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NBAC
SKYWATCHERS UPDATES AND CLUB NOTES:
Explore Tonight's
Sky:
Friday, May 9...
if the clouds break!
Catch Jupiter before dawn in
the early morning hours. Look for Mercury in the
West just after sunset. View the Planets Saturn and
Mars in the evening skies after dark.
From Earth and Sky:
At nightfall, the
waxing crescent cozies up with Castor and Pollux,
the two brightest stars in the constellation Gemini
the Twins. To the upper left of the moon, the ruddy
planet Mars and the faint Beehive star cluster mark
the moon’s path through the heavens.
From Spaceweather.com:
Do you know where Mars is? Let the
Moon be your guide. Tonight the crescent Moon is
passing by the twins of Gemini and making a beeline
for the red planet. You can't miss it. Look west
after sunset for a heavenly orientation:
sky map.
OUR MAY ASTRONOMY CLUB MEETING AT A
NEW LOCATION AND DATE:
Thursday, May 22, 2008, The Unitarian Church
at 135 Alves Lane
in New Braunfels
starting at 7 p.m.
Turn left 0.79 miles off Hwy 46 South past the I-35
overpass. The church is 0.15 miles on the left
A
note of thanks to
Global Online Computers
Inc. for their support in
keeping our Astronomy Club news and information
running on the Internet Highway ....Thank you!
WILL WE SEE STARS TONIGHT?
CURRENT NOAA WEATHER
Tabular
FORECAST
on cloud cover
May Dark Sky nights:
May 22 - 31
Our Moon...Always
changing...
Click here for
current phase
Current
Astronomy News and updates...
May 10 is National
Astronomy Day. If our area has clear skies, The
Scobee Panetarium
will hold a
Star Party
event Saturday evening.
May 9:
Spaceweather.com
informs us about a Doomed Planet Transit:
About 1300 light years from
Earth, in the constellation Hercules, a planet named
TrES-3 twice as massive as Jupiter is slowly
spiraling into its parent star. It orbits so close
to the star, in fact, that it occasionally passes in
front and dims the starlight--a telltale fluctuation
that led to its discovery by
astronomers in May 2007.
April 25: An
updated
report from
Universetoday.com
on the Nova in Sagittarius.
This
nova's coordinates are RA 18:05:58.90 Dec
-27:13:56.3 . For those who would like to try their
hand with binoculars? Aim just a couple of
fingerwidths north of the tip of the "teapot" spout.
It will by far be the brightest in the field.
New
Telescope,
GLAST:
Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope
is scheduled for launch May 16.
Preparations continue for the May launch.
April 22 a
Powerful Antenna
was attached to
NASA's GLAST Satellite.
Phoenix Mars Lander, spacecraft
is on course for its May
25 landing on the Red Planet.
NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander is
scheduled to land on the Martian northern plains
near 68 degrees north latitude, 127 degrees west
longitude.
Space shuttle
Discovery's STS-124:
the launch date is May 31 at
4:01pm CDT. Space shuttle Discovery is scheduled to roll out to
Launch Pad 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, Fla.,
on Saturday, May 3.
The canister carrying the STS-124 payloads arrived
at the launch pad April 29. Primary payloads are the
tour-bus-sized Japanese Experiment
Module-Pressurized Module and the lab's robotic arm
system. With Discovery in place at the launch pad,
the payload components have been installed in the
orbiter's payload bay.
Updated
from
SpaceDaily.com:
May 6, 2008.
The Hubble Telescope
service mission 4
The space shuttle's pending upcoming
mission to continue maintenance and repair work on
the Hubble telescope, which had been set for August
28, will be pushed back four to five weeks, NASA
said Thursday May 1, 2008.
The Lunar Reconnaissance
Orbiter (LRO): LRO
will launch in late 2008 with the objectives to
finding safe landing sites, locate potential
resources, characterize the radiation environment,
and demonstrate new technology.
May 9,
2008
Stars Orbiting Close to Black
Holes Flattened like Hot Pancakes
May 7,
2008
Astronomy Day - May 10, 2008
Photos of the Earth and Moon - From Other Worlds
Snow on Mercury?
Phoenix Landing Area Viewed
By Mars Color Imager
May 6,
2008
XMM-Newton Discovers Part
of Missing Matter in the Universe
Did Earth Have More Than
One Moon?
Comet Strikes Increase as
We Pass Through the Galactic Plane
May 5,
2008
Another (Better) Opportunity
to Send Your Name to Space
Spirit In A Catch-22: Stay
Awake Or Sleep
May 4,
2008
Send Your Name to the Moon
Mission to the Sun
The eta Aquarid Meteor
Shower
May 2,
2008
Could Jupiter Wreck the Solar
System?
May 1,
2008
New Type of White Dwarf Stars Discovered
Hubble trouble: shuttle
mission pushed back
April 30,
2008
Spirit's Dust Dilemma
April 29,
2008
Cassini Watches Five-Month-Long Lightning Storm Rage
on Saturn
Supermassive Black Hole Kicked Out of Galaxy: First
Ever Observation
April 28,
2008
Globular Clusters Are
Less Evolved than Astronomers Thought
Global Warming is
Accelerating Faster than can be Naturally Repaired
Hubble Surprise:
Heavyweight Baby Galaxies |