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I had my telescope out a little over an hour ago looking at the moon
and stars and noticed something odd. There was a star(?) maybe west southwestish, I dunno, I was just messing around. What was wierd was that it changes colors, between greenish and red, sort of like a tacky christmas light. I'm in central North Carolina and it was about a fifth of the way up the sky. Anyone know what the heck it is? I thought maybe a satelite but I wouldn't expect it to be so bright and maybe to move more than it did. Anyone have any clue? |
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In article ,
Mike Dworetsky wrote: "Odysseus" wrote in message news ![]() In article .com, wrote: I had my telescope out a little over an hour ago looking at the moon and stars and noticed something odd. There was a star(?) maybe west southwestish, I dunno, I was just messing around. What was wierd was that it changes colors, between greenish and red, sort of like a tacky christmas light. I'm in central North Carolina and it was about a fifth of the way up the sky. Anyone know what the heck it is? I thought maybe a satelite but I wouldn't expect it to be so bright and maybe to move more than it did. Anyone have any clue? It's quite common for a star's scintillation (twinkling) to make it flash in a variety of colours. The effect is especially pronounced for bright stars near the horizon when the atmosphere is turbulent. We usually think of twinkling mainly as a fluctuation in brightness, but where the various wavelengths in the star's light are refracted differently (as by a prism, or in a rainbow), the colour will appear to change as well. -- Odysseus You don't state the time but it might have been Sirius if early evening. Did you also see Venus to the West, brighter than the star that was changing colours? It is unlikely that Venus would show colour variations the way a star would; the angular size of the disk would tend to prevent it unless the seeing was very bad indeed. Otoh Venus is so much brighter that you can see it right down to the horizon: if the air is clear, you can expect a horizontal extinction around 5 magnitudes. Which will make Venus appear to shine at magnitude +1 or so right before it sets -- and then it *will* twinkle, often in different colors. But you need a really unobstructed view of the horizon to be able to see this. -- Mike Dworetsky (Remove pants sp*mbl*ck to reply) -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/ |
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"Paul Schlyter" wrote in message
... In article , Mike Dworetsky wrote: "Odysseus" wrote in message news ![]() In article .com, wrote: I had my telescope out a little over an hour ago looking at the moon and stars and noticed something odd. There was a star(?) maybe west southwestish, I dunno, I was just messing around. What was wierd was that it changes colors, between greenish and red, sort of like a tacky christmas light. I'm in central North Carolina and it was about a fifth of the way up the sky. Anyone know what the heck it is? I thought maybe a satelite but I wouldn't expect it to be so bright and maybe to move more than it did. Anyone have any clue? It's quite common for a star's scintillation (twinkling) to make it flash in a variety of colours. The effect is especially pronounced for bright stars near the horizon when the atmosphere is turbulent. We usually think of twinkling mainly as a fluctuation in brightness, but where the various wavelengths in the star's light are refracted differently (as by a prism, or in a rainbow), the colour will appear to change as well. -- Odysseus You don't state the time but it might have been Sirius if early evening. Did you also see Venus to the West, brighter than the star that was changing colours? It is unlikely that Venus would show colour variations the way a star would; the angular size of the disk would tend to prevent it unless the seeing was very bad indeed. Otoh Venus is so much brighter that you can see it right down to the horizon: if the air is clear, you can expect a horizontal extinction around 5 magnitudes. Which will make Venus appear to shine at magnitude +1 or so right before it sets -- and then it *will* twinkle, often in different colors. But you need a really unobstructed view of the horizon to be able to see this. I agree, but he described it as "about a fifth of the way up in the sky", which does not sound like very near the horizon to me. Hence my guess that he might be seeing Sirius, which normally shows just the effects described, and which should be about the right elevation in the early evening. The obvious question is whether he saw Venus at the same time as a different object. -- Mike Dworetsky (Remove pants sp*mbl*ck to reply) |
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