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Skyguide
April - June 2003
Bing F. Quock
April 1:
New Moon at 12:24 p.m.––too close to sunset
for the crescent moon to be seen this evening. Look tomorrow night.
April 6:
Reset clocks one hour ahead (“Spring forward, Fall back”), as most
of the United States goes to Daylight Time at 2 a.m.
April 16: Full Moon––only
a day before perigee (the Moon’s closest approach to Earth), this is the
largest Full Moon of the year and results in very high tides.
April 22: Peak of the Lyrid meteor
shower, usually averaging a meager 10–15 meteors per hour. This is
the earliest-recorded shower, with Chinese observations dating back to
687 BC.
May 1: New Moon––since most months are
longer than the Moon’s 29 1/2-day cycle, whatever Moon phase occurs on
the first day of the month will be repeated at the end of the month. Tonight,
a razor-thin 15-hour-old crescent may be visible in the twilight just
after sunset.
May 15: Full Moon
a half-day after perigee once again results in high tides. A total
lunar eclipse occurs at moonrise for skywatchers in San Francisco.
During an “eclipse season,” which happens about every six months, an eclipse
of the Moon will fall within two weeks of an eclipse of the Sun.
May 30: New (Blue)
Moon for the second time this month.An annular solar eclipse
will be seen along a wide path from Northern Scotland westward to central
Greenland. From there, the Moon will move in front of the Sun, but being
near apogee (its farthest from Earth), it will appear slightly smaller
and won’t block the entire solar disk. The bright ring of the Sun's disk
will remain visible like the edge of a penny peeking out from behind a
dime. The eclipse will be partial over most of Europe (except Spain and
Portugal), the Middle East, Russia, northeast China, Alaska and northwestern
Canada.
June 14: In contrast to the Sun, the Full
Moon nearest the Summer Solstice follows a low arc across the sky.
Tonight, it’s never higher than 30 degrees above the horizon, as seen
from San Francisco.
June 21: Summer Solstice at 12:10 p.m.
June 29: New Moon
at 11:39 a.m. Binoculars may be needed to glimpse a razor-thin crescent
just after sunset.
|
Sunrise |
Local Noon |
Sunset |
April 1 |
5:55 a.m. PST |
12:14 p.m. PST |
6:32 p.m. PST |
May 1 |
6:14 a.m. PDT |
1:07 p.m. PDT |
8:00 p.m. PDT |
June 1 |
5:49 a.m. PDT |
1:08 p.m. PDT |
8:26 p.m. PDT |
July 1 |
5:51 a.m. PDT |
1:13 p.m. PDT |
8:36 p.m. PDT |
Times are for San Francisco, CA, and will vary
for other locations.
Mercury In April, the
closest planet to the Sun makes its best appearance of the year for northern
hemisphere observers. It becomes visible in the west after sunset early
in the month. Find it just to the right of the crescent Moon on April
2. Mercury reaches its greatest angular separation from the Sun (eastern
elongation) by mid-month, setting about two hours after the Sun, then
quickly darts back down into the glow of twilight by the end of April.
On May 7, Mercury is at inferior conjunction, meaning that it comes between
Earth and the Sun. Later in May, Mercury emerges in the predawn eastern
sky in conjunction with brilliant Venus on May 28. On the morning of May
29, Mercury, Venus, and the waning crescent Moon cluster together very
low in the east-northeast about 30 minutes before dawn. A closer conjunction
of Mercury and Venus occurs very low in the east-northeast on the morning
of June 20.
Venus Venus is a morning object this season, visible before dawn.
The Moon is nearby on the morning of April 28, with both against the stars
of Pisces. On May 29, Venus is joined by tiny, elusive Mercury, with the
waning crescent Moon just to the left, all just within the border of Aries.
The Moon swings by again on the morning of June 28, when both are in Taurus
but so near the Sun that they’ll be difficult to see 30 minutes before
dawn.
Mars The Red Planet’s movement eastward against the constellations
keeps pace with the Sun’s location. Mars is consistently due south at
sunrise this season, slowly moving from the stars of Sagittarius through
Capricornus and into Aquarius. The Moon swings nearby on April 23, May
21, and June 19. On June 19, binoculars may reveal faint, greenish Uranus
about 3 degrees––or 6 Moon-diameters––above Mars.
Jupiter The giant of the solar system’s planets begins the season
very high in the east. At sunset, it’s almost overhead against the stars
of Cancer. Moving very slowly against the stars, it manages to edge closer
toward Leo by the end of June. By this time, it has crossed over into
the west and will be descending toward the Sun by sunset.
Saturn The planet Saturn––which lumbers along even more slowly
than Jupiter––barely budges from between the horns of Taurus this season.
In April, it’s quite high in the west at sunset. But through May and June,
it’s closer to the horizon, gradually dropping toward the Sun and disappearing
into the glare by early June in conjunction with the Sun on June 24. The
Moon swings near Saturn on the evenings of April 7, May 4, and June 1.
Red
Moon Rising |
A
total lunar eclipse occurs when the Full Moon slips through the
red-colored shadow of Earth. This is possible about every six months,
and the next opportunity for observers in San Francisco is the evening
of May 15. The eclipse begins at 7:03 p.m., before moonrise. By
the time the Moon appears at 8:06 p.m. in the east-southeast, it
will be almost completely eclipsed. Totality––when the Moon is completely
immersed in Earth’s shadow and appears reddish-orange to rusty-brown––is
at 8:14 p.m., just 8 minutes or so after moonrise, and lasts until
9:07 p.m., with the Moon only about 10 degrees above the horizon.
The partial eclipse, with the Moon on the way out of the shadow,
ends at 10:17 p.m., with the Moon 18 degrees high in the southeast.
Note the curved edge of the Earth’s shadow in this part of the eclipse.
If you track the Moon’s position against the stars throughout the
eclipse, you will notice that it moves from west to east by its
own diameter each hour. So even though the Earth’s ruddy shadow
appears to be sliding onto the Moon from east to west, it’s the
Moon that’s actually doing the moving. |
Bing F. Quock is
assistant chairman of the Morrison Planetarium.
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