What's in the sky tonight?
May 1, 2013
-Jupiter (magnitude –2.0, in Taurus) is the first "star" to come out in the west after sunset, a little lower every day. It descends in the evening and sets around 10 or 11 p.m. Below Jupiter twinkles orange Aldebaran, and a similar distance above Jupiter is El Nath (Beta Tauri). Bright Capella shines to the upper right from there. In a telescope, Jupiter has shrunk to a disappointing 34 arcseconds wide.
News Posted Today:
April 29, 2013
One Gap, No Planets
Astro Picture of the Day:
May 1, 2013
Source
This huge ball of stars predates our Sun. Long before humankind evolved, before dinosaurs roamed, and even before our Earth existed, ancient globs of stars condensed and orbited a young Milky Way Galaxy. Of the 200 or so globular clusters that survive today, Omega Centauri is the largest, containing over ten million stars. Omega Centauri is also the brightest globular cluster, at apparent visual magnitude 3.9 it is visible to southern observers with the unaided eye. Cataloged as NGC 5139, Omega Centauri is about 18,000 light-years away and 150 light-years in diameter. Unlike many other globular clusters, the stars in Omega Centauri show several different ages and trace chemical abundances, indicating that the globular star cluster has a complex history over its 12 billion year age.