Happy Halloween! Are you ready for the Spook’s Tour? Tonight treat your little ghouls and goblins, party guests and yourself to a real sweet treat through your telescope or binoculars as we take a look at some of the season’s craziest (and scariest) outer space objects. It’s a time honored custom that’s sure to please even the most starched shirt out there… So loosen up your tie and let’s have some fun! Need more to keep you busy? Sure! We’ll also take a look at the weekend’s lunar features, the magnificent “Double Cluster” and a salute to Harlow Shapely! Now, let’s haunt the weekend together…
Friday, October 31, 2008 – Happy Halloween! Many cultures around the world celebrate this day with a custom known as “Trick or Treat.” Tonight instead of tricking your little ghouls and goblins, why not treat them (or your party guests) to a sweet view through your telescope or binoculars? Let’s take a look at some of the “spookiest” objects in the night sky…
Begin in the constellation of Perseus with a single star. Its formal name is Beta Persei (RA 03 08 10 Dec +40 57 20) and it is the most famous of all eclipsing variable stars. Tonight, let’s identify Algol and learn all about the “Demon Star.”
93 light-years away, Algol is the nearest eclipsing binary, and is treasured by the amateur astronomer because it requires no special equipment to easily follow its stages. Normally Beta Persei holds a magnitude of 2.1, but approximately every three days it dims to magnitude 3.4 and gradually brightens again. The entire eclipse only lasts about 10 hours! Although Algol is known to have two additional spectroscopic companions, the true beauty of watching this variable star is not telescopic – but visual. The constellation of Perseus is well placed this month for most observers, and appears like a glittering chain of stars that lie between Cassiopeia and Andromeda. Take a look at Gamma Andromedae (Almach), east of Algol. Almach’s visual brightness is about the same as Algol’s at maximum.
Now we need a jack-o-lantern…
Studies by the Hubble telescope have confirmed this, as well as shown a large meteor impact crater which exposed Vesta’s olivine mantle. Debris from Vesta’s collision then set sail away from the parent asteroid. Some of the debris remained within the asteroid belt near Vesta, and became asteroids themselves with the same spectral pyroxene signature. But some of the debris escaped the asteroid belt through the “Kirkwood Gap” created by Jupiter’s gravitational pull. This allowed these small fragments to be kicked into orbits that would eventually bring them “down to Earth.” Did one make it? Of course! In 1960 a piece of Vesta fell to Earth and was recovered in Australia. Thanks to Vesta’s unique properties, the meteorite was definitely identified as coming from our third largest asteroid. Now, that we’ve learned about Vesta, let’s talk about what we can see from our own backyards. As you can discern from the image, even the Hubble Space Telescope doesn’t give incredible views of this bright asteroid. What we will be able to see in our telescopes and binoculars will closely resemble a roughly magnitude 7 “star.” Tonight you can find Vesta near Alpha Ceti. Vesta will be at opposition in just three days, and is now in retrograde, so you will be able to watch it slowly move away from Alpha Ceti for the rest of the year.
Of course, the approximate coordinates given above are only accurate for a short time, so I strongly encourage you to use a good planetarium program to print accurate locator charts, or visit an online resource such as the IAU Minor Planet Center for more details. When you locate the proper stars and the asteroid’s probable location, mark physically on the map Vesta’s position. Keeping the same map, return to the area a night or two later and see how Vesta has moved since your original mark. Since Vesta will stay located in the same area for awhile, your observations need not be on consecutive nights, but once you learn how to observe an asteroid and watch it move – you’ll be back for more!
Known as NGC 7293, this faint planetary nebula’s “ring” structure is around half the size of the full Moon. While its total magnitude (6.5) and large size should indicate it would be an easy find, the Helix is anything but easy because of its low surface brightness. Binoculars will show it as a large, round, hazy spot, while small telescopes with good seeing conditions will have a chance to outshine larger ones by using lower power eyepieces to pick up the braided ring structure. As one of the very closest of planetary nebulae, NGC 7393 is very similar in structure to the more famous Ring, M57. It is a spherical shell of gas lighted by an extremely hot, tiny central star that’s only around 2% of our own Sun’s diameter – yet exceeds Sol in surface temperature by over 100,000 Kelvin. Can you resolve it? Best of luck!
What Halloween celebration would be complete without a black cat? Let’s cruise Draco (the Dragon) in search of the “Cat’s Eye”…
So far we’ve collected a demon, a pumpkin, a galactic ghost, and the eye of the cat… And what Halloween would be complete without a witch! Easily found from a modestly dark site with the unaided eye, the Pleiades can be spotted well above the northeastern horizon within a couple of hours of nightfall. To average skies, many of the seven bright components will resolve easily without the use of optical aid, but to telescopes and binoculars?… M45 is stunning!
The date of the Pleiades culmination (its highest point in the sky) has been celebrated throughout its rich history, being marked with various festivals and ancient rites – but there is one particular rite that really fits this occasion! What could be more spooky on this date than to imagine a group of Druids celebrating the Pleiades’ midnight “high” with Black Sabbath? This night of “unholy revelry” is still observed in the modern world as “All Hallow’s Eve,” more commonly called Halloween. Although the actual date of the Pleiades midnight culmination is now on November 21 instead of October 31, why break with tradition? Thanks to its nebulous regions, M45 looks wonderfully like a “ghost” haunting the starry skies.
Treat yourself and your loved ones to the “scariest” object in the night. Binoculars give an incredible view of the entire region, revealing far more stars than are visible with the naked eye. Small telescopes at lowest power will enjoy M45’s rich, icy-blue stars and fog-like nebulosity. Larger telescopes and higher power reveal many pairs of double stars buried within its silver folds. No matter what you choose, the Pleiades definitely rock!
Saturday, November 1, 2008 – On this day in 1977, Charles Kowal made a wild discovery – Chiron. This was the first sighting of one of the multitude of tiny, icy bodies inhabiting the outer reaches of our solar system. Collectively known as Centaurs, they reside in unstable orbits between Jupiter and Neptune and are almost certainly “refugees” from the Kuiper Belt.
Of course, Dr. Shapley spent his fair share of time on the Hooker telescope as well. A particular point of his studies were globular clusters: their distances, and the relationship they have to the halo structure of our galaxy. Tonight let’s look at a very unusual little globular located about a fistwidth south-southeast of Beta Ceti, and just a couple of degrees north-northwest of Alpha Sculptoris (RA 00 52 47 Dec -26 34 43). Its name is NGC 288…
This week’s awesome images are: Beta Persei: Algol – Credit: Palomar Observatory, courtesy of Caltech, Asteroid Vesta – Credit: NASA, NGC 7293: The Helix Nebula – Credit: R. Jay GaBany, The Andromeda Galaxy – Bill Schoening, Vanessa Harvey/REU program/NOAO/AURA/NSF, NGC 6543: The Cat’s Eye – Credit: Hubble Heritage Team/NASA, M45: The Pleiades – Credit: John Chumack, The “Double Cluster” – Credit: N.A.Sharp/NOAO/AURA/NSF, Lunar image by Greg Konkel, annotated by Tammy Plotner, Harlow Shapely (widely used public image) and NGC 288 – Credit: Palomar Observatory, courtesy of Caltech. Our many, many thanks for the fine illustrations!
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