THE SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM
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70 Falmouth Street   Portland, Maine 04103
43.6667° N                   70.2667° W
Altitude:  10 feet below sea level
Founded January 1970
Julian Date: 2458814.16
2019-2020:  LIX


THE DAILY ASTRONOMER
Tuesday, November 26, 2019
November Night Sky Tour
Evening



*[image: jupiter-venus-conjunction-july-1-2015-tacoma-washington.jpg]*
*Venus and Jupiter:*  line up in the western evening sky

5:00 p.m.
A despairing time for those tortured souls who prefer light to darkness.
Deepest autumn has set upon us and colliered night descends in the late
afternoon instead of early evening.     Be joyful, however, for our sky
bedazzles us with celestial lights.      Well over in the west, one can see
the twin planetary jewels, Jupiter and Venus, drawing ever closer together.
   While Venus is about six times brighter than Jupiter, both worlds
outshine all the night sky stars.      Be aware that even though the moon
is new tonight and therefore not visible, it will ascend as a waxing
crescent in the western evening late this week.  We shall see the trinity
of the dark sky's brightest lights: Moon, Jupiter and Venus gathered above
the fading twilight.    Tonight, the two planets stand alone and apart.


[image: 9VQAHk5WBhoVvifCs4e8tA-320-80.jpg]
*Cassiopeia:* the rising queen
7:00 p.m.

The ancient queen Cassiopeia ascends toward her apex high in the northern
sky.   Like the other circumpolar constellations, this star pattern
describes a circle centered on the north celestial pole, the position of
which Polaris approximates.    Though the five stars comprising the main
pattern seem as though they are positioned side by side, they are located
at varying distances from Earth.  For instance, whereas Schedar (the second
star from the right) consists of four stars about 228 light years from us,
Ruckbat (the second star from the left) is an eclipsing binary star almost
exactly 100 light years away.   The eclipses are difficult to observe as
the brightness diminishes only slightly and successive eclipses are
separated by more than two years.     A reminder that stars are akin to
snowflakes: when perceived from a distance, they seem white and
nondescript.  Closer scrutiny reveals them to be truly complex in structure.

[image: j8grRwxWGHkXShsob5u9Ac-970-80.jpg]
*The Seven Sisters*

9:00 p.m.
Atlas's daughters rise into greater prominence by mid evening.    Looking
very much like a smudge of light poised on Taurus the bull's shoulder, this
gathering of mythical females has been striving to keep three strides ahead
of the lusty Orion.    Throughout these many centuries, they have
maintained a healthy distance from their persistent pursuer.   Granted,
they needn't bother to flee, for the stars comprising this cluster fly
through the star streams at a distance of 444 light years.  Orion's
component stars lurk nowhere near the Seven Sisters.  Betelgeuse, Orion's
shoulder star, is nearly 200 light years farther away.  Orion's belt stars,
Mintaka, Alnilam and Alnitak, are more than 1000 light years more distant.

When observed telescopically, the Pleiades reveals dozens more component
stars,  However, only in a time exposure photograph does one see the
whispers of gases surrounding these stars.  Once believed to have been the
residue of nebula from which the cluster formed about 120 million years
ago, this cloud, called the "Maia Nebula," is merely a rarefied nebula
through which the Pleiades is currently traveling.  The star light reflects
off the gases, like a firefly's light illuminating a fog bank, producing a
beautiful reflection nebula.

[image: orion-nebula.jpg]
*Orion the Hunter*

Midnight
The midnight hour finds Orion the Hunter passing along the meridian, the
imaginary line separating the eastern and western skies.   Although we're
still slightly less than a month away from astronomical winter, Orion rises
through the eastern sky this evening.   To look at Orion is to see stars in
both infancy and toward life's end.     Betelgeuse is a bloated red
supergiant due to explode as a supernova "soon," within at least one
million years. (It could have exploded already.)    Within Orion's sword
one finds the Orion Nebula, a furiously active starbirth region.      The
blazing light it emits originates in the trapezium, an ultra hot collection
of stars that impart high energy radiation into the nebula.  The nebula
absorbs the energy and then re-emits it as visible light in a process
called fluorescence.


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