We're going to have three telescopes set up tonight in old town
Monrovia, Library Park, at the corner of Myrtle & Lime, starting about
7:00 p.m.
The forecast is "mostly clear," and it looks like there might be a
little marine layer fog rolling in, but we're hoping for the best.
Jane and I are away from town this weekend, but wish them good luck! It
should be a good night for the moon and Jupiter.
Best regards,
Mojo
--
Morris Jones
Monrovia, CA
http://whiteoaks.com
Some of us are available tonight and some next week to do some sidewalk
astronomy, so those of us available tonight will be at the corner of
Myrtle and Lime Streets in Monrovia's Library Park tonight from 7 p.m.
to about 9 p.m.
If you are out for a stroll, stop by. We'll be looking at Jupiter and
the moon through some marine layer haze, but if you are itching for some
telescope viewing (like I am) come on down.
Here is my first observation of Comet PanSTARRS - the current (barely)
naked eye visible comet low in the west.
http://jane.whiteoaks.com/2013/03/12/my-first-view-of-comet-panstarrs-31113/
About 25 minutes after sunset (at civil twilight) you may be able to
spot the comet if you have good low western horizon and know where to
look (not easy). It also helps to have a clear and dark sky (which we
don't tonight). It is only about 10 degrees above the horizon (90
degrees is overhead). One of us may try moving a small telescope down
Lime Street for a better view to the west, hoping for a little clearing
between buildings and trees. I won't promise a view of the comet, but
it is always fun to try! The window of viewing will be only from about
7:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. - probably even less time without a clear
horizon. There are not only trees and buildings in the way, but hazy
marine layer, too. I'll bring my binoculars and try to be optimistic. :-)
Meanwhile here are some images of the comet:
http://spaceweather.com/gallery/index.php?title=comet It's only been
visible in the Northern Hemisphere for less than a week, and hopefully,
it will still be around in April and May (though faint, and only visible
in a telescope). But I hear it may be breaking up according to some if
the imagers. Still, comets are so cool!
--
Jane Houston Jones
Monrovia, CA
What's Up Podcast for March: Comet PanSTARRS, how bright?
On Youtube:http://youtu.be/uEqt0yE6EG0
Twitter:http://twitter.com/jhjones /CassiniSaturn /otastro
My Blog:http://jane.whiteoaks.com/
Yosemite Videohttp://www.youtube.com/user/yosemitenationalpark?feature=watch
Have you looked up, scratched your head, and wondered where that
"bright" comet is hiding?
It's very challenging to see - and in binoculars it it is very small, as
you can see in my sketches linked below. The circles represent the
binocular field of view of either 5 or 7 degrees. The entire comet is
about 1/2 of a degree long. Tonight, the 1 day old moon can be used as
an arrow pointing to the comet, if you can find the slender Cheshire cat
smile of a moon, that is.
The moon will be found 5.6 degrees to the right of the comet tonight,
and 10 degrees above the comet tomorrow night.
Sunset tonight is at 6:57, and it will take about 25 minutes for the sun
to set down 6 degrees, to the time called civil twilight - Evening civil
twilight begins at sunset and ends when the geometric center of the sun
reaches 6° below the horizon. Start scanning the sky about 8-10 degrees
above the horizon at about 7:15, and keep looking until you either find
the comet, or you don't.
Here is my sketch of the comet from 25 miles up Angeles Crest (Chileo
turnout) just before the Caltrans yard last night. This is a good spot
facing west.
http://jane.whiteoaks.com/2013/03/12/my-first-view-of-comet-panstarrs-31113/
and here is our Comet PanSTARRS resource page, which includes a good map
and my "What's Up, PanSTARRS Edition" podcast.
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/scitech/display.cfm?ST_ID=2538
Happy comet hunting, everybody!
Jane
--
Jane Houston Jones
Monrovia, CA
http://jane.whiteoaks.com/http://twitter.com/jhjones
What's Up For March? Will Comet Pan-STARRS be bright?
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/whatsup-archive.cfm
Youtube: http://bit.ly/14aXhTB
2013 At A Glance
http://jane.whiteoaks.com/2013/01/07/whats-up-in-2013-at-a-glance/
Mojo and I are going to our favorite observing location this afternoon,
Amboy Crater, to try and view comet PanSTARRS just after sunset at 5:57
p.m. From now through the end of March, the comet should be naked-eye
visible very low on the western horizon - low meaning about 10 degrees
above the unobstructed horizon for those at latitude 40 (we are at 34
degrees North latitude here in the LA area), so it will be even a few
degrees lower than that here throughout March. But it will be visible
in April and May (through a telescope) higher and fainter in the sky.
This month, use binoculars to scan the western horizon.
Ten degrees can be measured by holding your clenched fist at arms-length
distance, then with thumb-up, place the bottom of your fist on the
horizon. The top of your fist (put your thumb back down first) will be
ten degrees above the horizon. You'll see it's not very high. The
comet's tail will be like your thumb up - because the tail will be
pointing straight up. It's easy to see why -- comets tails point away
from the sun.
Any spot where you have an unobstructed view of the western horizon just
at sunset is where you should look. Here in LA, looking west on the
horizon generally means looking through a hazy (smoggy) or foggy layer
of our atmosphere. The viewing window is just about a half hour after
sunset right now - sunset until about 6:30 p.m. Longer window next week,
but still very low. Watch my video for tips.
Youtube: http://bit.ly/ZzW1bt
You are welcome to join us - sorry for the late notice, we were waiting
to see how the storm affected the deserts before deciding where and when
to go. Amboy, CA 92304 is an unincorporated town in San Bernardino
County, in California's Mojave Desert, west of Needles and east of
Ludlow on historic Route 66. It is roughly 60 miles northeast of
Twentynine Palms. Amboy Crater is a BLM landmark with a big parking lot.
It takes us about 3 hours (including a sandwich stop in Barstow) to
get there, and we'll arrive at about 4:30 p.m. to set up our equipment.
It will be cold and windy tonight, so we plan to observe for about 4
hours then drive back home. It is not a campsite, so no tents, but you
can sleep/rest in your car overnight and take a hike in the morning to
the volcanic crater. There are pit toilets in the parking lot.
We set up our two telescopes at the very end, next to the rest room.
http://photo.whiteoaks.com/2011-10-22-amboy/Site%20Pictures/index.html
If you do come, there are some universal courtesy tips to avoid blinding
the observers. The San Jose Astronomical Association has a great list
http://www.sjaa.net/etiquette.html
To this list, most important is to arrive before sunset. It is
virtually impossible to see the turnoff from Route 66 in the dark, and
you will miss the comet hunt unless your are all ready to look at
sunset. Park with your car lights pointed away from the telescopes
closer to the entrance end of the lot. Switch your car's interior lights
off if you can. We always bring some red carlight repair tape to place
over very small flashlights, leave those big flashlights at home, you
won't need them. No iPad, tablet, cell phones light near the (my)
telescopes, please. Just step away and face your light away from the
telescopes if you'd like to use them. They are fun to use, but will ruin
(this) observer's dark adaption. Bring a chair, layers, binoculars,
hydration. Oh there are trains with lights all night long, but I set up
away from that light. You'll love to hear them in the dark. :-)
Since this is short notice, you may want to consider joining us on May
11 at our campground star party at Mojave National Preserve instead.
Hopefully, the comet will still be visible. The light pollution rules
are a little more relaxed (except right near the telescopes) since it is
a public star party. Last fall's flyer is here with
directionshttp://mojavepreserve.org/index.php/site/article/star_party_in_th…
If you do see the comet from LA let us know! Your chances are good if
you can see the western horizon with no clouds or haze. Try with
binoculars. We'll share what we see, how hard it was, tips and tricks
tomorrow! Wish us luck!
Jane
--
Jane Houston Jones
Monrovia, CA
What's Up Video March 2013: Comet PanSTARRS
On Youtube: http://bit.ly/ZzW1bt
2013 Preview: http://bit.ly/13NrNHy
Monrovia High School has been one of six schools in the nation chosen to
host a downlink from the International Space Station this year! The
downlink event will take place on Tuesday, March 5^th . All the 5^th
graders and all the 8^th graders in MUSD will travel to the MHS
Auditorium to be part of this amazing event!
As the kick -- off for this event, MHS is hosting their first Science
Expo tomorrow, Saturday March 2 10-2 p.m. and a star parety 6-8 p.m.
This fun, free, public family event includes demonstrations from the
Santa Fe Dam RC Modelers Club, UniTek lazers, FIRST Robotics, and GAVRT
Radio telescope.
Other booths will include glider making, Pinewood Derby and MHS Chess
Club workshops, and information from the Deep Space Network, NASA/IPAC
(CalTech Infrared Processing and Analysis Center) , the Planetary
Society. The Sidewalk Astronomers will be sharing views of the sun
through several different solar telescopes. Food will be sold, including
hot dogs, pizza, and smoothies. This event will be on Saturday, March
2^nd in the MHS Quad from 10am to 2pm. You can stay later, and there wil
be a star party from dusk until 8 p.m. The school address is 845 W
Colorado Blvd Monrovia, CA 91016
In other news, I talk about the appearance of Comet PanStarrs in our
skies beginning about March 10 through early May in my monthly video.
The comet will be naked eye visible (somewhere between the magnitude of
the bright star Sirius below Orion, and the dipper stars, but also
extremely low to the horizon. An unobstructed view down to the horizon
will be necessary - the comet will not get above 10 degrees above the
horizon in March, higher but fainter in April and May. Binoculars will
help you pull the comet out of the murky horizon.
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RWC5xAxKTU0
Archive site with many formats
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/whatsup-view.cfm?WUID=1424
Hope to see you Saturday for some fun with the sun!
--
Jane Houston Jones
Monrovia, CA
http://jane.whiteoaks.com/http://twitter.com/jhjones
What's Up For March? Will Comet Pan-STARRS be bright?
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/whatsup-archive.cfm
Youtube:http://youtu.be/jYs6Mw744VA
2013 At A Glance
http://jane.whiteoaks.com/2013/01/07/whats-up-in-2013-at-a-glance/