STAR GAZER
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STAR GAZER

Episode # 09-47 / 1668th Show

To Be Aired : Monday 11/23/2009 through Sunday 11/29/2009

"Thanksgiving Week's Stars And
Start Your Mars Watch Now"


Horkheimer: Greetings, greetings fellow star gazers. Every year at Thanksgiving I like to remind you about three cosmic birds in addition to the turkey on the table. And this year will be no exception. However I'd also like to point out a few other wonderful cosmic objects, which you can see after Thanksgiving dinner as a kind of heavenly dessert. Let me show you.

O.K., we've got our skies set up for any night this Thanksgiving week about 8 p.m. facing southwest where the brightest thing you'll see will be the king of the planets Jupiter. In addition to looking wonderful to the naked eye it is exciting to watch through a small telescope with its four largest moons constantly changing orbit around it. Next if you look to the right of Jupiter due west you'll see three bright stars which make up the Summer Triangle, but which I call the Thanksgiving for-the-birds triangle because each star is related to a bird. Altair is the brightest star in Aquila the Eagle, Deneb is the brightest star in Cygnus the Swan and Vega is the brightest star in Lyra the Harp which thousands of years ago had several feathery reincarnations. So you've got three cosmic birds in addition to your Thanksgiving turkey.

Next look almost overhead and you'll see four much dimmer stars, which mark the Great Square of Pegasus, which is one of autumn's most prominent constellations. But what I think is really nifty is if you look to the east you'll see most of winter's brightest stars just beginning to rise. Three stars lined up in a row mark Orion's belt, two bright stars mark his shoulders and two bright stars mark his knees. Close beside him are the two brightest stars of the Gemini Twins, Castor and Pollux and above them both the bright red star Aldebaran, which marks the eye of Taurus the Bull. And right beside it if you're far from city lights and have dark skies you'll see one of my favorite groups of stars the very tiny but exquisite Pleiades, the Seven Sisters and below it the bright star Capella of Auriga the Charioteer.

So any Thanksgiving week night if you go outside around 8 p.m. you'll see not only the Summer Triangle getting ready to set but most of winter's stars starting to rise plus the winged horse Pegasus almost overhead. But aha! this year there is something very special added because if you wait until around 11 p.m. and look east you'll see a bright reddish gold object rising and that dear friends is the planet Mars which you can watch get steadily brighter night after night until it reaches its brightest on January 29 when it will be at opposition and at its closest and brightest for this meeting with Earth, a meeting which we experience every 26 months. So start your Mars watch now as it grows brighter every single night and gets higher in the heavens each night at the same time. Happy Thanksgiving and keep looking up!


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"Star Gazer" is available with iTunes,
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and we're now on YouTube

Check Out WPBT's Version

 
 
 
 

Star Gazer Minute

#09-47 M

11/23/2009 thru 11/29/2009

"Thanksgiving Week's Stars And
Start Your Mars Watch Now"

Horkheimer: Cosmic goodies await you after Thanksgiving dinner. Thanksgiving week about 8 p.m. face southwest and the planet king will beg you to look at it through a small telescope. Look west and you'll see the three bright stars, which make up the Summer Triangle. Each star is related to a bird so in addition to your Thanksgiving turkey you've got three cosmic birds after dinner. Look east and you'll see most of winter's brightest stars just rising, Orion the hunter, the Gemini Twins, Taurus the Bull and the tiny but exquisite Pleiades, the Seven Sisters. Plus at 11 o'clock you'll see rouge gold Mars rising. Watch it get brighter every single night until it reaches super brightness January 29th! Happy cosmic Thanksgiving and keep looking up!


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* This week's Sky At A Glance and Planet Roundup from Sky & Telescope.

This week's Sky At A Glance displays current week only.


Starry Night Deluxe was used to produce this episode of Star Gazer


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