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Friday, September 8
With summer on the wane, the rich fields of the Sagittarius Milky Way will soon be departing for the season. This week the Teapot star pattern of Sagittarius puffs its steam a bit west of due south right after dark. Chi Cygni is fading. This long-period red variable star, high overhead, reached an unusually bright maximum at about magnitude 3.8 in late July and early August. It's now down to about 4.8, according to reports in the last few days to the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO). Saturday, September 9 You know it's back-to-school season when the Big Dipper is lower in the northwest after nightfall than Cassiopeia is in the northeast. Look a little above the midpoint between them for 2nd-magnitude Polaris. Sunday, September 10 Arc to Arcturus: This is also the time of year when the Big Dipper's famous relationship to Arcturus is, displayed at its best. You'll find the Dipper in the northwest after nightfall. Its curving handle points leftward in an arc toward bright Arcturus shining at about the same height in the west, a little more than a Dipper-length away. Monday, September 11 Jupiter is quite close to the wide binocular double star Alpha Librae all week. They appear closest this evening and tomorrow evening, about ½° apart, with Alpha Librae to Jupiter's south (lower left). Tuesday, September 12 If Chi Cygni has whetted your appetite for variable stars, start checking in on T Ursae Minoris near the bowl of the Little Dipper. This is a strange red giant in the midst of a long, slow internal upheaval. Wednesday, September 13 This is the time of year when bright Vega shines almost straight overhead as the stars come out at twilight (if you live in mid-northern latitudes). Vega passes exactly overhead if you're at latitude 39° north: Washington DC, Cincinnati, Kansas City, Sacramento. Thursday, September 14 Last-quarter Moon. This Week's Planet Roundup Mercury is hidden in the glow of sunset. Venus is getting ever lower in the dawn. Look for it just above the east-northeast horizon before sunrise, below or lower left of Saturn. Mars is lost in the sunset. Jupiter shines low in the southwest at dusk, getting lower every week. It sets shortly after dark. Binoculars show the wide double star Alpha Librae close to Jupiter this week. Saturn, glows moderately low in the east before and during dawn (far above Venus and a little to the right). Saturn is rapidly getting higher day by day. -- The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Sidewalk Astronomy www.sidewalkastronomy.info Astronomy Net Online Gift Shop http://www.cafepress.com/astronomy_net In Garden Online Gift Shop http://www.cafepress.com/ingarden Blast Off Online Gift Shop http://www.cafepress.com/starlords Astro Blog http://starlord.bloggerteam.com/ |
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