test 1 Astronomy - May 2018 USA | Page 43

The Moon passes Venus Pollux LOCATINGASTEROIDS Passing through the Lion’s den Castor GEMINI Procyon AURIGA Capella Venus Moon TAURUS Betelgeuse ORION 10° May 17, 1 hour after sunset Looking west A waxing crescent Moon teams up with brilliant Venus to form a stunning pair in the western sky after the Sun sets May 17. Mars rises shortly before 1:30 a.m. local daylight time as May opens. It then lies in east- ern Sagittarius, 15° east of Saturn. Unlike Saturn, how- ever, the Red Planet moves eastward quickly. It passes 0.3° south of the 9th-magnitude globular cluster M75 on the 14th; by the next morning, it has crossed into Capricornus. It will remain in the Sea Goat until late August. The planet’s eastward journey partially compensates for the Sun’s own easterly motion, and Mars still rises after midnight in late May. Your best views through a telescope come shortly before twilight begins. By then, Mars has climbed about 25° high in the south-southeast. (It appears higher the farther south you live.) The planet’s visible hemisphere changes little from one night to the next because Mars rotates just a bit slower than Earth. If you observe the Red Planet at the same time each morning, the longitude at the center of the disk shifts only 9.1° each day. For observers in North America on May’s first few mornings, the dark, wedge- shaped feature known as Syrtis Major stands at the center of the martian disk. A week later, the dark, fingerlike Mare Cimmerium takes center stage. The volcanic Tharsis region rotates into view on mornings in mid-May. And by the 21st and 22nd, Solis Lacus appears quite prominent. The remaining planets cluster low in the east before sunrise. Neptune rises at the break of dawn in early May but becomes a much easier target late in the month. On the 31st, it rises around 2 a.m. local daylight time and climbs 20° high in the east-southeast as twilight commences. Glowing at magnitude 7.9, it’s an easy binocular object set against the backdrop of Aquarius. Look for it 1.0° west of 4th-magnitude Phi (ϕ) Aquarii. Uranus pops into view at the end of May. After a five- year stint among the back- ground stars of Pisces, the distant planet now resides in Aries. You can find it through binoculars 10° due south of 3rd-magnitude Beta (β) Arietis and 3° northeast of 4th-magnitude Omicron (ο) Piscium. Uranus shines at magnitude 5.9 and shows up quite easily through binoculars. Our final planet never escapes morning twilight this month for observers at crosses a field conducive to star- hopping, with plenty of unusual patterns containing unequal stars. Those are easy to sketch quickly, providing a framework that makes Ceres’ night-to-night movement noticeable. You can see it shift positions in a single evening again on the 24th, when it passes a crooked line of three fainter stars. Viewing Ceres in the first half of May won’t be as easy. Still, a 3-inch scope under suburban skies will pull it in. Your best bet is to start at Kappa and hop over the border into Cancer. Just be patient so as not to get lost in the abundance of field stars. If you’ve never seen a dwarf planet before, May offers a perfect opportunity. Ceres, the largest object in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, slides past magnitude 4.5 Kappa ( κ ) Leonis on the evening of the 18th. Point your tele- scope at Kappa and then look for a magnitude 6.8 star half the Full Moon’s diameter to the south-southwest. Magnitude 8.5 Ceres lies between the two and slightly closer to Kappa. You can see the dwarf planet move in under an hour as a nearly straight line becomes crooked. If it’s cloudy on the 18th, don’t despair — Ceres soon Catch a bright dwarf planet N o May 1 LEO 6 Path of Ceres 11 g E 16 21 26 ¡ i CANCER 31 1° h Although Ceres fades from magnitude 8.4 to 8.7 this month, it should be easy to find as it crosses from Cancer into Leo. mid-northern latitudes. Mercury reached greatest western elongation April 29, and it remains low in the east before dawn in early May. On the 1st, it stands 4° high 30 minutes before sunrise. It then shines at magnitude 0.3 and should be visible through binoculars if you have an unobstructed eastern horizon. If you’re ambitious, you can follow Mercury for another week or two. Although the innermost planet slowly loses altitude, it also brightens. On the 15th, it appears 3° high a half-hour before sunup and shines at magnitude –0.3. Martin Ratcliffe provides plane- tarium development for Sky-Skan, Inc., from his home in Wichita, Kansas. Meteorologist Alister Ling works for Environment Canada in Edmonton, Alberta. GET DAILY UPDATES ON YOUR NIGHT SKY AT www.Astronomy.com/skythisweek. W W W.ASTR ONOMY.COM 43