View Full Version here: : Observing the sky in January 2011
Gday everyone :hi:
While i am trying to wait very patiently for my Astronomy Book 2011 to arrive :rolleyes: (not from IIS)
I am organising an Astronomy night at Jens house to show off our awsome sky to all my work buddies :thumbsup: Which have now all been constantly having to listen to me brag about Snake Valley camp for weeks now and after showing off my first Orion pic i now have their full attention :lol:
So could someone kindly post here what the highllights of the month are so i can get this organised and pic a date :thanx:
Oh by the way these people dont know anything about Dobs or SDM's or refractors yet so my scope is the bee's knees to them right now :lol::lol:
:thanx:
chrisp9au
23-11-2010, 11:58 PM
Hi Jen,
Your favourite is going to be high in the sky, Orion! :)
Think of Snake Valley, all the things that were rising at midnight and beyond back then, will be high in the sky during the evening in January.
You just have to think of what the moon will be doing on the night you have your 'do'.
The weekend of the 8th-9th of January will be good, a quarter moon for people to look at, plus Jupiter fairly close to the moon.
Fire up Stellarium or CDC on your computer, change the date to whatever date you're thinking of, and check out what's up!
Cheers :thumbsup:
Chris
:thanx: so there is no conjunctions, meteor showers or anything exciting in January :question:
Just the Jupiter near quarter moon on the 8th-9th :rolleyes:
chrisp9au
24-11-2010, 08:30 AM
Only 2 conjunctions that I can find...
On January 2nd, Jupiter 34' south of Uranus, worth a look, both in same field of view.
January 18th, Mercury 4° 05' south of Pluto, don't bother!
No strong or even medium showers for the southern hemisphere in January.
Alpha Centaurids Jan 28th - Feb 21st, medium, ZHR = 6. Not much of a show really!
Cheers :thumbsup:
Chris
chrisp9au
24-11-2010, 08:48 AM
Jen,
Here are a few screen grabs from Stellarium for the evening of January 8th at about 9:40pm, in Swan Hill.
They'll give you an idea of what will be in the sky.
Cheers :thumbsup:
Chris
Highlights? Are you looking for interesting targets?
1st to the 9th Jan is good Moonwise. After the 25th, the Moon rises about 11:30 pm.
Uranus is quite near to Jupiter.
Globular cluster 47 Tuc.
Open clusters Pleiades, Beehive (M44) in Cancer.
LMC and SMC. Tarantula Nebula (NGC 2070) in LMC.
Galaxies NGC 253 and NGC 55 in Sculptor.
Orion Nebula of course.
Eta Carinae nebula.
Planetary nebulae- Eskimo (NGC 2392) in Gemini, Ghost of Jupiter (NGC 3242) in Hydra.
Double stars Acamar (theta Eridani), beta Tucanae, gamma Arietis, 145 CMa and x Velorum for colour contrast.
Triple star beta Monocerotis.
Visual quadruple star sigma Orionis.
Carbon star R Leporis.
Regards, Rob
GrampianStars
24-11-2010, 01:02 PM
Here Ya go Jen
practice on some of these for early January 2011 :thumbsup:
ngcles
24-11-2010, 03:50 PM
Hi Jen,
Pick a night if possible with a 4-odd day moon. Non-astronomers love to look at the Moon it just totally blows them away. Saturday 8th January is the pick. View the Moon in the west as twilight settles in, then Jupiter before it begins to get too low in deep twilight.
Rob mentioned many lovely objects, but omitted several really nice Open Clusters situated perfectly not long after darkness drops -- M46, M47 and NGC 2362 (Tau Canis Majoris cluster). The Pleiades and M44 are good but are better for big-binoculars than a telescope.
There's some good info here on the clusters I mentioned above:
http://messier.obspm.fr/m/m046.html
http://messier.obspm.fr/m/m047.html
http://messier.obspm.fr/xtra/ngc/n2362.html
that if you can memorise a bit of and spiel it off (how far, how many stars, how old) as they view will have you looking like an absolute astronomy genius.
Make sure you also show then 47 Tucanae, M42 and the Tarantula Nebula (NGC 2070). Theta Eridani (as already mentioned) is a superb, moderately wide pair easily split at low power.
Drink one and one only only burbon and coke before you use the 'scope (just so you're loosened up enough to do it all comfortably but not tanked) and when finished with the sky and the 'scope's away you can get well-oiled enough that by midnight, it will seem like a brilliant idea to both you and your guests to lie-down on the ground in the backyard (in the dark) (looking up hopefully) and enjoy the naked-eye Milky Way after moonset.
Have a great night. Hope the clouds do the right thing !
Best,
Les D
:thumbsup::thumbsup: hey thanks guys that should keep me busy and make me look like an astro genius for sure (LOL Les) now only to remember all that :lol:
maybe i should record it onto my IPOD and play it quietly in my ears ;)
Once again i came to the best site on earth to get all the answers i needed thanks guys
xxoxoxoxx
:thanks::thanks::thanks:
Octane
24-11-2010, 05:31 PM
The following objects will be best visible on either night.
Cirrus
Cirrocumulus
Cirrostratus
Altocumulus
Altostratus
Stratocumulus
Stratus
Nimbostratus
Cumulus
Cumulonimbus
H
mithrandir
24-11-2010, 06:05 PM
:rofl:
Positive vibes, H. Positive.
:lol::lol: lol H ;) Swan Hill hasnt seen too many of those, ive been pretty lucky really :P
Whahahahahahahaahhahhahahaaahha Jen and only one bourbon and coke :rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:
Pull the other one ;)
:lol::lol::lol: LOL Martin you know me too well :P
:drink:
In March we have to go to the outlook and make some photo's Jen.
:lol::lol: Only if Douggie comes too :rofl::rofl:
Yeehaa!!!! The Doug, and we have rock the outlook :rofl::rofl::rofl:
Not that he is scared of heights :shrug:
GrampianStars
02-12-2010, 02:04 AM
Jen
Get this FANTASTIC pocket guide :thumbsup:
http://embiggenbooks.com/collins-stars-and-planets.html
It's the best for your size scope will show you individual maps, Deep sky, etc,
This is my 3rd copy since the 90's they get severe use in the field and at star parties you will be a wizz at finding COOL stuff real quick :eyepop:
Plenty available here
http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/0691135568/ref=dp_olp_new?ie=UTF8&condition=new
:eyepop: oh goodie i looovve astro books ;) i dont have this one yet :thumbsup:
Thanks Rob ;)
edosaurus_rex
13-12-2010, 02:36 AM
Hello all,
On Jan 8-9 Mercury and Venus will be at their greatest western elongations within 24 hours of each other. Astonomically unimportant but visually interesting!!!
Ed
alistairsam
31-12-2010, 04:17 PM
Hi,
Not sure if this has been listed repeatedly, but for those who have'nt seen it as yet, I found Calsky an incredible tool to make a list of interesting objects for observing at a particular night for a particular location, or for a whole week, month to a whole year.
you can make your personalized calendar with objects that you want to see, and it'll give you a list, with images, friendly description, sorted by the local time of what is visible, whats the best time to view it, magnitude and so on.
I found it very useful to plan an observing session for a beginner, rather than look at sky charts or stellarium or messier lists to figure out what is visible at that night.
I still use stellarium to locate it though.
problem for me with sky charts was that i needed to look up what that particular object was if it just had its ngc number, and then check if its mag was within my scopes capability and then move on. this eliminates it.
attached a sample of what it generates for whats out there tonight from my location sorted by my local time, including the ISS, iridium flares and more.
http://www.calsky.com/cs.cgi
just choose the object type from the menu on the top, and then the sub object type, enter date, time, location, other filter and hit go.
alistairsam
31-12-2010, 06:27 PM
Hi jen,
this site gives free monthly sky calendars with significant events listed.
the jan '11 is not out yet, but should be out soon and will be handy
look for the sky map for the southern hemisphere. it has a sky calendar for the month
http://www.skymaps.com/downloads.html
Jen, I second that. :thumbsup:
The "Stars and Planets" book is my best friend when observing. Molly loves her book too (she recommended it to me). ;)
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.