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Podcaster: Rob Webb

Title: Observing With Webb in March 2014

Organization: Physics teacher at Pequea Valley High School

Link: http://mrwebb.podbean.com ;
https://sites.google.com/site/mrwebbonline/ ;
http://www.youtube.com/user/MrWebbPV
https://sites.google.com/site/pvplanetarium/home
follow me : @mrwebbpv

To see a video of this information (<10 min long) click here

Description: March is relatively low key, with Jupiter visible almost all night, along with appearances from Mars, Saturn, and Venus, and some close encounters with the Moon.

Bio: Rob Webb is a physics, astronomy, and sustainability teacher at Pequea Valley High School in Pennsylvania. His passions include teaching, astronomy, astrophotography, planetariums, running, reading, and golf. A proud graduate of Dickinson College in 2005, he also obtained a Master’s Degree in Science Education from Penn State University after conducting research in regards to the current state of planetariums in Pennsylvania. Feel free to contact him at rob_webb@pequeavalley.org

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Transcript:

To listen to this email as a podcast, go to my Podbean page here

To see a video of this information (<10 min long) go to my YouTube Channel here

March is relatively low key, with Jupiter visible almost all night, along with appearances from Mars, Saturn, and Venus, and some close encounters with the Moon.

PLANETSwell, the ones visible with your naked eye

Planets you can see around Sunset – Jupiter (SE)

Planets you can see throughout the night – Jupiter (SEàSàNW), Mars (SEàSàSW)

Planets you can see in the Morning – Mars (SW), Saturn (S), Venus (SE)

Mercury – Might be able to find it in the East in the morning, low on the horizon, until the 18th.

Venus – Venus will be very bright again this month in the morning toward the Southeast.  It rises pretty much after 5:30am and is about 20˚ above the horizon by sunrise. Closest to the Moon on the 27th.

Mars – Look in the SE after 10pm, in the SW around sunrise.  It’s hanging out in Virgo this month, close to Spica – Virgo’s brightest star.  Close to the Moon on the 18th.

JUPITER – Jupiter is out until about 3am.  Look East after sunset for the brightest “star” currently in the middle of Gemini.  It’ll move toward the South and eventually set in the West before sunrise.  Close to the Moon on the 9th.

Saturn – Look low in the Southeast after 1am for the bright point that is Saturn, which rises and moves to the South by sunrise. Closest to the Moon on the 21st. Try taking out your binoculars or telescope to find the rings at its side.

EVENTS

New Moon – 1st (darkest skies)

First Quarter Moon – 8th (Visible until midnight)

9thClose Encounter – Moon & Jupiter – Find the Gibbous Moon in the South/Southwest in the evening.  Jupiter will be 7˚ up and to the left.  The next night the Moon will be on the opposite side

9th – Daylight Savings Time starts at 2am.  Spring forward.

Full Moon – 16th (Visible all night)

18th & 19thClose EncounterMars, Moon – Get out after 10pm and check out the Gibbous Moon in the SE.  Mars will be about 3˚ above it, making a nice triangle with the Moon and Spica – the brightest star in Virgo.

20thSpring Equinox – Astronomically the first day of Spring, even though meteorologically Spring starts in the beginning of March.  Here’s some more info.

21stClose Encounter – Moon, Saturn – Look to the SE after midnight and you can see a Gibbous Moon, with Saturn about 3˚ above it.

Last Quarter Moon – 23rd (Visible from midnight into the morning)

27thClose Encounter – Moon, Venus – Before sunrise, look to the Southeast and find a VERY thin crescent Moon. Venus will be about 3˚ to the right of the Moon, making a very nice morning pair worthy of a picture.  You might be able to see them as early as 5:30am.

New Moon – 30th (darkest skies)

CONSTELLATIONS(see sky map link at the bottom for a Star Map for this month – or ask Mr. Webb)    Look straight up and you’ll see…

After Sunset (sunset is around 5:30-6:30pm) – Auriga (Taurus is right nearby), Gemini

Between Sunset and Midnight – Cancer, Gemini, Lynx, and Leo later in the month – Extra Challenge! Find M44 in the Middle of Cancer – an open cluster of stars also known as the Beehive Cluster.  You may be able to see it as a small fuzzy patch with your naked eye if you have very dark skies.  However with a pair of binoculars or a telescope on low power, it will look like a hive of bees in the distance, hence its nickname.

Midnight – Leo, Leo Minor, Ursa Major’s legs

Early Morning – Corona Borealis, Hercules, Boötes (you can also find the Big Dipper’s handle, and starting from the inside of the handle, follow the arc that those four stars make past the last star in the handle about 30˚ or three fist-widths to the next very bright star you find which is Arcturus, the base of the constellation Boötes.  Hence astronomers use the phrase “Follow the Arc to Arcturus”)

GENERAL CONSTELLATION FINDING TIPS: 

Winter constellations:  Orion is easy to spot as he is high in the south as the Sun sets.  You can use Orion to find many other winter constellations.

Using Orion:  Find Orion by looking for the three stars in a row that make up Orion’s belt in the South after 7pm.  If you draw a line from the left star to the right star and keep going right about 20 degrees (about 2 fists at arm’s length) until you reach another very bright star, you will have reached the star Aldebaron in Taurus (the V).  Follow that line a little more (about another fist) and you’ll find the Pleiades.

If you start at his belt again, but instead go the opposite way and draw a line from the right star in Orion’s belt to the left star, and keep going left about 20 degrees (2 fists again), you’ll come to the brightest star in the sky – Sirius – part of Canis Major.

Above these three constellations are Gemini and Auriga.  The brightest stars in each of these constellations form a circle in the sky.  Going clockwise – Aldebaron (Taurus) – Rigel (Orion – bottom right foot) – Sirius (Canis Major) – Procyon (Canis Minor) – Castor & Pollux (Gemini) – Capella (Auriga).  It makes for great stargazing in the winter sky.

Use a sky map from www.skymaps.com to help you out.

End of podcast:

365 Days of Astronomy
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