As we’re now properly into the second half of summer season within the Northern hemisphere and the variety of hours accessible to us for stargazing are slowly however certainly growing once more, the delicate evenings make for some very snug viewings of some very particular wonders in our night time sky. So pull up a backyard chair, a cool drink and a pair of binoculars…
Eagle 1
The proud eagle has lengthy been acknowledged as a ruler of the skies and been a logo of status and energy so it’s no shock to be taught that it too has a spot in House. One eagle that’s as tightly sure within the human psyche of ‘House’ at this time because the phrase ‘Apollo’ evokes the House Age and the House Race is after all the 9.4 metre-wide Lander Module (LM) named ‘Eagle’ that introduced Astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin safely to and from the floor of the Moon in July 1969 (For a glance inside, see this YouTube video by Jared Owen). Though the ascent stage (prime half) of the module left the lunar floor a long time in the past, the underside half or ‘descent stage’ of the Eagle nonetheless stays on the touchdown web site of the Apollo 11 lunar mission which nonetheless captivates many as a captivating observational goal. The Apollo 11 crew landed within the ‘Sea of Tranquility’ – on the fringe of one of many large basalt-filled basins that have been created by one of many largest asteroid impacts within the early historical past of Earth’s pure satellite tv for pc.

Eagle LM touchdown web site. Picture Credit score: Stellarium/Nick Parke
Though an novice astronomer would want a really giant telescope to identify even a 700m-wide object on the Moon from 384 400km away on Earth, it’s nonetheless thrilling to know we’re wanting on the very a part of the Moon that first noticed mankind reaching out and truly touching one thing in House for the primary time. Maybe one of the best alternative this month for observing the touchdown web site of NASA’s ‘Eagle’ spacecraft can be on the 12th of the month at 4am when the Moon is highest within the sky.
Eagle 2
The subsequent ‘eagle’ in our August night time sky is a star inextricably linked to the chook of prey, that shiny star ‘Altair’. Human eyes aren’t too good at seeing at midnight so at a look we regularly miss the truth that there are violet, blue, crimson, orange and yellow-tinted in addition to white stars within the heavens. However Altair is among the few that ‘does what it says on the tin’ or quite is simply because it seems to the bare eye, as a it’s a white most important sequence star. The star’s title has an Arabian origin and means the “flying eagle”. It earns its title from being the ‘Alpha’ star or brightest star within the constellation of Aquila the Eagle and in Greek mythology Aquila was the pet eagle belonging to the king of the gods – Zeus, (if not Zeus himself, in disguise).With fewer stars of our star metropolis being seen in the summertime sky and with Altair having a magnitude lower than +1.0 (which inversely makes it one of many brightest, actually the 12th brightest star in the entire night time sky) – it’s simple for all ranges of stargazer to identify because it actually attracts the attention.

Summer time Triangle, Aquila, Altair. Picture Credit score: Stellarium/Nick Parke
You may simply affirm that you’re observing the right star because it marks the underside level of the massive asterism the ‘Summer time Triangle’ which may nonetheless be seen as we face south mid-month round 11pm. Lastly, Altair’s affiliation with the predatory chook is additional secured by reaching farther again in time to Sumerian and Babylonian cultures when it was known as the ‘eagle star’. Eagles can transfer quick so it must be no shock that the Eagle Star rotates a lot quicker than our Solar. At it’s equator the Solar rotates on the pace of roughly 2km per second, however at its equator Altair spins at a staggering 286 kilometres per second! The pace of rotation is actually so quick that it causes the star itself to alter form from a sphere of sizzling gasoline to one thing somewhat extra like the form of a skittle, being flattened at its poles. By way of dimension, Altair – the brightest ‘eagle’ in our August night time sky Altair measures 2.8 million km in diameter, 1.8 instances the scale of our native star.
Eagle 3

Eagle Nebula sculpture. Picture Credit score: AOP/Nick Parke
Our third and closing eagle in House is named the Eagle Nebula. This ‘nebula’ –(Latin phrase for cloud) is an open cluster of stars that occurs to be formed like a mighty eagle in House with wings outstretched. Often known as ‘Messier 16’ or M16, it was noticed and included within the 18th century French astronomer – Charles Messier’s 1774 celestial catalogue of deep sky objects often known as the ‘Catalogue de Nebuleuses et des Amas d’Etoiles’ and within the Armagh Observatory’s New Common Catalogue [NGC 6611]. Due to its monumental dimension and comparative brightness to different nebulae it is among the most noticed celestial wonders within the heavens by novice astronomers.

Eagle Nebula sky location. Picture Credit score: Stellarium/Nick Parke
Wanting just like the talons beneath the good chook are the just-as-popular ‘Pillars of Creation’, towering constructions 9.5 mild years excessive that include the vital components for future star programs and worlds. M16 sits proper on the sting of bare eye statement with an obvious magnitude of +6.0 to +6.2, so a small pair of binoculars may very well be wanted in the event you’d wish to take a peek on the greatest eagle in House. The deep sky object lies 7000 mild years from Earth somewhat to the best of and beneath the constellation of Aquila, on the tail finish of the stellar snake Serpens. Discovered by Jean-Philippe de Cheseaux in 1745, the wings of the magnificent cosmic eagle span 70 mild years throughout (66.5 trillion kilometres), that’s a realm some 22 instances the diameter of our total Photo voltaic System!

Eagle Nebula. Picture Credit score: T.A.Rector (College of Alaska Anchorage, NRAO/AUI/NSF and NOAO/AURA/NSF) and B.A.Wolpa (NOAO/AURA/NSF)