THE SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM 207-780-4249   www.usm.maine.edu/planet
<http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.usm.maine.edu%2Fplanet&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNHulkHuLP13bOG2PkNrPazsGWFs2A>
70 Falmouth Street   Portland, Maine 04103 43.6667° N
 70.2667° W  Altitude:  10 feet below sea level Founded January 1970 Julian
Date:  2459327.18
2020-2021: CXIX


THE DAILY ASTRONOMER
Wednesday, April 28, 2021
May 2021 Night Sky Calendar Part I

Leaping ahead a bit, are we?
Not really.     May begins on Saturday!  We've scheduled the weekly quiz on
Friday, which leaves us two days in which to at least begin to post the
monthly night sky calendar.

*SATURDAY, MAY 1:   MAY DAY (BELTANE)*
We all know about the different seasonal points:

   -  vernal equinox (~March 21)
   - summer solstice (~June 21)
   - autumnal equinox (~Sept 22/23)
   - winter solstice. (~December 21)

The calendar also includes four cross-quarter days, those midway between
successive seasonal points:


   - *Imbolc (Groundhog's Day) Feb 2 * [Between the winter solstice and
   vernal equinox]
   - *Beltane (May Day)   May 1 *[Between the vernal equinox and summer
   solstice]
   - *Lammas : August 1 *[Between the summer solstice and autumnal equinox]
   - *Samhain (Halloween)  October 31* [Between the autumnal equinox and
   winter solstice.]


Today is May 1, the second of the four cross quarter days.  Although spring
started more than a month ago, consistent spring-like weather should arrive
someday soon.

*SUNDAY, MAY 2:  TA TA, TAURUS!*

[image: TaurusCC.jpg]

Using constellations as calendars is deliciously good fun!   Regard the
zodiac constellation Taurus the Bull.   The Sun appears to move through
Taurus between May 15 - June 21.  In fact, the Sun leaves Taurus just after
the summer solstice and moves into Gemini.       Consequently, one
shouldn't bother to find Taurus in May as its stars will appear too close
to the Sun.      However, by late July one can see Taurus rising in the
pre-dawn eastern sky.   Its v-shaped face, consisting primarily of the
Hyades Star Cluster, will appear in full just before the intensifying
twilight obscures it.        Remember that stars rise four minutes earlier
each day so that by late summer, Taurus will be well placed in the eastern
morning sky.      By autumn, Taurus will move into the evening sky.   By
early winter, Taurus -and the Pleiades Star Cluster poised on its shoulder-
rises in the early evening.  However, as winter is far away from us, Taurus
is about to exit stage west.

*MONDAY, MAY 3: LAST QUARTER MOON*

*MONDAY, MAY 3:  SATURN 4.4 DEGREES NORTH OF THE MOON*

[image: skychart.png]

The last quarter moon and Saturn will rise together just after 2:00 a.m.
today. At magnitude 0.7, Saturn is about as bright as Altair, the brightest
star in Aquila the Eagle.   Having the moon appear nearby will help one
find this moderately bright planet.          One important note: the
configuration above doesn't last long as the moon moves 1/2 degree every
hour.  Throughout the morning, one will see the moon appear to shift away
from the sixth world in our sky.  Both the moon and Saturn will occupy the
constellation Capricornus the Seagoat.

*TUESDAY, MAY 4:   JUPITER 4.9 DEGREES NORTH OF THE MOON*
[image: skychart (1).png]
See the waning crescent moon (43% illuminated) just south of Jupiter, the
brighter of the two morning sky planets.   One will observe both worlds by
3:00 a.m.

*WEDNESDAY, MAY 5: ETA AQUARID METEOR SHOWER PEAKS*
Although considered a minor shower, the Eta Aquarid shower is particularly
noteworthy because Halley's Comet is  its parent body.  Although we won't
see Halley's Comet in our sky again until 2061, we can still see the lights
its particles create when they infiltrate the atmosphere.     While one
might see 30 - 40 meteors an hour at the peak time after midnight, this
shower tends to favor tropical and southern hemisphere observers because
the radiant is located in Aquarius, one of the most southerly of the zodiac
constellations.

*THURSDAY, MAY 6: AN EARLY MORNING ISS FLY-OVER*
Early risers won't want to miss the bright ISS fly-over this morning.
At 2:59:56 a.m, the International Space Station will appear 26 degrees
above the NW horizon.
At 3:00:39 a.m. the ISS attains its maximum altitude of 29 degrees. At that
time, the ISS will shine at magnitude -2.0, making it as bright as Jupiter.
At 3:05:56, the station will set on the ENE horizon.
Refer to the star chart below to see the ISS path through the starfield.


*TUESDAY, MAY 11:  NEW MOON*
Beginning of Lunation cycle 1217


To subscribe or unsubscribe from the Daily Astronomer:
https://lists.maine.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=DAILY-ASTRONOMER&A=
<https://lists.maine.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=DAILY-ASTRONOMER&A=1>