The First Quarter Moon is Sunday August 31. This can be a “blue” First Quarter Moon. The “eyes of Clavius” are seen on the first. Mars is passing by means of Virgo heading in the direction of the star Spica. Saturn is rising earlier than midnight and is the brightest object above the jap horizon. Saturn is near Neptune. Venus and Jupiter are seen within the morning twilight and are drawing aside.
The First Quarter Moon is Sunday August 31. This can be a “blue” First Quarter Moon the second first Quarter moon in a month. The Moon is at apogee, the place is is furthest from the Earth, on the thirtieth. The “eyes of Clavius” are seen on the first.
North-eastern twilight sky on the morning of Saturday, August 30 as seen from Adelaide
at 05:43 ACST (60 minutes earlier than dawn, click on to embiggen).
Venus and Jupiter are drawing aside. Jupiter types a
triangle with Procyon and Betelgeuse. Venus is changing into tougher to see low above the horizon
The insets are the telescopic views of Venus and Jupiter right now.
Jap sky on the night of Saturday, August 30 as seen from Adelaide at 23:00 ACST (click on to embiggen).
Saturn is rising greater above the jap horizon. The insets exhibits the telescopic view right now and the binocular view of Saturn and Neptune.
Comparable views shall be seen from the remainder of Australia at roughly the equal native time (90 minutes after sundown).
North-western
sky on Sunday, August 31 as seen from Adelaide at 19:20 ACST (90
minutes after sundown, click on to embiggen). The Final Quarter Moon is near the intense pink star Antares. This can be a “blue” First Quarter Moon, the second final quarter Moon in a month.
The inset is the telescopic view of “the Eyes of Clavius” on Monday the first on the similar time
Comparable views shall be seen from the remainder of Australia at roughly the equal native time (90 minutes after sundown).
Complete sky on Saturday, August 30 as seen from Adelaide at 19:20 ACST, 90 minutes after sundown (click on
to embiggen). Mars is within the north-west.
Vivid Achernar is rising from the Southern horizon. Scorpius and the galactic core is on the Zenith.
The
Southern Cross is sinking within the Southern sky. The moon is waxing and
the fainter clusters and nebula have gotten tougher to see.
Elsewhere
in Australia will see the same view on the equal time (90 minutes after sundown).
Mercury is low within the morning twilight.
Venus is reducing within the morning twilight shifting away from Jupiter.
Mars is reducing within the night sky and passing by means of Virgo in the direction of Spica.
Jupiter climbs within the morning twilight above Venus. Jupiter types a
triangle with Procyon and Betelgeuse.
Saturn is rising earlier than midnight. It’s close to Neptune
Labels: weekly sky