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Celestrial Events for
July
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Mercurys Greatest Western Elongation (21d 47m 8s)
(10:49:19) Mercury's Greatest Western Elongation (21d 47m 8s) - Best Morning View

Wednesday, July 2, 2008
New Moon
(19:19:43) New Moon

Thursday, July 3, 2008
Aphelion - Earth is farthest from the sun
(22:16:43) Aphelion - Earth is farthest from the sun

Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Jupiter Opposition
(01:59:56) Jupiter Opposition

Wednesday, July 9, 2008
First Quarter Moon
(21:36:27) First Quarter Moon

Friday, July 18, 2008
Full Moon
(01:00:09) Full Moon

Friday, July 25, 2008
Last Quarter Moon
(11:43:17) Last Quarter Moon

 
Other_Celestial Events
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Neptune Reaches Opposition
Since Neptune will reach opposition on August 14, 2008, It is in excellent position for observing until end of October.
[Click HERE for more information]

Subscribe to our Calendar of Events Feed

Today in Astronomy History
courtesy of astroplanet.info

September 5, 1907
An entire family was reportedly crushed by a meteorite in Hsin-p ai Wei, Weng-li, China

 
How to Photograph the Moon and Planets
 
Sale to Benefit Astronomers without Borders
 
Vixen A70Lf 70mm Achromatic Refractor Telescope Package w/ PortaMount
Vixen A70Lf 70mm Achromatic Refractor Telescope Package w/ PortaMount
$399.00
Information about A70Lf 70mm Achromatic Refractor Telescope Package
Meade 114EQ-A 4.5 Short Tube Equatorial Newtonian Reflector
Meade 114EQ-A 4.5 Short Tube Equatorial Newtonian Reflector
$169.00
Information about 114EQ-A 4.5 Short Tube Equatorial Newtonian Reflector
Star Blast 4.5" Dobsonian Reflector
Star Blast 4.5" Dobsonian Reflector
$179.95
Information about StarBlast Astro Telescope
Celestron NexStar SE
Celestron NexStar SE
$799.00
Information about NexStar 5 SE with StarBright XLT Coatings
Vixen VMC95L with Mini PortaMount
Fantastic VALUE!!! Vixen VMC95L with Mini PortaMount
$399.00
Information about VMC95L with Mini PortaMount
Meade 15mm Plossl, 2x Barlow & Lunar Filter Kit
Meade 15mm Plossl, 2x Barlow & Lunar Filter Kit
$49.95
Information about 15mm Plossl, 2X Barlow & Lunar Filter Kit
Meade MA17.5mm Eyepiece & 2X Barlow Lens Kit
Meade MA17.5mm Eyepiece & 2X Barlow Lens Kit
$29.95
Information about MA17.5mm Eyepiece & 2X Barlow Lens Kit
Meade Eyepieces and Filter Accessory Kit
Meade Eyepieces and Filter Accessory Kit
$99.95
Information about Eyepieces and Filter Accessory Kit
Celestron Polarzing Filter Set 1-1/4 inch
Celestron Polarzing Filter Set 1-1/4 inch
$49.95
Information about Polarzing Filter Set 1-1/4 inch
Celestron Eyepiece Filter Set 3 - 1-1/4 inch (#23A, 38A, 58, ND-50)
Celestron Eyepiece Filter Set 3 - 1-1/4 inch (#23A, 38A, 58, ND-50)
$49.95
Information about Eyepiece Filter Set 3 - 1-1/4 inch (#23A, 38A, 58, ND-50)
Meade #905 Variable Polarizing Filter Series 4000
Meade #905 Variable Polarizing Filter Series 4000
$49.95
Information about #905 Variable Polarizing Filter Series 4000
Celestron Eyepiece Filter Set 2 - 1-1/4 inch (#12, 25, 56, ND-25)
Celestron Eyepiece Filter Set 2 - 1-1/4 inch (#12, 25, 56, ND-25)
$49.95
Information about Eyepiece Filter Set 2 - 1-1/4 inch (#12, 25, 56, ND-25)
Celestron Eyepiece Filter Set 4 - 1-1/4 inch (#8,15,47,82A)
Celestron Eyepiece Filter Set 4 - 1-1/4 inch (#8,15,47,82A)
$49.95
Information about Eyepiece Filter Set 4 - 1-1/4 inch (#8,15,47,82A)
Meade SET #2 Color Filter Series 4000
Meade SET #2 Color Filter Series 4000
$49.95
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Meade SET #3 Color Filter Series 4000
Meade SET #3 Color Filter Series 4000
$49.95
Information about SET #3 Color Filter Series 4000
Celestron Eyepiece Filter Set 1 - 1-1/4 inch (#21, 80A, 15, Polarizing)
Celestron Eyepiece Filter Set 1 - 1-1/4 inch (#21, 80A, 15, Polarizing)
$49.95
Information about Eyepiece Filter Set 1 - 1-1/4 inch (#21, 80A, 15, Polarizing)
Sectrum Color Filter Wheel
Sectrum Color Filter Wheel SALE!!!
$139.95 $99.95
Information about Color Filter Wheel
Meade SET #1 Color Filter Series 4000
Meade SET #1 Color Filter Series 4000
$139.95 $49.95
Information about SET #1 Color Filter Series 4000
Kendrick Kwik-Focus Masks
Kendrick Kwik-Focus Masks
Buy the
Celestron SkyScout
SkyScout Personal Planetarium
$299.00 $199.00
Information about SkyScout Personal Planetarium
mySKYâ„¢ - Your Personal Guide for Sky Exploration
mySKYâ„¢ - Your Personal Guide for Sky Exploration
$299.00
Information about mySKY®PLUS
SoftwareBisque TheSky6 Professional Edition
SoftwareBisque TheSky6 Professional Edition
$299.00 $279.00
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DSI III Color Camera
$1399.00
Information about DSI III Color Camera
DSI III Monochromatic Camera
$1399.00
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July 9, 2008 - Jupiter Opposition

courtesy of astroplanet.info

Jupiter Opposition July 9 1:59am PSTOpposition
July 9, 2008 1:59 AM PST - Jupiter reaches its Opposition!

Jupiter is located in the constellation Sagittarius until January 2009.  Since Jupiter reaches opposition on July 9th, Jupiter will be visible all night for the entire month and is in the best position for observing for the year.  Views on Jupiter will be fantastic until October.

Jupiter is currently in retrograde motion. It will reach opposition on July 9th, the same day as the first quarter moon. On July 17th Jupiter will set less than 3°30’ from the waxing, gibbous moon.

Oppositions

courtesy of astroplanet.info

For planets outside the Earth’s orbit (Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto), the months around Oppositions are the best time to view these. An Opposition occurs when the planet is opposite from the Sun, relative to the Earth. At Opposition the planet will rise as the Sun sets and will set as the Sun rises providing an entire night of observation. Also at Opposition the planet comes physically closest to the Earth in it’s orbit so it appears as large as possible.

From Observing Planets

Opposition

Oppositions for this Year

courtesy of astronomyworld.net

Date
Event

Observing Jupiter

courtesy of astroplanet.info

Where To Look

The Ecliptic

If you were to trace the path of the Sun across the sky, the Sun’s path is a line called the Ecliptic.  The Ecliptic rises and falls during the year:  The highest point is the Summer Solstice and at the lowest point, 6 months later, occurs on the Winter Solstice.  Once you get a feeling of where the Ecliptic lies, you might discover that the moon and all the planets, with the exception of the former planet Pluto lies within a few degrees of the Ecliptic.  The Ecliptic represents the edge view of the Solar System.

At Opposition, Jupiter is OPPOSITE the Sun, so as the Sun sets in the West - Jupiter rises in the East and as the Sun rises in the East - Jupiter will set in the West.

Scanning the Ecliptic will help you locate the moon and planets. To pinpoint a specific planet at a specific time, you may want to: consult magazines like Sky and Telescope or Astronomy, or use software (see below), or one of the new handheld computerized realtime gadgets (see below), or consult a website like Astro Planet.[ :-) Ed.]

As an outer planet, Jupiter is best observed around its Opposition. Jupiter’s opposition occurs about once a year. Jupiter appears striped with light and dark cloud zones. If you extend an imaginary line through the center of the planet and parallel to the cloud zones you will see what appears to be tiny stars along the line. These are the moons of Jupiter.

Optimal Times

Jupiter is at opposition around mid July, so the best time to observe Jupiter is between May and September.

Equipment Needed

Telescopes

Because planets are bright, though tiny in size, a large telescope isn’t necessarily required for viewing planets like Mercury, Venus, Mars, Saturn and Jupiter.  Large aperture telescopes are very beneficial to make dim things bright, like nebulae, galaxies, star clusters and the far outer planets: Uranus, Neptune and Pluto.

Almost any telescope capable of magnifying 100 to 200 times is great for viewing planets and our moon.

Eyepieces

Eyepieces control magnification, field-of-view and eye relief.  You can consider the eyepiece half of your optical system.  Typically you will want high magnification eyepieces (100x-200x) for the moon and planets, while low power, wide field eyepieces are used for deep sky objects.

Calculating eyepieces

Each telescope is designed with a focal length.  Eyepieces also have a focal length. This value is usually printed on the side or top of the eyepiece. If you divide the focal length of the telescope by the focal length of an eyepiece that will give you the power or magnification that eyepiece will give with that telescope.

For example: An 8-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope has the focal length of around 2000mm.  If you use a 10mm eyepiece with that telescope you will have 200 magnification (2000/10). A 30mm eyepiece in the same telescope will produce 67 power (2000/30).

So the lower the focal length of an eyepiece, the higher the power.

Sometimes eyepieces are also specified with Apparent Field-of-View measured in degrees.  If you were to divide the Apparent Field-of-View by the power you will calculate the Actual Field-of-View that that eyepiece would have with the telescope.

To compare various eyepieces click here.

Planetary Filters

Planetary Filters Because they reflect light directly from the Sun, most planets are very bright.  If you think of a telescope as a light amplifier, then most telescopes will produce an image of a planet that is too bright to pick out subtle details.  There are two ways to adjust the light: planetary Filters and Off-axis masks.

Wratten System

The Kodak company developed a numbering system to specify color filters for use with black and white film.  This is known as the Wratten System.  Astronomy uses the same numbering system to specify planetary filters.

Because observational astronomy lacks color in the views of astronomical object until one gets into very large aperture telescopes (greater than 10 inches), using a planetary filter is like using a color filter with black and white film.  They will reduce the brightness and enhance various features seen on the planetary disk.

Suggested Filters for Jupiter

Wratten Number Color Feature
12 Yellow to darken the Blue festoons of the southern edge of the northern hemisphere and the equatorial region
15 Yellow to darken the Blue festoons of the southern edge of the northern hemisphere and the equatorial region
30 Magenta to enhance white oval features in the southern hemisphere
47 Dark Blue to darken the brown belts of Jupiter
57 Green to darken the brown belts of Jupiter
38A Blue to enhance the bright cloud zones and sharpen the boundaries of faint cloud currents
80A Blue to enhance the bright cloud zones and sharpen the boundaries of faint cloud currents

Off-axis Masks

Using an off-axis mask on the front of a telescope is another way to reduce the light gathered by a telescope for observing planets.  An off-axis mask is a plate that fits in the front opening of the telescope with a smaller hole located between the center and the edge of the opening (off-axis).  Frequently off-axis masks are built into the dust cover of some Newtonian reflector telescopes.  The hole is placed off-axis to avoid being blocked by the secondary mirror, usually located in the center of the aperture.

Using and off-axis mask has two advantages of filters.  They do not introduce false color and by reducing the usable aperture makes the telescope less sensitive to poor seeing conditions caused by turbulent atmosphere.

Kendrick Kwik-Focus

KwikFocus

One way to get an off axis mask is to purchase a Kendrick Kwik-Focus.  The Kwik-Focus is an off-axis mask with three equally separated holes.  It is a tool used by astrophotographers to assist in focusing.  Basically,  if your telescope is out-of-focus the mask will produce three separate images.  The astronomer simply focuses the telescope until all the images are merged together and the telescope is focused, the astronomer removes the plate and starts photographing.

To use the Kwik-focus to observe a planet, simply plug two of the holes with the conveniently supplied plugs supplied with the mask and return the plate to the front of the telescope.

For more information on the Kendrick KwikFocus go here.

Computerized Sky Guides

In the last couple of years a new class of astronomy gadgets have appeared.  These handheld devices integrate GPS, Electronic compasses and motion sensors to create and integrate system that allow you to locate and identify visible objects in the sky without a telescope or other celestial aid.

These devices have three basic functions:

  1. Locate an object from the device’s database. Select the object from the database and follow the arrows to aim the device at the object in the sky.
  2. Identify an object in the sky.  Aim the device at an object in the sky and press the “Identify” button to get a list from brightest to dimmest of candidate objects.
  3. Give visual and audio information about a select object in the Device.

These devices first must sync to the GPS satellites, so they work best when there is a relative clear view of the sky.  Also, these devices are sensitive to electric and magnetic fields, so their battery compartments are shielded or separated from the rest of the mechanism and they work best when you step away from large metal objects like cars and electrical fields like high power lines.

Celestron SkyScout Personal Planetarium

Celestron SkyScout

Announce in 2006 at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES), this is the first-of-its-breed device.  The idea was so novel that it won the “CES 2006 – Best of Innovation Award”, the “Readers Digest – Best 2006 Award”, the “PC Magazine – Last Gadget Standing Award” and “Popular Mechanics- Editor’s Choice Award (CES 2006)”.

This device consists of :

  1. A black & white, backlit, liquid crystal display
  2. Audio port with “ear-buds”.
  3. Memory Card Port
  4. USB Port – for updating firmware.

This device runs on two AA batteries that are place in metal shielded tubes before you install into the device to reduce electrical interference.

To aim the SkyScout, you look through the device that has two rings on either end of the chamber.  The far ring has a ring of LED arrows to help you point your way

For more information on the Celestron SkyScout go here.

Meade mySky - Your Personal Guide for Sky Exploration

Announced in 2007, Meade came out with their mySky device. The mySky is a light weight,  gun-shaped device which sport LED at the top side of the device for aiming and a 2 inch color video screen for visual output.

When you first turn this device on you get an option to watch an instruction video on how to use the device or simply start using the device.

The mySky consist of:

  1. A color video screen
  2. Audio port with “ear-buds”.
  3. Memory Card Port
  4. USB Port – for updating firmware.
  5. A cable port in interface the mySky with a Meade computerized telescope system.  You can tell your telescope to move to a selected object from the mySky.
Meade mySky

This device runs on 4 AA batteries that are located at the bottom of the handle so they do not need to be shielded.

To aim the mySky simply look down the LED gunsite of the device and follow the “real time” star map projected in the video screen.

For more information on the Meade mySky go here.

Computer Software

One of the easiest ways to pinpoint the location of a planet or any celestial object for any given night is to use computer software to simulate the sky. Here are a few examples:

Starry Night

Available for Windows and Macintosh, this software is some of the most popular sky simulators.  There is also a “PRO” version which allows you to control a computerized “GOTO” telescope.

More information for Starry Night can be found here.

Starry Night
TheSky

The Sky

A beautiful program available for Windows is another popular choice for simulating the sky.

More information for TheSky can be found here.

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