Sky Watch
 
Used by permission from Universe Today - http://www.universetoday.com

       Friday, January 21 - How about if we try to ignore the Moon tonight and instead search for Comet C/2004 Q2? Unaided-eye detection will be next to impossible, but we're in luck as the "Magnificent Machholz" will be only three degrees above Alpha Persei. Making its closest approach to the Sun in just a few days, spotting Comet Machholz' dust tail with so much moonlight will be a real challenge - but at my last observation the ion tail was so strong it just might show! Having passed closest to the Earth earlier this month, Comet Machholz is delighting viewers with clear skies world-wide. On its way to becoming a circumpolar object, this great comet will make a wonderful sight in binoculars with 1.8 magnitude Mirfak in the same field. If you plan on using a telescope, be sure to take the time to study this giant star as well! As the senior member of the Alpha Persei group, this particular star is around 4000 times more luminous than our own Sun and is about 570 light years away. If you are able to discern the other bright stellar members of this group, make note of their position! They might not be cruising quite so fast as Comet Machholz, but they will have changed positions in the sky by around one degree in say... 90,000 years? Just a cosmic sneeze!

       Saturday, January 22 - This time of year is best to look for some strange occurrences that are not astronomy-related - but wonderful for SkyWatchers! Thanks to a multitude of high thin clouds and an abundance of ice crystals in our atmosphere, be on the lookout for various forms of atmospheric phenomena. The most common is known as the "sun dog" and will look very much like a mock rainbow that appears in a small portion of the sky near the Sun. Much more dramatic is the "sun pillar", which will look like a huge column of light towering over the Sun both during rise and set. A lot less common, but certainly inspiring is the "parhelic arc", which appears as a circular (in whole or part) "rainbow" directly around the Sun. Do these things only happen during the day? No! It is not uncommon on frigid nights to see "light pillars" above distant street lights, or to catch a "moon dog" when conditions are just right. For more information on these fantastic phenomena, as well as some downright awesome photos, please take the time to visit with Atmospheric Optics. It makes the cold months just a little more warm...

       Sunday, January 23 - Tonight the Moon will be at its furthest point from the Earth (apogee), but not far enough to darken skies as its gibbous form appears almost two hours before sunset and reveals Saturn only six degrees away at skydark. Almost an equal distance on the other side of our "near full" Moon are the famous "twins" of Gemini - Castor and Pollux. Aim your telescopes at the northernmost of these stars as we briefly explore Alpha Geminorum!
        What we are looking at when we view Castor is six-part star system that is around 45 light years away. In a telescope, only three of these stars are visible. If you look carefully, you will see the primary star is actually a fairly close double, only separated in brightness by about 1 magnitude. Each of these two stars is also a spectroscopic double and their companions orbit within just a few million miles of their primary star in a matter of days. To really understand just how close this system is, imagine our own Sun being twice its size and having a small companion orbiting even closer than Mercury. Somewhere out around Pluto would be an identical sun and companion! Moving elliptically around each other, our pair of doubles takes about 400 years to orbit each other. At closest, we would see a separation of about 1.8 arc seconds, but right now they are about 2.2 arc seconds apart and the gap is gradually widening. In around 50 years from now, this "pair of pairs" will have moved to almost 6.5 arc seconds apart!
        If you want an additional challenge, see if you can spot the 9.5 magnitude "orange" C star widely placed southeast of our tight system. It is also a spectroscopic binary that belongs to the same "group". It's about two-thirds the size of our own Sun and its identical companion orbits in 24 hours at only about a million and a half miles away. But don't expect to see them change soon, for it takes this particular pair 10,000 years to orbit 100 AU away the dual primary stars. Perhaps we could find a few "sunny" days there?
       And that's it for now. I sure hope that some of you have had clearer skies than I have! Until next week? Ask for the Moon - but keep reaching for the stars! Wishing you clear skies and light speed... ~Tammy Plotner

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