Greetings, fellow SkyWatchers! Has everyone enjoyed the Apollo revival? I certainly have – and now the Moon is gently returning to evening sky and offering us great opportunities over the coming evenings to do a little bit of study with binoculars and telescopes. Look for its slender crescent just after sunset! This weekend we’re going to try an open cluster you may never have seen that works well for small optics and a Herschel object with a real twist. Need more? Then we’ll check out a beautifully colored double star, too… But not the one you expect! Grab your telescopes and binoculars and I’ll see you in the back yard…
Tonight we start with a group of young stars beginning their stellar evolution and end with an old solitary elder preparing to move onto an even ‘‘higher realm.’’ Open cluster IC 4665 is easily detected with just about any optical aid about a finger-width north-northeast of Beta Ophiuchi (RA 17 46 18 Dec +05 43 00). Discovered by Philippe Loys de Cheseaux in the mid-1700s, this 1,400 light year distant cluster consists of about 30 mixed-magnitude stars all less than 40 million years of age. Despite its early discovery, IC 4665 did not achieve broad enough recognition for Dreyer to include it in the late nineteenth-century New General Catalog (NGC), and it was later added as a supplement to the NGC in the Index Catalog of 1908. Be sure to use low power to see all of this large group.
Saturday, July 25, 2009 – Today we celebrate a success of the U.S.S.R. space program with the achievement of cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya, the first woman to walk in space (in 1982 on this date) and only the second female to go into space, preceding Sally Ride. Today is also the date of the 1973 launch of Soviet Mars 5 probe. Although it didn’t complete its full mission, it did send back 60 photos of the Martian Southern Hemisphere!
Although poor position makes study difficult during the first few lunar days, be sure to look for the ancient impact Vendelinus. Spanning 150 kilometers in diameter and with walls reaching up to 4,400 meters in height, lava flow has long ago eradicated any interior features. Its old walls hold mute testimony to later impact events such as crater Holden on the south shore, larger Lame on the northeast edge, and sharp Lohse northwest. Mark your challenge list!
Sunday, July 26, 2009 – On this date in 1969 in a vacuum-sealed room, the very first sample return of Moon rocks was studied.
Our own vacuum of space awaits as we view the area around Mare Crisium to have a look at this month’s lunar challenge—Macrobius.
You’ll find it just northwest of the Crisium shore. Spanning 64 kilometers in diameter, this Class I impact crater drops to a depth of nearly 3,600 meters—about the same as many of our Earthly mines. Its central peak rises to 1,100 meters and may be visible as a small speck inside the crater’s interior. Be sure to mark your lunar challenge lists, and look for other features you may have missed before!
Until next week? Enjoy your observations and keep reaching for the stars!
This week’s awesome images are (in order of appearance): Henri Deslandres (historical image), IC 4665 (credit—Palomar Observatory, courtesy of Caltech), Vendelinus (credit—Alan Chu), NGC 6401 (credit—Palomar Observatory, courtesy of Caltech), Macrobius on the edge of Crisium (credit—Greg Konkel) Omicron Ophiuchi (credit—Palomar Observatory, courtesy of Caltech) and Jupiter (credit-Sky & Telescope: Sean Walker). We thank you so much!
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