For the previous few weeks, some might have reported a vivid “UFO” hovering simply above the western horizon proper after the solar has gone down. However by the point the sky turns into darkish sufficient for different stars to seem, this vivid “thriller object” has vanished.
This unusual vivid level of sunshine showing within the night twilight glow is Venus, identified colloquially as “The Night Star.”
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The moon that starts the month
Many calendars, including the Jewish and Muslim, have lunar months defined as beginning with the evenings when the moon first appears. As an example, the “Knife of Time,” a poetic term for an extremely thin crescent moon, will hang low in the western twilight on the evening of March 19, heralding the opening of Nisan, the primary month of the yr A.M. 5786. (A.M. is for Anno Mundi, which dates from the normal yr of the Creation, 3761 B.C.). This expressive description of a younger crescent moon seems within the Icelandic Edda of virtually 8 centuries in the past and accordingly characterizes how the moon’s cycles minimize the yr into handy segments.
After I used to reply astronomy questions by cellphone on behalf of New York’s Hayden Planetarium, we’d get a surge of inquiries as we neared the Islamic month of Ramadan, from folks desirous to know “… when would the moon be born once more?”
To individuals who observe a lunar calendar, the primary sight of a waxing crescent is of on a regular basis sensible significance. Certainly, monitoring the moon’s phases was most likely the premise for the earliest calendars. Nonetheless, it’s tough to do that precisely as a result of the typical part cycle — referred to as a synodic month — is about 29.53 days, and any synodic cycle will be as a lot as 6 hours longer or shorter. Given the added uncertainty of the climate, it’s straightforward to grasp how confusion may come up over when a brand new month begins.
Very often, when folks see a slender crescent, they confer with it as a “new” moon. However correctly outlined, a brand new moon is the invisible immediate when it is at the side of the solar, whereas when sighting a fragile crescent moon, we should always confer with it as “younger” for an indefinite however quick span starting on the first visibility.
For many of us, the primary sighting of a waxing crescent moon within the night sky normally comes two or three days after the brand new part, when the sunlit portion of the moon is roughly equal, respectively, to about 5 to 12%. A crescent moon towards the deepening twilight sky is a stunning sight to behold and has grow to be essential for some religions.
Venus factors the best way
Because it seems, on Thursday night (March 19), Venus can function a really helpful benchmark to make a sighting of an exceedingly slender, hairline crescent moon lower than 24 hours after the brand new moon part. The truth is, we would go as far as to say that Venus could be the linchpin to creating a profitable sighting. With out her, the probabilities of discovering the moon would doubtless be significantly tougher.
All you will want is nice imaginative and prescient, a suitably clear and clear sky and a flat, unobstructed western horizon. Observers needs to be outdoors from roughly half an hour to at least one hour after sundown. That is essential, because the moon will likely be finest seen when it’s roughly 2 levels to five levels above the precise (true) horizon. First, discover Venus, which needs to be quite apparent towards the intense twilight sky. As soon as discovered, make a fist and maintain it out at arm’s size. The width of your fist measures roughly 10 levels. From Venus, your quarry, an exceedingly younger crescent moon, will likely be located 7 levels to Venus’s decrease proper.
First try to find it with just your bare eyes, but if unsuccessful, then use binoculars. If you find the crescent first with binoculars, slowly lower them while focusing your gaze at the moon’s location to see if you can perceive it without optical aid.
Why this week offers a rare viewing opportunity
Not every new moon offers such a favorable circumstance, for the moment of new moon needs to fall within certain limits of local time. For example, if a new moon were to occur during the late-morning hours, at sunset that day, the crescent moon would be an impossibly hard-to-see eight hours old and much too close to the sun in the sky. This month, the new moon occurs on Wednesday, March 18, at 9:23 p.m. EDT or 6:23 p.m. Pacific Time. With sunset occurring at mid-northern latitudes at around 7:00 p.m., this would be a good time to try and see a crescent moon on the following evening that is less than 24 hours old.
The season of the year is also important. For north temperate latitudes, the best time is around the March equinox, as then the ecliptic — the imaginary coordinate line that serves as the apparent path of the sun, moon and planets — crosses the western horizon most steeply. In such cases, the moon will appear to stand almost directly above the sun’s setting point on the horizon. In this upcoming case, the equinox occurs on the very next day!
Also, should the crescent occur close to the time of perigee (closest to the Earth), it will move up and away from the sun into the evening sky more quickly, improving its visibility. As it turns out, the moon arrives at perigee on Sunday, March 22.
Just how thin is this moon?
So, just how thin a moon are we talking about? If the moon were a perfect sphere, the illuminated crescent would arc 180 degrees around the rim of the disk. However, on this occasion, the bright arc will likely subtend only to, at most, 130 degrees and it might even appear to be broken, with bright points appearing where individual mountains are illuminated.
From Atlantic Canada, the moon will be only about 20.6 hours past new, and the width of the sunlit crescent will amount to just one percent. As one heads westward, the difference in time between the moment of new phase and the possible visibility of the moon, as well as the width of the hairline crescent, slowly increases. For those living near and along the Atlantic Seaboard, the moon will be 21.6 hours old and the sunlit crescent measures just 1.1 percent wide. Along the Pacific coast, the moon will have aged to just over 24 hours, but the crescent will still measure a mere 1.4% in width.
To see the moon when less than 24 hours old is an exhilarating experience, appearing so delicately thin that it almost looks like it might break apart! Certainly, if the weather appears favorable in your area on Thursday, you should attempt this very challenging observation.
On the following evening (Friday, March 20), the moon will be nearly two days old, and the crescent will have widened to 5% illuminated. It will also have shifted to a position some eight degrees, almost directly above Venus.
By then, it should be relatively easy for most everyone to see.
Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York’s Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, Sky and Telescope, The Old Farmer’s Almanac and different publications.