The Magazine of the CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

CURRENT ISSUE

SUBSCRIBE

ABOUT CALIFORNIA WILD

CONTACT US

ADVERTISING

SEARCH

BACK ISSUES

CONTRIBUTORS'
GUIDELINES

THIS WEEK IN
CALIFORNIA WILD

 

Skyguide

December 2005 to February 2006

Bing F. Quock

December 1: New Moon at 6:59 am pst. The crescent won’t be visible until after sunset tomorrow, marking the start of the month of Zul-Qa’dah in the Islamic calendar.

December 14: Peak of the Geminid meteor shower, usually the best of the year. However, coming only a day before Full Moon, this year’s display will be spoiled by moonlight.

December 15: Full Moon, also known as the “Baby Bear Moon” to the Osage and the “Groundhog Mother’s Moon” to the Tlingit. This Full Moon crosses very high in the sky.

December 21: Winter solstice for the northern hemisphere at 10:36 am pst. The Sun rises and sets at its most southerly points on the horizon, and its path across the sky is low, making for cool, short days. In the southern hemisphere, this is the Summer solstice.

December 22: Peak of the modest Ursid meteor shower, normally featuring five to ten meteors per hour, radiating from between the Big and Little Dippers.

December 30: New Moon at 7:11 pm pst–the second New Moon this month. The sighting of tomorrow’s crescent Moon at sunset marks the start of the month of Zul-Hijjah in the lunar-based Islamic calendar.

January 3: Peak of the Quadrantid meteor shower, one of the better displays of the year at about 40 meteors per hour. Coinciding with a thin waxing crescent Moon that sets early, it should put on a fine show in the predawn sky.

January 14: The Full Moon rises soon after sunset against the stars of Cancer. It was called the “Goose Moon” by the Tlingit and the “Great Spirit Moon” by the Ojibway.

January 29: New Moon at 6:15 am pst–too late for the first crescent to be visible at sunset that evening. Try observing on the 30th, when the first sighting of the crescent marks the start of the month of Muharram and the Muslim new year.

February 12: Full Moon at 8:44 pm pst. This moon is also called the “Budding Time” by the Nez Perce and the “Elder Moon” by the Haida.

February 27: New Moon at 4:31 pm pst. Look tomorrow for the first crescent, low in the west after sunset. This marks the start of the month of Safar in the Muslim calendar.

The Planets

Mercury
The most elusive naked-eye planet is a morning object as December begins, and quickly descends into the glow of the rising sun. By New Year’s it will probably be too difficult to see. It hides behind the Sun on January 26 (superior conjunction) and emerges into the evening sky by mid-February, passing close to Uranus on February 14. The crescent Moon passes nearby on the morning of December 29, the evening of January 29 (too close to the Sun’s glow to be seen), and the evening of February 28 (hint: use the Moon to find Mercury).

Venus
Venus is a brilliant evening object in the southwest as December begins, but rapidly disappears into the twilight about a week into the New Year. At inferior conjunction January 14 and hidden in the Sun’s glow, it emerges into the morning sky in late January, becoming increasingly prominent in the southeast. The Moon passes nearby on the evening of December 4, January 1, and the morning of February 24.

Mars
In December, Mars is high in the east at sunset, in Aries. In January, it gradually moves into Taurus, passing the Pleiades on February 14. The Moon appears nearby on December 11, January 8, and February 5, bracketed by Mars and the Pleiades.

Jupiter
In December, Jupiter is less than 40 degrees high in the south, against the stars of Libra at sunrise, and creeps westward through January and February. The Moon is nearby December 26, January 23, and February 19-20.

Saturn
Saturn rises a few hours after sunset against the stars of Cancer (with binoculars, look nearby for M-44, the “Beehive” star cluster). In opposition on January 27, it rises at sunset and remains visible all night, setting in the east at sunrise. By mid-February, it is well above the eastern horizon by sunset and sets before dawn. It pairs prettily with the Moon on the evenings of December 18, January 14-15, and February 10-11.

  Sunrise Local Noon Sunset
December 1 7:07 AM PST 11:59 PM PST 4:51 PM PST
January1 7:25 AM PST 12:14 PM PST 5:02 PM PST
February 1 7:14 AM PST 12:24 PM PST 5:34 PM PST

Times are for San Francisco, CA, and will vary slightly for other locations.

A Sprinkling of stardust

On January 15, if all goes well, NASA’s Stardust spacecraft will deliver to Earth the first samples of material from a comet. Launched in February 1999, the spacecraft made several loops through the inner solar system, encountering asteroid Annefrank in November 2002 on its way to Comet Wild-2 (pronounced the German way, “vilt”). In January 2004, it passed within 150 miles of the comet’s nucleus. More importantly, it used a device resembling an oversized tennis racket to sweep up dust liberated from the nucleus. These particles––perhaps no more than a thimbleful––will return to Earth in a capsule parachuting into the Utah desert. Analyses at NASA’s Johnson Space Center may reveal the conditions that existed during the formation of our solar system and the chemical building blocks from which the planets formed.


Bing F. Quock is Acting Chair of the Morrison Planetarium. bquock@calacademy.org