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CALIFORNIA WILD
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Skyguide
October
- December 1999
Bing F. Quock
October
9 |
New Moon––Tomorrow night,
look for a thin crescent Moon in the west just after sunset. The
Moon will then "wax," or grow, during the next two weeks, rising
an average of about 55 minutes later each night. |
October
22 |
Peak of the Orionid meteor shower,
caused by dust from Halley’s Comet, averaging 15-20 "shooting stars"
per hour. But the light of a waxing gibbous Moon may wash many meteors
from view. |
October
24 |
Full Moon, known as "Hunter’s
Moon." |
October
31 |
At 2:00 a.m., most of the U.S. "falls
back" from Daylight Time to Standard Time. Tired Halloween
trick-or-treaters won’t get much light from tonight’s Last Quarter
Moon, which doesn’t rise until after midnight. |
November
7 |
New Moon, rising and setting
with the Sun. Located in Libra, but not visible because of the Sun’s
glare. |
November
17 |
Peak of the Leonid meteor shower,
averaging about 15 "shooting stars" per hour. |
November
22 |
Full Moon, known to colonial
Americans as the "Beaver Moon," the "Frosty Moon," and the "Snow
Moon." |
December
7 |
New Moon This evening is too
soon to see the first crescent Moon after sunset, so Muslims must
wait until December 8 to officially observe the beginning of Ramadan,
the month of fasting. |
December
14 |
Peak of the Geminid meteor shower––averaging
about 50 "shooting stars" per hour. Coinciding with a waxing Crescent
Moon, this year’s Geminids should put on a fine show. This display
isn’t as well-known in the Northern Hemisphere as summer’s Perseid
shower because of the cold weather––few people stay out late to
watch for it. |
December
21 |
Winter solstice, or beginning
of winter in the Northern Hemisphere at 11:45 p.m. pst. The North
Pole is tipped farthest away from the Sun. On this day, the Sun
rises and sets at its southernmost points along the horizon and
makes its lowest, shortest arc across the sky. |
December
22 |
Full Moon, also known as the "Moon
Before Yule." It is located directly opposite the low-moving Sun;
notice how high it arcs across the sky. |
December
25 |
Winter solstice...on Mars...in the
Northern Hemisphere? Nighttime low temperatures typically dip to
-190 0F––low enough for carbon dioxide to freeze. |
The Planets
Mercury |
This planet has been making an evening
appearance since early September, but the shallow angle of its path
puts it very low in the sky after sunset and it is not easily visible.When
it swings to the other side of the Sun and appears in the predawn
sky in late November, its path will be quite steeply inclined, making
it easily visible in the southeast before sunrise (look for it just
below the Moon on the morning of December 5). It dips back down into
the Sun’s glow in late December. On November 15, Mercury transits
the face of the Sun, and will be seen (through telescopes and with
proper eye protection!) as a tiny dot moving close to the Sun’s northern
edge. The last solar transit by Mercury was in 1993, and the next
won’t be until 2003. |
Venus
|
A prominent predawn object, Venus rises
several hours before the Sun and reaches greatest western elongation
on October 31, when its angular separation from the Sun is 47 degrees.
The Moon sweeps past on the mornings of October 5, forming a striking
triangle with the bright star Regulus (the heart of Leo), on November
3 and 4, and December 3, forming a triangle with the bright star Spica. |
Mars |
Located in the southwest after sunset,
the Red Planet is prominent in the evening sky and quickly moves from
the stars of Ophiuchus into those of Sagittarius, then into Capricornus
and Aquarius. The Moon passes by on the evenings of October 14 and
15, November 12 and 13, and––at its closest––December 12. On December
14, look with binoculars less than a degree from Mars for a distinctly
greenish "star"––actually the planet Uranus. |
Jupiter |
Reaching opposition on October 23,
Jupiter is positioned best for viewing after sunset, rising in the
east. Don’t mistake it for Saturn, which rises slightly later––and
don’t miss the beautiful sight on the evening of October 24, when
the Full Moon, Jupiter, and Saturn form a conspicuous triangle! The
Moon again passes Jupiter on the evenings of November 20 and December
17. |
Saturn |
Like Jupiter, the slowest of the naked-eye
planets is seen in the east after sunset, reaching opposition on November
6. All season long, Saturn lingers just below the stars of Aries and
above those of Cetus the Sea Monster. |
|
Sunrise |
Local Noon |
Sunset |
October 1 |
7:05 a.m. PST |
12:59 p.m. PDT |
6:53 p.m. PDT |
November 1 |
6:35 a.m. PST |
11:53 a.m. PST |
5:11 p.m. PST |
December 1 |
7:06 a.m. PST |
11:59 a.m. PST |
4:51 p.m. PST |
January 1 |
7:25 a.m. PST |
12:13 p.m. PST |
5:01 p.m. PST |
(Times are for San Francisco, CA,
and are accurate to within two minutes.) |
Whose Millennium?
As the end of 1999 approaches, almost everyone around
here is preparing for "the end of the millennium." A millennium can be
any series of 1,000 contiguous years, starting any time you want. But
what about "The" millennium? While many countries are planning a grand
millennium celebration at the end of 1999, critics say that this is plain
wrong and a concession to convenience over accuracy. There was no year
"0"; we went, retrospectively, from 1 B.C. straight to 1 A.D. The first
thousand years A.D. should therefore last from the beginning of the year
1 to the end of 1000 and the second from the beginning of 1001 to the
end of 2000.
Meanwhile, many cultures still use calendars that
are based on the phases of the Moon, so they have a completely different
new year, which will begin in February, and which will be 4698. For Jews,
the year 5760 will already be three and a half months underway, and to Muslims,
it'll be late in the year 1420, with 1421 beginning in April.
So most of the world's population may well be wondering
what all the fuss is about!
Bing F. Quock
is Assistant Chairman of the Morrison Planetarium at the California Academy
of Sciences.
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Fall 1999
Vol. 52:4
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