July, 2008

Amateur Astronomy Sky this Week for July 27 to August 2, 2008

The following is a discussion of a few astronomical objects to see up in the sky this week, July 27 to August 2, 2008.

This Week in Astronomy History

On July 29, 1958 President Eisenhower signed the National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958 establishing the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. On July 30th, 1971 Apollo 15 landed near Hadley Rille on the Earth's moon.

International Space Station

The ISS is visible in skies over Denver in the late evening this week. The passes are low in the northwest and visible for only a couple minutes or less. Brightest passes are on Thurs at 10:31 pm, Fri at 10:29 pm, and Saturday at 9:20 pm.
Check www.heavens-above.com for times specific to your location.

Sun

Sunday July 27 sunrise is 5:57 am and sunset is 8:21 pm MDT

Saturday Aug 2 sunrise is 6:02 am and sunset is 8:15 pm MDT

(for those of us at 40 degrees north latitude)

There are no active regions visible on the solar disk as of Sunday (July 27)
For more information about the Sun and current solar activity check www.swpc.noaa.gov

Moon

As the week begins the Moon is at lunation 25. It is new on Aug 1 at 4:12 am. It is at lunation 1.7 on Saturday.

Planets

If you have a clear view to west Saturday evening you might try to spot the thin crescent Moon, Venus, Mars, and Saturn around 8:45 pm.

This week look for planet Jupiter in the sky toward the south as soon as it is dark. It is easy to find as it is the brightest object visible that time of the evening. It is in constellation Sagittarius aka "the tea pot" and is quite bright at magnitude -2.5 . As viewed from a telescope on earth, the diameter is 46.6 arc sec across.

The Great Red Spot is a giant storm which may have been raging in the atmosphere of Jupiter for hundreds of years. Giovanni Cassini observed a spot on Jupiter in 1665 although the observational records are not conclusive that it is the same spot visible today. Its reddish color was first noted in the 1800s.

For observers in the Denver area, the spot is visible at the following times this week:
Mon July 28 at 2:35 am>
Mon July 28 at 10:26 pm
Wed July 30 at 4:13 am
Thurs July 31 at 0:04 am (Excellent position)
Sat Aug 2 at 1:42 am
Sat Aug 2 at 9:33 pm

For more information about observing Jupiter's red spot see
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/objects/planets/Transit_Times_o...

You may also view Jupiter's moons moving across the disk. Io transits July 29 around 0:40 am followed by its shadow at 1:09 am; Egress is at 2:56 am.
On July 31st Europa's shadow begins to transit across the disk at 9:10 pm; Europa egresses at 10:50 pm.

For information about transit times of Jupiter's moons see http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/objects/planets/3307071.html

Comets

Comets are sometimes called 'dirty ice-balls' and contain frozen material or volatiles that change from a solid to gaseous state when heated. A comet's atmosphere or 'coma' is formed from frozen gas which vaporizes and drags small dust grains into the surrounding space.

C2007 W1 Boattini is in constellation Aries, It is magnitude 7.7 in brightness and its coma is 10 arc minutes across. Recent images show a tail.

15P Finley is in constellation Taurus. It is magnitude 10.3 in brightness.

C2008 J1 Boattini is in constellation Cepheus, magnitude is 10.3

C2007 N3 Lulin is in constellation Sagitarrius, magnitude 11.9

C2007 G1 LINEAR is in constellation Lupus, magnitude 11.3

C2006 OF2 Broughton is in constellation Perseus, magnitude is 11.5

For finder charts and more information about comets see Seiichi Yoshida's comet pages at www.aerith.net
Check out the Astroleague Comet Club at http://www.astroleague.org/al/obsclubs/comet/comet.htm

Asteroids

3 Juno is in constellation Ophiuchus
11 Parthenope is constellation Capricornus
Check out the Astroleague Asteroid Club at http://www.astroleague.org/al/obsclubs/asteroid/astrclub.html

Dark Sky Objects

Around 11 pm, The constellation Sagittarius is directly south and in prime viewing position. Above the spout of the teapot locate Messier 8, the Lagoon Nebula. The lagoon is a oval cloudlike patch that may be seen naked eye in a dark sky location. A bright open cluster called NGC 6530 provides a background sprinkle of stars in the northeastern portion. The luminscent glow of this impressive emission nebula is divided in two by a dark broad lane of dust. It is estimated to be 4100 light years distant.

Slew about 1.5 degrees north of the Lagoon and a few arc minutes to the west and you will come across the Trifid Nebula, Messier 20. Put on a UHC or OIII filter and view this relatively bright nebula which is divided unequally by 3 radial dark lanes. It is marvelous to photograph as it is a wonderful color combination of an open cluster, a bluish reflection nebula in the north and a reddish emission nebula in the south.

Meteor Showers

The Perseid meteor shower began on July 17, peaks Saturday Aug 12, and ends Aug 24. The Delta Aquarids meteor shower is quite active this week as well. Also, the sporadic rate increases this time of year . (Sporadic meteors are those not associated with a particular radiant). The best time to look for meteors is about 2 am to 4:30 am. About 25 or so per hour may be visible in dark early morning skies this week.

For more information about observing meteor showers see http://www.amsmeteors.org/lunsford/
You may also be interested in the Astroleague's Meteor club http://www.astroleague.org/al/obsclubs/meteor/metrcl.html

Summary

This week you can view the giant red spot and watch shadows from Jupiter's moons move across its upper atmosphere. If you have a 10 inch or larger telescope you can see some faint comets and asteroids. You may also view some bright nebula and dust lanes and look for meteors in the early morning sky.

The Weekend Under the Stars at Fox Park, Wyoming sponsored by the Laramie and Cheyenne Astronomy Clubs begins this Thursday.

See Cheyenne Astronomy Club website at http://home.bresnan.net/~curranm/ for more information.

Amateur Astronomy - Sky this Week for July 20 to July 26, 2008

Discussion of some astronomical objects that may be seen during the week of July 20 to July 26, 2008.

You may subscribe at the itunes store (640x480 pixels, 55 megabytes) or download a HD 720P high resolution version of this astronomy video from the Astroleague website (1280x1024 pixels, 174 megabytes).

International Space Station

The International Space Station makes some bright passes over the Denver area early in the week.
On Sunday July 20 at 4:05 am the ISS appears in the NW and disappears at 4:11 am in the southeast. (magnitude -2.5)
On Sunday evening at 10:06 pm the ISS appears at 10:06 pm in the west and disappears in the north-northeast at 10:11 pm MDT (magnitude 0.0)
On Monday July 21st it appears at 8:55pm in the west-southwest and disappears in the northwest at 9:00 pm MDT (magnitude -2.2)
On Tue July 22 it appears at 9:18 pm in the west and disappears in the north-northeast at 9:23 pm (magnitude 0.1)
Other passes this week are much dimmer, low and quite brief. Check www.heavens-above.com for times specific to your location.

Sun

On Sunday July 20 sunrise is at 5:51 am and sunset is at 8:27 pm On Saturday July 26 sunrise is at 5:56 am and sunset is at 8:22 pm MDT For more information about the Sun see www.swpc.noaa.gov

Moon

As the week begins, the moon is at lunation 18.
It is in 3rd quarter on Fri July 25 at 12:42 pm.
It ends the week at lunation 24.
Thirty nine years ago this Sunday (July 20, 1969), Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin set foot on the Moon's Sea of Tranquility.

Planets

You may be able to spot the planet Venus just barely above the western horizon around 9pm in constellation Cancer. It is currently magnitude -3.8. Around 9:30 pm you can see Mars and Saturn very low and nearly straight west in the constellation Leo. The semidiameter of Mars is 4.2 arc sec and it is +1.7 magnitude in brightness. Saturn is magnitude +1.2 in brightness and the semidiameter is 16.4 arc sec.

The planet Jupiter may be seen low in the southeast in the constellation Sagittarius as the sky darkens in the early evening. It is magnitude -2.6 in brightness and the semidiameter is 46.9 arc sec. The great red spot crosses the center of Jupiter at the following times this week:

Mon morning July 21 at 1:39 am
Mon evening July 21 at 9:31 pm
Wed morning July 23 at 3:17 am
Wed evening July 23 at 11:09 pm (excellent)
Fri morning July 25 at 3:55 am (low)
Sat morning July 26 at 00:46 am (excellent)
Sat evening July 26 at 8:38 pm (low)

On Monday July 21st, Jupiter's moon Io starts its transit across the disk at 10:55 pm followed by its shadow at 11:14 pm. Transit ends around 01:12 am.

Comets

Here are some comets to locate in the evening sky before the moon rises. C/2008 J1 Boattini is in constellation Cepheus and is magnitude +10.2
C/2007 N3 Lulin is in constellation Sagittarius and is magnitude +11.8?
C/2007 G1 Linear is in constellation Lupus and is magnitude 11.3
C/2007 W1 Boattini is in constellation Aries but the Moon may make it difficult to spot.

Meteor Showers

The annual Perseid meteor shower continues this week. Unfortunately the moon will obscure most of them, though a few of the brighter ones may be visible. The Perseid meteor shower began on July 17, peaks on Aug 12, and continues through Aug 24. Best time to view meteors is in early morning, about two to three hours before sunrise. See www.amsmeteors.org for more info. Also checkout the Astroleague Meteor Club at http://www.astroleague.org/al/obsclubs/meteor/metrcl.html

Summary

This week you can see the International Space Station, take a look at Jupiter's Great Red Spot, view some comets, and maybe some meteors. Join the Longmont Astronomical Society www.longmontastro.org or other astronomy club near you to learn more about the many great objects visible in the night sky.

Amateur Astronomy - Sky this Week for July 13 to July 19, 2008

The following is a presentation of a few astronomical objects that may be viewed in the sky this week, July 13 to 19, 2008.

International Space Station

There are some excellent passes of the ISS over Colorado this week. (See www.heavens-above.com for times for your specific location). Toward the end of the week it is visible both in the early morning and in the evening sky. The brightest passes are:
Tues July 15 the ISS appears in the northwest at 5:18 am and disappears in the east at 5:23 am (-0.3 magnitude)
Thurs July 17 the ISS appears in the northwest at 4:30 and disappears in the east at 4:35 am (-0.4 magnitude)
In the morning on Friday July 18 the ISS appears in the northwest at 4:53 am and disappears in the southeast at 4:59 am (-2.5 magnitude)
That evening it appears at 9:19 pm in the SSW and disappears in the east-northeast at 9:24 pm (-1.5 magnitude)
And again that evening at 10:54 pm in the west and disappears in the north-northeast at 10:59 pm (-0.1 magnitude)

On Saturday July 19 the ISS appears in the northwest at 3:42 am and disappears in the east at 3:47 am (-0.5)
at 5:17 am it appears in the west and disappears in the southwest at 5:22 am (magnitude -1)
at 9:42 pm it appears in the southwest and disappears in the northeast at 9:48 pm. (-2.3)
On Sunday morning July 20 the ISS appears in the northwest at 4:05 am and disappears in the southeast at 4:11 (magnitude -2.5)

Sun

There are no active regions visible on the solar disk as of today Sunday. On Sunday July 13 sunrise is at 5:45 am and sunset is at 8:31 pm On Saturday July 19 sunrise is at 5:50 am and sunset is at 8:28 pm MDT

Moon

As the week begins, the moon is at lunation 11. It is full on Fri July 18 at 1:59 am. It ends the week at lunation 17 Thirty nine years ago this Wednesday, Neil Armstron, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin began their journey to the moon.

Planets

You may be able to spot the planet Venus just barely above the western horizon around 9pm. It is currently magnitude -3.8. Around 9:30 pm you can see Mars and Saturn fairly low and nearly straight west in the constellation Leo. The semidiameter of Mars is 4.2 arc sec and it is +1.7 magnitude in brightness. Saturn is magnitude +1.2 in brightness and the semidiameter is 16.5 arc sec. The planet Jupiter may be seen low in the southeast in the constellation Sagittarius as the sky darkens in the early evening. It is magnitude -2.6 in brightness and the semidiameter is 47.3 arc sec. The great red spot crosses the center of Jupiter at the following times this week: Sun July 13 at 05:03 am (low)
Mon July 14 at 00:54 am (excellent)
Mon July 14 at 08:45 pm (low)
Wed July 16 at 02:32 am
Wed July 16 at 10:23 pm
Fri July 18 at 04:10 am (low)
July 19 at 00:01 am (excellent)
July 19 at 07:53 pm (low)

Monday morning July 14, Jupiter's moon Europa crosses the disk starting around 2:28 am followed by its shadow at 2:43 am. Jupiter sets around 5:30 am. Monday evening July 14, Jupiter's moon Io crosses the disk around 9:11 pm followed by its shadow at 9:20 pm . Transit ends 11:30 pm. Somewhere around 9:30 pm you can get an image of both Io's shadow and the red spot.

There was a conjuction of the Giant Red Spot, 'Red Spot Junior', and 'Little Red Spot' in early July. 'Red Spot Junior' survived but 'Little Red Spot' was consumed.

Mercury can be viewed very low in the eastern sky about 45 minutes before sunrise in the constellation Gemini. It is at maximum elognation at noon on Fri. It will quickly moves lower into the bright twilight next week. It reappears in the evening sky in August.

Comets

Bright moonlight interfers with locating dim comets this week. Comet C/2007 W1 Boattini is getting dimmer but is up higher as the week progresses. It should be around magntiude 6 to 6.5 this week, so you may be able to spot it in the early morning with binoculars. It moves from constellation Cetus into Aries this week. See www.cometchasing.com or www.aerith.net for more information. Checkout the Astroleague Comet club at http://www.astroleague.org/al/obsclubs/comet/comet.htm

Meteor Showers

The annual Perseid meteor shower begins this week. Unfortunately the moon will obscure most of them, though a few of the brighter ones may be visible. The Perseid meteor shower begins July 17, peaks on Aug 12, and continues through Aug 24. Best time to view meteors is in early morning, about two to three hours before sunrise. See www.amsmeteors.org for more info. Also checkout the Astroleague Meteor Club at http://www.astroleague.org/al/obsclubs/meteor/metrcl.html

Summary

This week you can see some of the bright passes of the International Space Station. Look for rays on the bright full moon. View Jupiter's great red spot and see moon shadow's cast on clouds in its upper atmosphere. A comet that may be seen in the morning sky with binoculars. If you are interested in learning more about some of the fascinating objects in the sky, attend one of the astronomy club meetings in your area . If you happen to be in Colorado this week stop by the Longmont Astronomical Society (www.longmontastro.org) meeting on Thursday July 17th, the Denver Astronomical Society (www.denverastro.org) meeting on Friday July 18th, or the Boulder Astronomical Society meeting on Saturday July 21st (www.boulderastro.org). If you are Des Moines, Iowa on Friday or Saturday, maybe stop by the Astroleague Conference.

Amateur Astronomy - Sky this Week

The following is a discussion of just a few of the many objects that may be seen up in the sky, this week, July 6 to July 12, 2008.

You may subscribe at the itunes store (640x480 pixels, 55 megabytes)

International Space Station

The ISS is visible every morning this week but most passes are low in the northern sky and are visible for only a minute or two. The brightest and highest passes are
Monday July 7 at 3:42 am. ISS appears in the west and disappears in the northeast.
Wednesday July 9 at 2:56 am. ISS appears in the north and disappears in the northeast.

Sun

There are no active regions visible on the sun's disk as of today, Sunday. For those of us near 40 degrees north latitude on
Sunday July 6 sunrise is 5:41 am and sunset is 8:34 pm
Saturday July 12 the sun rises at 5:45 am and sets at 8:32 pm MDT

Moon

The moon is at lunation 4 (that is 4 days after new) just before it sets on Sunday evening. It is at first quarter on Wed. July 9 at 10:35 pm MDT. By Saturday, July 12, the moon will be at lunation 10. This week is a great time to explore near the terminator, that is the line between the dark side and the illuminated side. Features near the terminator are illuminated by the rising sun and cast long shadows. This increases the contrast and makes subtle rilles, domes, and other geologic feature a bit easier to see.

Planets

Mars and Saturn appear quite close together this week. Look for them straight west about 15 degrees above the horizon an hour after sunset. On Thursday they are closest together at 40 arc minute apart. Mars is magnitude +1.7 and the semidiameter is 4.3 arc sec. Mars is 202 million miles from Earth. Saturn is magnitude +1.2 and the semidiameter is 16.6 arc sec. Saturn is 929 million miles from Earth.

Jupiter is at opposition, that is it is directly opposite the sun in the sky early Wednesday July 9th at 2 am. It is currently located in the constellation Sagittarius. Jupiter is magnitude -2.6 in brightness and the semidiameter is 47.4 arc sec; distance is 387 million miles. The great red spot crosses center of Jupiter's disk at the following times this week:
Wed. July 9 at 1:47 am
Wed. July 9 at 9:38 pm br/>Fri. July 11 at 3:25 am
Fri. July 11 at 11:16 pm
The great red spot is visible about an hour before and after the times noted. The planet Mercury may be seen before sunrise in the northeast in constellation Gemini. It is magnitude -0.5 in brightness. It is 96 million miles from Earth.

Comets

The following is a list of comets may be brighter than magnitude +12 this week.
C/2007 G1 (Linear) is in constellation Scorpius. It is magnitude +11.9 (position July 12 at 10 pm is RA 16 05 50 Dec -29 02 42)
C/2007 N3 (Lulin) is in constellation Capricornus. It is magnitude 10.5 (position July 13 2am is RA 20 28 02 Dec -17 28 36 )
C/2008 J1 (Boattini) is in constellation Cepheus. It is magnitude +10.2 (position July 13 2 am is RA 22 03 27 Dec +70 31 14)
C/2006 OF2 (Broughton) is in constellation Perseus. It is magnitude +11.4 (position July 13 2 am is RA 02 40 28 Dec +42 13 05)
C/2007 W1 (Boattini) is in constellation Cetus. It is magnitude +5.5 (position July 13 at 6 am is RA 03 13 15 Dec +07 29 35) Recent images show a 0.5 degree long tail.
15P/Finlay is in constellation Taurus. It is magnitude +10 (location July 13 5 am RA 04 28 12 Dec +22 50 37)

Summary

This week the ISS makes some brief low passes in the early morning. Mars and Saturn appear close together and may viewed in the same field through binoculars or low power telescope. Craters, domes, and other features may be viewed along the terminator on Earth's moon. Several comets may be located after the moon sets in the early morning. Join with the Longmont Astronomical Society or other club in your area as we view some of the great objects visible up in the sky this week.

Amateur Astronomy - Sky this Week for June 29 to July 5, 2008

You may download a HD 720P high resolution version of this astronomy video from the Astroleague website (1280x1024 pixels, 254 megabytes).

Also you may subscribe at the itunes store (640x480 pixels, 55 megabytes)

The following is a discussion of just a few of the many objects that may be seen up in the summer sky, this week, June 29 to July 5, 2008.

International Space Station

There is a brief, low pass on Tues July 1 at 4:28 am. The ISS appears in the south; passes through constellation Cetus where it reaches magnitude -0.6, and then disappears in the east-north-east at 4:33 am There is an excellent pass on Wed July 2 beginning at 4:51 am. The ISS appears in the southwest; passes almost directly above in constellation Pegasus where it reaches magnitude -2.4. It disappears in the northeast at 4:57 am. There is a low pass on Thur July 3 at 3:43 am. The ISS appears in the southeast and disappears in the east-northeast (max magnitude -0.6) Another excellent pass on Fri July 4 at 4:06 am. The ISS appears in the southwest, passes through the eastern arm of Cygnus, reaches -2.4 magnitude, passes below Cassiopae, and then disappears in the constellation Auriga in the northeast at 4:09 am. There are a couple passes on Sat July 5. The best one is at 4:28 am when the ISS appears in the west, passes below Hercules and the Little Dipper and then disappears in the northeast at 4:33 am (max magnitude -0.6) There are a couple passes on Sun July 6. The pass at 3:20 am is bright but brief. Look just below the constellation Cassiopae in the northeast. The ISS will pass through Perseus and then disappear just below Auriga in the northeast at 3:22 am (max magnitude -1.6). For more information check http://www.heavens-above.com

Sun

There are no active regions visible on the solar disk as of today, Sunday. On Sunday June 29 sunrise is at 5:37 am and sunset is at 8:43 pm On Saturday July 5 sunrise is at 5:40 am and sunset is at 8:42 pm MDT

Moon

As the week begins, the moon is at lunation 25. The crescent wanes more each day until the moon becomes new on Wednesday July 2nd at 8:19 pm. On Thursday look for the one day old, thin crescent just after 9 pm low in the west-north-west. It sets at 9:28pm. You will probably need to be east I25 or the mountains will cut off your view. You might be able to spot the planet Venus about 6 degrees to the lower right of the Moon. Venus sets at 9:06 pm. On Friday and Saturday the moon will be a pretty view as the earthshine illuminates the lunar night side. On Saturday the moon will be at lunation 3. Crater Endymon can be seen in the northern portion of the crescent. The prominent crater Cleomedes may be viewed just north Mare Crisium. Near the center of Mare Crisium locate crater Picard. Just south of the center of the crescent is the crater Langrenus. A bit farther south are the craters Vendelinus and Petavius. Slew even further south and locate crater Furnerius.

Planets

Mars is low in the west about 11 degrees above the horizon in the constellation Leo. It is nearly in a straight line with the Moon, Regulus, and Saturn on Saturday. Mars is magnitude +1.7 in apparent magnitude and the semi-diameter is 4.4 arc sec. Saturn is in Leo as well. It is magnitude +1.2 in brightness and the semi-diameter is 16.8 arc sec. Jupiter is in constellation Sagittarius. It is magnitude -2.6 in brightness and semi-diameter is 47.3 arc sec. It will be at opposition with the earth next week on July 9th at 2 am MDT. The great red spot crosses the center of the disk at the following times: Sun Jun 29 at 11:24 pm Tues July 1 at 05:11 am Wed July 2 at 1:02 am * Wed July 2 at 8:53 pm (very low) Fri July 4 at 2:40 am * Fri July 4 at 10:31 pm Sun July 6 at 04:18 am * Best position for imaging Mercury rises in constellation Taurus around 4:23 am this week. It is magnitude +0.2 in brightness. Semi-diameter is 7.3 arc sec and the disk is 45% illuminated.

Comets

C/2007 G1 Linear is in constellation Scorpius. Estimated magnitude is +11.9. Location is RA 16 19 14.77 Dec -27 Dec 16 44.6 13.64 at 10 pm on July 5) C/2008 J1 Boattini is in the constellation Cepheus and is reported to be magnitude 11.1 in brightness. Location is RA 22 01 08.30 Dec +65 16 56.1 at 2 am July 5). C/2006 OF2 Broughton is in constellation Taurus. It should be about magnitude 12. (Location is RA 02 25 11.91 Decl +40 15 59.5 at 2 am July 5) C/2007 W1 Boattini reappears in the morning sky this week in constellation Taurus. Its bright ~mag 5.5 and has quite large 20 arc min wide coma. It rises at 3:30 am on July 5. Location is RA 03 30 27.62 Dec +02 29 51.2 on July 5)

Dark Sky Objects

The summer sky offers many tantalizing objects to view especially if you can get far away from the light polluted urban sky. Around 11 pm take a look at the Veil nebula high up in the east in the constellation Cygnus or the Northern Cross. First locate the star called 'Gienah' marking the eastern arm of the cross and then locate the 4.2 magnitude star 52 Cygnus about 3 degrees to the southeast. Slew north so that 52 Cygni is just out of the field of view. The western portion of the Veil or NGC 6960 can then be seen extending across the field. The brighter portion of the Veil, NGC 6992/6996 or the east Veil, is located 2.5 degrees to the east-north-east. From dark skies the eastern portion of the Viel can be viewed in binoculars or scopes of any size. Add a UHC filter to your eyepiece to enhance the contrast. This is a stunning object especially in large aperature telescopes. Delicate, inter-twined nebulous filaments appear to hang in space against a star filled, dark velvet background. Slew slowly and trace the beautiful wispy strands of this wondrous object in the eyepiece view by view. The Veil is a large object covering an area of about three degrees. The fainter northern portion, NGC 6974/6979, is located 1 degree north of 52 Cygni. Look for a triangular shaped haze about 30' and 15' wide called 'Pickering's Triangular Wisp'. Further to the northeast are the 'S-shaped' NGC 6974 and the faint patch of NGC 6979. The Veil nebula is a super nova remnant of a star that exploded many thousands of years ago (age estimates vary widely). It was discovered by William Hershel in 1784. Take a trip down south into constellation Sagittarius as it is now in prime viewing position. Above the spout of the teapot locate Messier 8, the Lagoon Nebula. The lagoon is a oval cloudlike patch that may be seen naked eye in a dark sky location. A bright open cluster called NGC 6530 provides a background sprinkle of stars in the northeastern portion. The luminscent glow of this impressive emission nebula is divided in two by a dark broad lane of dust. It is estimated to be 4100 light years distant. Slew about 1.5 degrees north of the Lagoon and a few arc minutes to the west and you will come across the Trifid Nebula, Messier 20. Put on a UHC or OIII filter and view this relatively bright nebula which is divided unequally by 3 radial dark lanes. It is marvelous to photograph as it is a wonderful color combination of an open cluster, a bluish reflection nebula in the north and a reddish emission nebula in the south.

SummaryM

This week is great time to get out and view the summer sky. The International Space Station may be seen quickly crossing the sky before dawn. Earthshine may be seen on the moon. Through a telescope you can see the rings of Saturn and view Jupiter's red spot. A comet is visible in binoculars before sunrise. Faint distant super nova remnants can be traced and dark dust lanes maybe seen crossing bright emission nebula. Join with the Longmont Astronomical Society or other club in your area as we view some of the great objects visible this week in the summertime sky.