-------- Original Message --------
From: HQ-spotthestation(a)mail.nasa.gov
Sent: November 29, 2016 9:57:21 AM EST
To: jane(a)whiteoaks.com
Subject: SpotTheStation
Time: Tue Nov 29 6:04 PM, Visible: 3 min, Max Height: 88°, Appears: 19° above SW, Disappears: 47° above NE
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Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
Hi everyone and welcome new members from the Mojave National Preserve
star party last weekend! We are already setting up the spring date
which we'll announce once its finalized. There were over 50 tents, over
120 attendees, a couple dozen attendees were urban youth, visiting MNP
and camping out for probably the first time looking through about 10
telescopes! Article and photos
http://www.mojavepreserve.org/news/2016/11/7/promoting-the-preserve
We were expecting a lot of questions about the "Supermoon" at the
telescopes tonight, but it's super cloudy, so we are cancelling our
sidewalk astronomy -- we usually hold it near the first quarter moon
Saturday night, but we did Mojave non that night this month since the
campground was available. Both Sunday and Monday night will be about
equally good to measure the "full " or what we astronomers call a
"perigee" moon, so look in binos
In a nutshell a supermoon new or full moon which occurs with the Moon at
or near (within 90% of) its closest approach to Earth in a given orbit.
Dubbed so by an astrologer in 2011. Because the Moon's orbit is an
ellipse instead of a circle, its distance from Earth varies during the
month from about 225,800 miles (363,400 km) at perigee, or closest
approach, to 252,000 miles (405,550 km) at apogee or furthest distance
in the elliptical orbit. Changing the distance causes the Moon's size
and brightness to change as well. A perigee moon is on average 7% bigger
and 16% brighter than an average full Moon, but during an unusually
close perigee (the supermoon moon), the full Moon can be 12–14% larger
than a full Moon at apogee (farthest) and 30% brighter. There are nice
graphics and explanations here -->
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/see-the-biggest-supermoon-in-68-ye…
If it is clear tomorrow, the full moon rises at 4:38 p.m. here in
California. The moon turns precisely full on November 14, 2016 at 1352
UTC <http://earthsky.org/astronomy-essentials/universal-time>. meaning
the moon will reach the crest of its full phase on November 14 at 1352
UTC <http://earthsky.org/astronomy-essentials/universal-time>. That
translates to 9:52 a.m. AST, 8:52 a.m. EST, 7:52 a.m. CST, 6:52 a.m.
MST, 5:52 a.m. PST. The moon will reach perigee – the moon’s closest
point to Earth for this month – within an one and one-half hours of that
time. This EarthSky article gives a lot of other great information and
graphics! http://earthsky.org/?p=190918
There are 4-6 supermoons every year, so have a look, and do what I am
going to do -- make a moon measuring device and start comparing! All you
need is an index card shown in the Sky and Telescope magazine article
above, with some 5 mm to 10 mm slots cut unto it. 6mm is close to 1/4
inch, fyi. Hold your moon measurer straight out, aim at the moon, and
see which slot matches the moon's diameter, write down the date, repeat
next full moon. You can also hold your index finger out stretched, and
see that it covers both regular full moons, closest perigee moons, as
well as farthest away moons. :-) Some astronomers hate the name
Supermoon, but if it raises awareness, I'm good with it. :-)
Jane Houston Jones @jhjones
What's Up November 2016:
Venus, Jupiter and Saturn + more meteor showers
https://youtu.be/aj7hDvy9bgI
Although my JPL astro guy sent out the announcement that the Chinese
Space Station Pass is Tuesday -- aka TONIGHT, Heavens Above - our source
says it is Wednesday Nov 2. Look tonight to verify? And have a nice
look at a very thin crescent moon and Venus/Saturn. And try again
tomorrow night, which is what we think is the correct date.
Jane
--
Jane Houston Jones @jhjones
What's Up Sept 2016:
African Eclipse, metoers, planet pairs
https://youtu.be/n_2rgiyJ5Pg
Hi everyone, my What's Up November video is out, and there is a pretty
lineup of moon and planets the next 3 nights, so I thought I'd send out
an additional reminder to step out and look up!
From November 1^st to 3^rd , catch gibbous Venus (phase visible in
telescopes, may look "oval" in binos, the crescent moon, and ringed
Saturn together in the southwest sky just after sunset.The prettiest
triangle of the three is Thursday night, so go out and practice just
after sunset.
Then also tonight, there'sa very good pass of the Chinese Space Station
just after 7:00 PM for SoCal. This is probably the last real
opportunity to see Tiangong 2 while the Chinese astronauts are still
onboard. Jing Haipeng and Chen Dong are half way through
their month-long flight. The station reaches 10 degrees above WSW
horizon 7:06:53 p.m. (Very near the moon/Venus/Saturn trio) Maximum
altitude 67 degrees NNW at 7:09:57 at magnitude 1.2, brighter than the
most of the stars it passes until it disappears into Earth's shadow near
fainter Cassiopeia stars. Let me know if you see it!!
There are also some famous meteor showers -- famous from past outbursts,
but rates will be lower due to bright moons nearby, but still any chance
to see a Taurid on the 12th, a Leonid on the 17th or an Orionid on the
28th, is worth it if you are awake and the sky is clear on or near the
peak nights!
Mojave National Preserve Star Party is this weekend! RSVP here on the
Facebook Event - or ask me for phone/email to RSVP
https://www.facebook.com/events/310376066006443/
Eclipse info - no new news, but some of your fellow members of this
email list have reserved two of the camper sites next to us in St.
Anthony ID, and there are plenty more sites available. Info was on the
last email. And the Idaho Museum in Idaho Falls will have some cool
exhibits (and speakers :-) the day before the eclipse) It's gonna be epic!!
Jane
What's Up JPL http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/video/details.php?id=1448
What's Up Youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aj7hDvy9bgI
What's Up Tumblr
http://nasa.tumblr.com/post/152612101714/whats-up-for-november-2016
--
Jane Houston Jones
@jhjones @otastro
What's Up Nov? Venus sunset,Jupiter dawn, Saturn, Meteors
https://youtu.be/aj7hDvy9bgI