00:35 UT.
3 Sat
4 Sun
5 Mon
6 Tue
7 Wed Last Quarter Moon
8 Thu
9 Fri
10 Sat
11 Sun
12 Mon Moon occults Spica: visible from Madagascar and parts of Antarctica from about 00:00 UT.
13 Tue The New Moon totally eclipses the Sun: visible from western Australia and the southern Pacific Ocean.
14 Wed Moon occults Mercury during the daytime.
With the Moon at perigee only 12 hours after the New phase, expect high tides.
15 Thu
16 Fri
17 Sat A waxing crescent Moon means dark skies for the Leonids (theoretical peak activity: several predictions ranging from 09:50 UT and 21:00 UT today to 06:00 UT on 20 November).
Mercury at inferior conjunction
18 Sun
19 Mon
20 Tue First Quarter Moon
21 Wed The waxing gibbous Moon causes few problems for the Alpha Monocerotids (theoretical maximum activity: 09:55).
22 Thu Neptune at east quadrature
23 Fri
24 Sat
25 Sun
26 Mon
27 Tue
28 Wed The Full Moon undergoes a penumbral eclipse and reaches apogee within the space of five hours.
Moon occults Jupiter: visible from southeastern South America and southern Africa from 23:20 UT.
29 Thu
30 Fri

Coming up next month...

Jupiter is at opposition, shining brightly in the sky all night.

December is also home to several meteor showers, the most reliable of which is the Geminids in mid-month.

The Solar System

The word planet is derived from the Greek word for 'wanderer'. Unlike the background stars, planets seem to move around the sky, keeping mostly to a narrow track called the ecliptic, the path of the Sun across the stars. Dwarf planets and small solar-system bodies including comets, are not so constrained, often moving far above or below the ecliptic.

Sun
Libra » Scorpius » Ophiuchus
Although Ophiuchus is not a member of the zodiac, the ecliptic passes through it.
Mercury
Scorpius » Libra
Mercury undergoes a daytime occultation of the Moon on 14 November and reaches inferior conjunction just three days later. From a northern hemisphere vantage point, it can be viewed in the west just after sunset for the first few days of the month but remains visible from southern latitudes until mid-month.
Venus
Virgo » Libra
Now appearing in the east before sunrise, the 'morning star' sinks rapidly towards the horizon as seen from the northern hemisphere but maintains a low but steady altitude for those looking at it from southern latitudes.
Mars
Ophiuchus » Sagittarius
Found in the west after sunset, the red planet vanishes soon afterwards.
Jupiter
Taurus
Opposition next month means that the biggest planet in the solar system is visible for most of the night. It is occulted by the Moon twice this month, first on 2 November and again on 28 November, a few hours after our satellite's penumbral eclipse.
Saturn
Virgo
At conjunction last month, the ringed planet reappears late in November as a morning sky object, found in the east just before sunrise.
Uranus
Pisces
This mysterious world sets in the early hours of the morning.
Neptune
Aquarius
A small telescope is necessary to view the most distant planet in the solar system. It reaches east quadrature on 22 November and sets before midnight.

The Celestial Sphere

Constellations are patterns of stars in the sky. The International Astronomical Union (IAU) recognises 88 different constellations. The brightest stars as seen from the Earth are easy to spot but do you know their proper names? With a set of binoculars you can look for fainter objects such as nebulae and galaxies or some of the closest stars to the Sun.

Descriptions of the sky for observers in both the northern and southern hemispheres are available for the following times this month. Subtract one hour from your local time if summer (daylight savings) time is in effect.

Local Time Northern Hemisphere Southern Hemisphere
1730 hours (1830 hours summer time) 45° N 30° S
1930 hours (2030 hours summer time) 45° N 30° S
2130 hours (2230 hours summer time) 45° N 30° S
2330 hours (0030 hours summer time) 45° N 30° S
0130 hours (0230 hours summer time) 45° N 30° S
0330 hours (0430 hours summer time) 45° N 30° S
0530 hours (0630 hours summer time) 45° N 30° S

For More Information...

Credits

Much of this information can be found in this month's issue of your favourite amateur astronomy magazine available in your local bookshop. Another excellent source is the current edition of the Astronomical Calendar by Guy Ottewell and published by the Universal Workshop.

The SkyEye banner features the supernova remnant known as the Crab Nebula. Six light years wide and 6500 light years distant, this expanding nebula is the shattered remains of a star that blew up nearly a thousand years ago. At its heart beats a pulsar, a neutron star which spins at the incredible rate of 30 times per second. The supernova explosion which produced this object was observed in 1054 in China, Japan and Arabia. It was also seen in North America by the Anasazi people who lived in what is now New Mexico and who depicted it in a petroglpyh. This image is a composite assembled from 24 individual exposures taken by the Hubble Space Telescope in October 1999, January 2000 and December 2000, and is courtesy of NASA, ESA, Jeff Hester and Allison Loll (Arizona State University). The colours represent different elements which were expelled during the explosion: neutral oxygen (blue), doubly-ionised oxygen (red) and singly-ionised sulphur (green). These elements will find their way into the next generation of stars and planets (and extra-terrestrial life?).


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Last modified on 31 October 2012