04-27-2013, 06:39 AM
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#517
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Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: I live in the last place where you Look.
Age: 31
Posts: 7,376
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Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.
What's in the sky tonight?
April 27, 2013
-The waning gibbous Moon rises in the southeast very late this evening, with the red supergiant Antares sparkling to its right. By early dawn Sunday morning Antares is below the Moon in the southwest.
-Saturn (magnitude +0.1, in Libra) is at opposition Saturday night April 27th. All week it glows low in the east-southeast as twilight fades (to the lower left of Spica and farther lower right of Arcturus). It rises it higher all evening and shines highest in the south in the middle of the night.
-Carefully note the brightness of the rings with respect to the globe. The rings always brighten for several days around opposition due to the Seeliger effect. The solid, very irregular particles of the rings preferentially reflect sunlight back in the direction it came from more than Saturn's cloudtops do. Watch as the rings dim back down later in the week, as Saturn moves away from the opposition point in Earth's sky.
-The Seeliger effect: Christopher Go took these images of Saturn on March 2nd (top) and April 24th. Notice how the rings brightened with respect to the globe. And on the 24th, Saturn was still three days from opposition.
Astro Picture of the Day:
April 27, 2013
Source
Get out your red/blue glasses and gaze across the floor of Gale crater on Mars. From your vantage point on the deck of the Curiosity Rover Mount Sharp, the crater's 5 kilometer high central mountain looms over the southern horizon. Poised in the foreground is the rover's robotic arm with tool turret extended toward the flat veined patch of martian surface dubbed "John Klein". A complete version of the stereo view spans 360 degrees, digitally stitched together from the rover's left and right navigation camera frames taken in late January. The layered lower slopes of Mount Sharp, formally known as Aeolis Mons, are a future destination for Curiosity. Find the complete version here: http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA16925
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