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Bright Venus continues moving closer to bright Jupiter: Both easily seen by eye just after sunset
Heavens-Above.com
Posted on 11/19/2008 7:59:03 AM PST by ETL
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An (hopefully) interesting aside: Both planets are currently in the constellation Sagittarius. The center of our Milky Way galaxy lies 30,000 light years off in the general direction of Sagittarius. One light year, the *distance* light travels in one year at its non-wavering speed of 186,000 miles per second, works out to about 6 trillion miles (actually 5.9 trillion). And so the center of our galaxy, then, is approximately 30,000 x ~6 trillion miles away from here.
heavens-above.com
http://heavens-above.com/
1
posted on
11/19/2008 7:59:03 AM PST
by
ETL
To: ETL
Both planets are currently in the constellation Sagittarius. The center of our Milky Way galaxy lies 30,000 light years off in the general direction of Sagittarius. One light year, the *distance* light travels in one year at its non-wavering speed of 186,000 miles per second, works out to about 6 trillion miles (actually 5.9 trillion). And so the center of our galaxy, then, is approximately 30,000 x ~6 trillion miles away from here.And it's all Bush's Fault.
2
posted on
11/19/2008 8:00:50 AM PST
by
JRios1968
(Sarah Palin smash Hulk!)
To: ETL
Bright Venus continues moving closer to bright Jupiter GOSH! Do you think they'll collide?
;^)
3
posted on
11/19/2008 8:00:54 AM PST
by
WayneS
(Respect the 2nd Amendment; Repeal the 16th)
To: ETL
Thanks for the post. I saw both of them last night - figured them for planets, but didn't know which ones.
Venus was especially bright.
4
posted on
11/19/2008 8:05:11 AM PST
by
ComputerGuy
(HM2 USN M/3/3 Marines RVN 66/67)
To: Anoreth
5
posted on
11/19/2008 8:14:08 AM PST
by
Tax-chick
("I thank Thee, dear Jesus, that Thy will and not mine has been done." ~St. Frances Cabrini)
To: ETL
Thanks for that info!
I’ve been admiring the display every evening now for days and wondered which were which. I knew one was Jupiter.
(IR not much an astronomer.)
Both are quite brilliant and large in our dark rural sky!
6
posted on
11/19/2008 8:15:17 AM PST
by
ozark hilljilly
(Obama lies, the Constitution dies)
To: ETL
Most EXCELLENT thread! Thank you for posting it. We’ve had over a week of very clear warm nights and I’ve been seeing stars I’ve never noticed before, it’s that clear. And yes, Venus is huge. Yes indeed, for several days there I was wondering if it WAS a slow moving “vehicle” light. I mean, it was moving too slow to be a vehicle, but seemed to be moving way too fast to be a star.
Also, looking further toward the southwest I’m seeing what I always (probably incorrectly) called Orion’s Belt. When I first see it, the three big center stars are just about vertical to the earth, but hours later they are almost horizontal.
Such a treat it’s been. (nice having an outdoor hot tub!)
To: All
Also check the heavens-above website for International Space Station-Space Shuttle passes that might be visible from your particular location. Of course you'll first have to tell them where the heck you are! The Station can potentially be very bright, depending on how high in the sky the pass is (assuming it will in fact pass over your part of the world). And with the Shuttle currently attached to it it should be even brighter. Check the site below and/or spaceweather.com for schedules. Spaceweather makes it a lot easier. All you need to provide them is your zip code!
See heavens-above.com for more info. After registering, look on the main page for ISS (International Space Station):
http://heavens-above.com/
spaceweather.com:
http://spaceweather.com/
8
posted on
11/19/2008 8:15:57 AM PST
by
ETL
(Smoking gun evidence on ALL the ObamaRat-commie connections at my newly revised FR Home/About page)
To: ETL
9
posted on
11/19/2008 8:25:02 AM PST
by
LiteKeeper
(Beware the secularization of America; the Islamization of Eurabia)
To: EggsAckley
You’re welcome. Glad you found it interesting.
10
posted on
11/19/2008 8:38:52 AM PST
by
ETL
(Smoking gun evidence on ALL the ObamaRat-commie connections at my newly revised FR Home/About page)
To: ETL
Venus is now extremely bright and easily seen by naked eye... Easily seen, heck, such is its brightness, you could read a newspaper by it, that is, if anyone still read newspapers.
11
posted on
11/19/2008 8:44:56 AM PST
by
Plutarch
To: ETL
Bump! Cool stuff. Thanks!
12
posted on
11/19/2008 8:49:00 AM PST
by
dead
(I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
To: EggsAckley
Clear COOL nights makes for better viewing. Warm air = more turbulence in the atmo.
To: ETL
You know, there’s actually a theory that this is the same configuration of planets that was thought to be the “Star” the wise men from the East followed to find Jesus.
When they eclipsed each other, the caused an amazing “star” to appear in the East.
Just reflecting.
To: AFreeBird
I know what you mean about the cool nights, but we’ve been having some very strange low, low humidity weather, very clear skies, especially at night, and temps in the high 80s/low90s for nearly two weeks. Bizarre weather.
Today however we are back to our humid marine layer fog crud (I hate the fog).
It’s been really fun seeing all those stars night after night.
To: EggsAckley
not sure where you are but here in central florida we have had below normal temps since last sunday...daytime highs are high to low 60’s and mid 30’s to low 40’s at nite...
normal highes this time of year are mid 70’s.....
To: ETL
I have been seeing this. Last night, they were especially brilliant even before the sky was completely dark!!
17
posted on
11/19/2008 9:14:19 AM PST
by
La Enchiladita
(Don' need no steenkin' bipartisan..... Oops, have I failed to be "gracious" AGAIN?!!)
To: EggsAckley
Wish I had a better view of the night sky. Too much light pollution where I live. If I want to use my telescope, and view anything outside the system (and even some stuff in the system) I have to pack it up and haul it out to the country. PITA.
To: tatsinfla
I’m on the coast of central California, Monterey Bay Area. Seems like your weather and our weather got mixed up somehow.
Heh.
To: AFreeBird
Wish I had a better view of the night sky. Too much light pollution where I live. These planets are bright enough to be seen easily from darn near everywhere. The International Space Station also can be very bright if and when it passes over your location. Check the two links I previously posted on this thread (heavens-above.com and spaceweather.com) for a visible pass schedule for your location.
20
posted on
11/19/2008 9:22:26 AM PST
by
ETL
(Smoking gun evidence on ALL the ObamaRat-commie connections at my newly revised FR Home/About page)
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