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 Post subject: Follow that star at Christmas
PostPosted: Thu Dec 22, 2011 12:24 pm 
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If the skies are clear, it just so happens that most days over the holiday, you can get a great view at round about teatime of the International Space Station serenely floating across the sky.

Here's a calendar giving approximate times and directions:
http://goo.gl/D4Uc1
I've highlighted the potentially bets ones (where the ISS climbs to a reasonable height) but you could potentially see them all, clear skies permitting.

So for example tonight if you look low in the SW at 17:42 you'll see the ISS slowly approach and rise, until at 17:44:26 it will be fairly low (33 degrees, i.e 1/3rd from the horizon to straight up) and due South - then it will suddenly "disappear" (as the ISS passes into the Earth's shadow), just after it passes underneath Jupiter.

You can get individual sky charts with a diagram of every pass (and lots more) at the excellent http://www.heavens-above.com/

Here's the 17:42 pass, from your right to left:
Image

While you're waiting, you may if the sky is clear see some faint moving objects. These are not UFOs, but are actually various satellites which will happen all to be criss-crossing the sky all at the same time


Satellite------------Time of peak elevation, and direction
H-2A R/B------------17:34:09 74° WNW travelling to SSW
Cosmos 1842--------17:34:18 74° E travelling to NNE
APEX-----__-----------17:33:14 70° ESE travelling to NE
Cosmos 2369 Rocket-17:35:59 69° NE travelling to SE
Lacrosse 4 Rocket-----17:36:33 31° NW travelling to NNE

If we get clouded out (sadly more nights than not) don't worry, get on heavens-above.com any clear night and you can get all this info for free.

Enjoy, and Merry Christmas all.
If the skies are clear, it just so happens that most days over the holiday, you can get a great view at round about teatime of the International Space Station serenely floating across the sky.

Here's a calendar giving approximate times and directions:
http://goo.gl/D4Uc1
I've highlighted the potentially bets ones (where the ISS climbs to a reasonable height) but you could potentially see them all, clear skies permitting.

So for example tonight if you look low in the SW at 17:42 you'll see the ISS slowly approach and rise, until at 17:44:26 it will be fairly low (33 degrees, i.e 1/3rd from the horizon to straight up) and due South - then it will suddenly "disappear" (as the ISS passes into the Earth's shadow), just after it passes underneath Jupiter.

You can get individual sky charts with a diagram of every pass (and lots more) at the excellent http://www.heavens-above.com/

Here's the 17:42 pass, from your right to left:
Image

While you're waiting, you may if the sky is clear see some faint moving objects. These are not UFOs, but are actually various satellites which will happen all to be criss-crossing the sky all at the same time


Satellite------------Time of peak elevation, and direction
H-2A R/B------------17:34:09 74° WNW travelling to SSW
Cosmos 1842--------17:34:18 74° E travelling to NNE
APEX-----__-----------17:33:14 70° ESE travelling to NE
Cosmos 2369 Rocket-17:35:59 69° NE travelling to SE
Lacrosse 4 Rocket-----17:36:33 31° NW travelling to NNE

If we get clouded out (sadly more nights than not) don't worry, get on heavens-above.com any clear night and you can get all this info for free.

Enjoy, and Merry Christmas all.






Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total

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 Post subject: Re: Follow that star at Christmas
PostPosted: Thu Dec 22, 2011 12:31 pm 
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As part of my duty as Dads Taxi I am often afforded the privilege of collecting my youngest from her workplace near the airport late at night and on Sunday night at around 11pm in a clear sky we saw a very bright star (no, this isn't going to turn into the Nativity story), much brighter than any other.

We were on the Chevin road at the time and as the airport runway lies strictly south to north it was easy to see that the star was in line with direct north so I assumed that it was the north star (I'm not just a pretty face) but could it have been anything else - it was far brighter than anything else in the sky but it was an incredibly clear and still night.


Can I also add, I'm fascinated by this astrology thing and space travel (I'm a child of the 50s, we all expected to be living on the moon by now) but I'm totally incapable of transposing the diagram above into the night sky, I think I can spot "the plough" but then as soon as I do I see another one in a different place :D






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 Post subject: Re: Follow that star at Christmas
PostPosted: Thu Dec 22, 2011 1:09 pm 
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Did you know I was the first person in the UK to gain their Scouts Astronomy badge in the UK? I was also a member of the Salford Astronomy Club.






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 Post subject: Re: Follow that star at Christmas
PostPosted: Thu Dec 22, 2011 1:32 pm 
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McLaren_Field wrote:As part of my duty as Dads Taxi I am often afforded the privilege of collecting my youngest from her workplace near the airport late at night and on Sunday night at around 11pm in a clear sky we saw a very bright star (no, this isn't going to turn into the Nativity story), much brighter than any other.

We were on the Chevin road at the time and as the airport runway lies strictly south to north it was easy to see that the star was in line with direct north so I assumed that it was the north star (I'm not just a pretty face) but could it have been anything else - it was far brighter than anything else in the sky but it was an incredibly clear and still night.

That was Vega. Would have been low, but easily the brightest object in the northern sky. Not the Pole Star, which is actually quite faint, but if you are still around then, Vega will oddly enough be promoted to pole star in around the year 13,725!

You were actually viewing live a scene from the past (1986), as that's when the light you saw actually set off from Vega.

McLaren_Field wrote:Can I also add, I'm fascinated by this astrology thing

No need for that sort of language ;) - it's Astronomy not that "astrology" sheeiiiite!!
McLaren_Field wrote: but I'm totally incapable of transposing the diagram above into the night sky, I think I can spot "the plough" but then as soon as I do I see another one in a different place :D


Print it out and stand facing due South. The 'S' is then directly south, on the horizon, and the centre of the chart is directly overhead.

If you turn to face directly West - just turn the chart clockwise through 90 degrees, so that it is sideways, and so that the "W" now appears to you to be at the bottom.

The Astronomy Now sky chart makes it a bit more user friendly.

If you face due North at around 7pm, the Plough is above the northern horizon, and the "right way up" so it's hard to miss. Above that, at about 45 degrees, is a pretty unremarkable little star, but still easily the brightest in a patch of very faint sky; that's Polaris.
McLaren_Field wrote:As part of my duty as Dads Taxi I am often afforded the privilege of collecting my youngest from her workplace near the airport late at night and on Sunday night at around 11pm in a clear sky we saw a very bright star (no, this isn't going to turn into the Nativity story), much brighter than any other.

We were on the Chevin road at the time and as the airport runway lies strictly south to north it was easy to see that the star was in line with direct north so I assumed that it was the north star (I'm not just a pretty face) but could it have been anything else - it was far brighter than anything else in the sky but it was an incredibly clear and still night.

That was Vega. Would have been low, but easily the brightest object in the northern sky. Not the Pole Star, which is actually quite faint, but if you are still around then, Vega will oddly enough be promoted to pole star in around the year 13,725!

You were actually viewing live a scene from the past (1986), as that's when the light you saw actually set off from Vega.

McLaren_Field wrote:Can I also add, I'm fascinated by this astrology thing

No need for that sort of language ;) - it's Astronomy not that "astrology" sheeiiiite!!
McLaren_Field wrote: but I'm totally incapable of transposing the diagram above into the night sky, I think I can spot "the plough" but then as soon as I do I see another one in a different place :D


Print it out and stand facing due South. The 'S' is then directly south, on the horizon, and the centre of the chart is directly overhead.

If you turn to face directly West - just turn the chart clockwise through 90 degrees, so that it is sideways, and so that the "W" now appears to you to be at the bottom.

The Astronomy Now sky chart makes it a bit more user friendly.

If you face due North at around 7pm, the Plough is above the northern horizon, and the "right way up" so it's hard to miss. Above that, at about 45 degrees, is a pretty unremarkable little star, but still easily the brightest in a patch of very faint sky; that's Polaris.






Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total

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 Post subject: Re: Follow that star at Christmas
PostPosted: Thu Dec 22, 2011 1:33 pm 
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peggy wrote:Did you know I was the first person in the UK to gain their Scouts Astronomy badge in the UK? I was also a member of the Salford Astronomy Club.


No, but respect! :ROCKS:






Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total

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 Post subject: Re: Follow that star at Christmas
PostPosted: Thu Dec 22, 2011 2:03 pm 
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The last two stars of the Plough (at the metal end) point to the North Star at about five times the distance between those last two Plough stars.
That's the easy way to find the North Star (Polaris).
And it's significance is that everything else appears to revolve around it while it stays motionless as the Earth rotates.
And since we rotate anti-clockwise, the stars seem to rotate clockwise in the night sky.
I thought that was common knowledge.
I'm appalled! :wink:






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 Post subject: Re: Follow that star at Christmas
PostPosted: Thu Dec 22, 2011 2:13 pm 
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Stand-Offish wrote:...
And since we rotate anti-clockwise, the stars seem to rotate clockwise in the night sky.
I thought that was common knowledge.
I'm appalled! :wink:


Except, we don't. For people in Australia, for example, the earth rotates clockwise, and the stars appear to rotate anti-clockwise in the night sky. And that's before I start on about people on the equator. :wink:






Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total

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 Post subject: Re: Follow that star at Christmas
PostPosted: Thu Dec 22, 2011 2:26 pm 
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Ferocious Aardvark wrote:Except, we don't. For people in Australia, for example, the earth rotates clockwise, and the stars appear to rotate anti-clockwise in the night sky. And that's before I start on about people on the equator. :wink:

I am aware of the differences thank you.
We do have some antipodean visitors on here, but not many so my comments were not meant to relate to them, and since we are talking about the North star, there was no ambiguity.
I was talking about the Northern Hemisphere. :wink:
As for knowledge about astronomy, you only have to look at MF's contribution to realise it's dire, hence the wink I used.
I hope that clears that one up. :)






War does not determine who is right - only who is left.

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 Post subject: Re: Follow that star at Christmas
PostPosted: Thu Dec 22, 2011 3:13 pm 
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Ferocious Aardvark wrote:That was Vega. Would have been low, but easily the brightest object in the northern sky. Not the Pole Star, which is actually quite faint, but if you are still around then, Vega will oddly enough be promoted to pole star in around the year 13,725!

You were actually viewing live a scene from the past (1986), as that's when the light you saw actually set off from Vega.

No need for that sort of language ;) - it's Astronomy not that "astrology" sheeiiiite!!
Print it out and stand facing due South. The 'S' is then directly south, on the horizon, and the centre of the chart is directly overhead.

If you turn to face directly West - just turn the chart clockwise through 90 degrees, so that it is sideways, and so that the "W" now appears to you to be at the bottom.

The Astronomy Now sky chart makes it a bit more user friendly.

If you face due North at around 7pm, the Plough is above the northern horizon, and the "right way up" so it's hard to miss. Above that, at about 45 degrees, is a pretty unremarkable little star, but still easily the brightest in a patch of very faint sky; that's Polaris.


:thumb: Cheers, I'm going to try that tonight, the dog will think I'm barmy while we stare at the sky together but what the hell.

And apologies for the astronomy/astrology gaff - if it makes it any easier to bear I believe that Russell Grant should be burned at the charlatans torch post along with various priests/archbishops and QVC presenters.


PS - your explanation of Vega was uncannily correct, it was low in the sky and by far the brightest thing in a dark landscape.

PPS - for other astronomy duffers, basically if I stand in my garden holding that plan (above) then I'm stood in the middle of that plan, the sky directly above my head is also the middle of that plan, and the plan changes day by day on that linked web site ?
Ferocious Aardvark wrote:That was Vega. Would have been low, but easily the brightest object in the northern sky. Not the Pole Star, which is actually quite faint, but if you are still around then, Vega will oddly enough be promoted to pole star in around the year 13,725!

You were actually viewing live a scene from the past (1986), as that's when the light you saw actually set off from Vega.

No need for that sort of language ;) - it's Astronomy not that "astrology" sheeiiiite!!
Print it out and stand facing due South. The 'S' is then directly south, on the horizon, and the centre of the chart is directly overhead.

If you turn to face directly West - just turn the chart clockwise through 90 degrees, so that it is sideways, and so that the "W" now appears to you to be at the bottom.

The Astronomy Now sky chart makes it a bit more user friendly.

If you face due North at around 7pm, the Plough is above the northern horizon, and the "right way up" so it's hard to miss. Above that, at about 45 degrees, is a pretty unremarkable little star, but still easily the brightest in a patch of very faint sky; that's Polaris.


:thumb: Cheers, I'm going to try that tonight, the dog will think I'm barmy while we stare at the sky together but what the hell.

And apologies for the astronomy/astrology gaff - if it makes it any easier to bear I believe that Russell Grant should be burned at the charlatans torch post along with various priests/archbishops and QVC presenters.


PS - your explanation of Vega was uncannily correct, it was low in the sky and by far the brightest thing in a dark landscape.

PPS - for other astronomy duffers, basically if I stand in my garden holding that plan (above) then I'm stood in the middle of that plan, the sky directly above my head is also the middle of that plan, and the plan changes day by day on that linked web site ?






Someday everything is gonna be different, When I paint my masterpiece
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BUY MY ART ONLINE AT ARTGALLERY.CO.UK

AT THE RIPPINGHAM GALLERY
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On Twitter
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 Post subject: Re: Follow that star at Christmas
PostPosted: Thu Dec 22, 2011 3:40 pm 
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McLaren_Field wrote:PPS - for other astronomy duffers, basically if I stand in my garden holding that plan (above) then I'm stood in the middle of that plan, the sky directly above my head is also the middle of that plan, and the plan changes day by day on that linked web site ?


Aye. Which is why "west" looks to be in the wrong place, but isn't. If you could print it out on clear acetate, and stick it inside a big clear glass bowl, that sort of explains it.

Bear in mind you want a plan for the hour you'll be watching, it changes a lot as the hours roll by.






Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total

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