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Subject:
From:
Edward Gleason <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Edward Gleason <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 6 Jul 2016 10:15:57 -0400
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THE SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM
207-780-4249       www.usm.maine.edu/planet
70 Falmouth Street  Portland, Maine 04103
43.6667° N                   70.2667° W
Founded January 1970



*THE DAILY ASTRONOMERTuesday, July 7, 2016Bye, Bye Bees!*

In winter and early spring, one can observe both of our sky's prominent
galactic star clusters, the Pleiades (Seven Sisters) and Praesepe (the
Beehive) in the evening sky.  They resemble diffuse light patches located
at either side of the Milky Way's diffuse light bridge.  In fact, they look
like fragments that flaked off the galaxy b and.    Unlike the much larger
globular clusters lurking around the galactic halo, these open systems
travel around the Milky Way's spiral arms with us.   Consequently, these
open clusters tend to be more prominent owing to our closer proximity to
them.    The mammoth globulars, confined to the galaxy's center, are far
more distant and therefore much more difficult to see.



*Beehive Star Cluster:  a galactic cluster in Cancer the Crab has vanished
into the dusk, destined*
*to return to the pre-dawn early autumn sky.   Image:  Michael Sherick*
​
We have no difficulty observing the Seven Sisters and the Beehive in the
winter and spring as they are quite distinctive objects within the star
fields.  They are particularly beautiful when observed telescopically, as
such observations permit us to resolve many more stars: hundreds more,
provided the telescope is sufficiently powerful.       Even without a
telescope, one can still behold lovely clusters, the collective light of
which produces a phantom-like glow in the sky.

In May, we lose the seven sisters for awhile as the Sun obscures our view.
 Throughout the rest of May and June, we can still watch the Beehive Star
Cluster drawing closer to the setting Sun.  In July, Prasepe sets soon
after dark and by mid month we lose it altogether.    On August 1, the Sun
is directly over the Beehive, itself.      By September, it slowly emerges
in the pre-dawn eastern sky, where one will currently find the Seven
Sisters.

This week, we prepare to bid adieu to the Beehive Star Cluster, so named as
they resemble a bee swarm when seen through a telescope.     Their passage
out of the evening sky marks the arrival of middle Summer.*  Their return
to the morning heralds the return of earliest autumn.     While we're still
protected from autumn for the moment, we at least know that summer's
progressing along nicely.   The Beehive's imminent disappearance serves as
a handy reminder that the natural cycles continued unabated.

For some, that is quite a comfort.





*"Middle summer" is not the same as Mid-summer, as the former term applies
to the middle of summer, while the latter term "mid summer" means summer's
beginning (solstice.)


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