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In the Sky This Week – April 2, 2019

By Robert Trembley  |  2 Apr 2019

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This entry is part 21 of 253 in the series In the Sky This Week

South-Southeastern sky

Stellarium version 0.19.0 has been released; I use Stellarium to create images for every one of these posts. When I receive new outreach requests, I frequently use Stellarium to see what the nighttime sky will look like on those future dates. The new version has code optimizations, some user interface improvements, and includes 5 new sky cultures. Stellarium is free, and available for the PC/MAC/Linux.

Saturn, Jupiter and the star Antares appear in south-southeastern predawn sky this week.

South-Southeastern sky Saturn, Jupiter and the star Antares in south-southeastern predawn sky. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.

Mars continues to appear high in the western sky by the Pleiades all week.

Mars and the Pleiades in the western sky Mars near the Pleiades high in the western sky after dark on Apr. 2, 2019. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.

A very thin waxing crescent Moon appears low in the western sky after sunset on Apr. 6th.

Crescent Moon in western sky A thin waxing crescent Moon in the western sky at dusk Apr. 6, 2019, Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.

Mercury and Venus appear low in the eastern predawn sky Apr. 8th.

Mercury and Venus in eastern sky Mercury and Venus in the eastern sky Apr. 8, 2019, Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.

The Moon joins Mars and the Pleiades in the western sky after dark on Apr. 8th.

The Moon, Mars and the Pleiades in the western sky The Moon, Mars and the Pleiades in the western sky after dark on Apr. 8, 2019. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.


Coma Cluster

Coma cluster This false-color mosaic of the central region of the Coma cluster combines infrared and visible-light images to reveal thousands of faint objects (green). Follow-up observations showed that many of these objects, which appear here as faint green smudges, are dwarf galaxies belonging to the cluster. Two large elliptical galaxies, NGC 4889 and NGC 4874, dominate the cluster’s center. The mosaic combines visible-light data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (color coded blue) with long- and short-wavelength infrared views (red and green, respectively) from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope.

The Coma Cluster (Abell 1656) is a large cluster of galaxies that contains over 1,000 identified galaxies. Along with the Leo Cluster (Abell 1367), it is one of the two major clusters comprising the Coma Supercluster. It is located in and takes its name from the constellation Coma Berenices.

The cluster’s mean distance from Earth is 99 Mpc (321 million light years). Its ten brightest spiral galaxies have apparent magnitudes of 12–14 that are observable with amateur telescopes larger than 20 cm. The central region is dominated by two supergiant elliptical galaxies: NGC 4874 and NGC 4889. The cluster is within a few degrees of the north galactic pole on the sky. Most of the galaxies that inhabit the central portion of the Coma Cluster are ellipticals. Both dwarf and giant ellipticals are found in abundance in the Coma Cluster. – Wikipedia

The sketch below is how you might see the Coma Cluster in s moderately-sized amateur telescope:

Panoramic Sketch of the Coma Cluster (Abell 1656). Credit: Michael Vlasov

Here’s an image of the Coma Cluster from the Hubble Space Telescope:

Coma Cluster This is a Hubble Space Telescope mosaic of a portion of the immense Coma cluster of over 1,000 galaxies, located 300 million light-years from Earth. Hubble’s incredible sharpness was used to do a comprehensive census of the cluster’s most diminutive members: a whopping 22,426 globular star clusters. Among the earliest homesteaders of the universe, globular star clusters are snow-globe-shaped islands of several hundred thousand ancient stars. The survey found the globular clusters scattered in the space between the galaxies. They have been orphaned from their home galaxies through galaxy tidal interactions within the bustling cluster. Astronomers will use the globular cluster field for mapping the distribution of matter and dark matter in the Coma galaxy cluster. Credits: NASA, ESA, J. Mack (STScI), and J. Madrid (Australian Telescope National Facility)


The Moon is a waning crescent, visible low to the east before sunrise for the next 2 days. The new Moon occurs on Apr. 5th. After the 5th, the Moon will be a waxing crescent, visible toward the southwest in early evening.

Moon The Moon from Apr. 2-8, 2019. Visualizations by Ernie Wright / NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio.

Moon News

Season 3 of our Gravity Assist podcast is coming soon. And it’s all about lunar science and our journey from #Moon2Mars. For now, catch up on Seasons 1 and 2. Our favorite episode? The Moon with Sarah Noble😉https://t.co/qqvyNcDGPf pic.twitter.com/qtD94PHXvl

— NASA Moon (@NASAMoon) April 1, 2019

Here's one of our favorite @LRO_NASA images for #MoonCrushMonday. The eastern rim of Dionysius crater shows the effects of an impact, with darker cooled lava below flows of lighter-colored dust and gravel. #MCM pic.twitter.com/6nv0e55s7C

— NASA Moon (@NASAMoon) April 1, 2019


Sunspot AR2737 is rotating across the face of the Sun – just north of the equator; coronal loop activity associated with the sunspot is visible in both videos below. The northern coronal hole has diminished slightly from last week, whereas the southern hole remains open and large. Several small holes appear below the equator.

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/movies_1080/20190401_1080_0193.mp4

SpaceWeather.com says: “A southern hole in the sun’s atmosphere is spewing a stream of solar wind toward Earth. Estimated time of arrival: April 4th. Minor geomagnetic storms and Arctic auroras are possible when the gaseous material arrives.”

A beautiful looping prominence appeared for practically the entire day yesterday!

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/movies_1080/20190401_1080_0304.mp4

The solar wind speed is 389.4 km/sec (↑), with a density of 1.5 protons/cm3 (↓).

SOHO LASCO C2 Latest Image Animated LASCO C2 Coronograph showing the solar corona above the Sun’s limb (the white circle). Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
You can view the Sun in near real-time, in multiple frequencies here: SDO-The Sun Now.
You can create your own time-lapse movies of the Sun here: AIA/HMI Browse Data.
You can browse all the SDO images of the Sun from 2010 to the present here: Browse SDO archive.

Sun News

The solar wind — the Sun's outflow of particles and magnetic field — creates a bubble in space that stretches far past the orbit of Neptune. Beyond that bubble is interstellar space. Here are 5️⃣ things to know about the space between the stars. 🌟 https://t.co/5XDi359nhT pic.twitter.com/2tAO2hUxFr

— NASA Sun & Space (@NASASun) April 1, 2019


Upcoming Earth-asteroid encounters:

Asteroid
Date(UT)
Miss Distance
Velocity (km/s)
Diameter (m)
2019 FR2
2019-Apr-01
2.1 LD
8.3
11
2019 FN1
2019-Apr-02
8.5 LD
9
14
2019 FT2
2019-Apr-02
2.4 LD
27.1
19
2019 FW1
2019-Apr-04
16.7 LD
8.3
18
2016 GE1
2019-Apr-04
3.9 LD
10.1
17
2019 FV
2019-Apr-06
15 LD
7.7
59
2019 FS2
2019-Apr-08
3.2 LD
6.2
12
2019 FU
2019-Apr-09
5.3 LD
14.2
86
2014 UR
2019-Apr-09
13 LD
4.6
17
2016 GW221
2019-Apr-09
10.1 LD
5.3
39
2014 HD177
2019-Apr-10
6.1 LD
14
102
2019 FO1
2019-Apr-13
14.4 LD
9.7
28
2019 FH1
2019-Apr-13
18 LD
3.8
32
2012 XO134
2019-Apr-18
14.8 LD
11
56
2019 FN2
2019-Apr-18
4.1 LD
7.7
72
522684
2019-Apr-19
19 LD
11.5
214
2019 FV2
2019-Apr-22
15.7 LD
2.3
32
2018 KK1
2019-May-05
13.9 LD
13.9
71
2017 RC
2019-May-09
14.5 LD
10.6
9
2008 HS3
2019-May-09
14.6 LD
5.3
162
2018 VX8
2019-May-12
6.2 LD
15.5
118
2012 KT12
2019-May-18
3.3 LD
3.9
20
2015 KQ18
2019-May-25
10.7 LD
13.1
30
66391
2019-May-25
13.5 LD
21.5
1780
2003 LH
2019-May-28
15.6 LD
7.4
32
2011 HP
2019-May-30
12.2 LD
8.4
135

Notes: LD means “Lunar Distance.” 1 LD = 384,401 km, the distance between Earth and the Moon. Table from SpaceWeather.com

Near-Earth objects (NEOs) discovered this month: 0, this year: 527, all time: 19919 (+39)
Potentially hazardous asteroids: 1967 (last updated  Feb. 26, 2019)
Minor Planets discovered: 794,000  (-82?)

Asteroid News

(6478) #Gault Asteroid with tail ~580 000 km. Obs 104 San Marcello pic.twitter.com/h9H0ZF8og4

— backman (@backman_B09) March 30, 2019

This fast-spinning asteroid, with a tail longer than a half-million-miles, is shedding dust into space. Watching an asteroid become unglued gives astronomers the chance to study the makeup of these space rocks without sending a spacecraft to sample them: https://t.co/F6qKhOodH2 pic.twitter.com/F8uewgAU96

— NASA Goddard Images (@NASAGoddardPix) March 29, 2019


On Apr. 1, 2019, the NASA All Sky Fireball Network reported 8 fireballs.
(8 sporadics)

Fireball Orbits In this diagram of the inner solar system, all of the fireball orbits intersect at a single point–Earth. The orbits are color-coded by velocity, from slow (red) to fast (blue). From: Spaceweather.com

Green fireball spotted over Florida on dash-cam #meteor #meteorshower #space #astronomy #asteroid pic.twitter.com/GWpXI5awwI

— DeepSpaceDrones (@DeepSpaceDrones) April 1, 2019

A fireball in the sky could be seen in this video from Crawfordville, Florida, on Saturday night. Did you see anything?☄️Video and permission from Daniel Ppool. #SKYWARN #meteor #nightsky #SaturdayNight pic.twitter.com/si8BEGjtUe

— SWGA Weather, Inc (@swgaweather) March 31, 2019


This is the position of the planets and a couple bodies in the solar system:

South-Southeastern sky
Saturn, Jupiter and the star Antares appear in south-southeastern predawn sky this week. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.
Mars and the Pleiades in the western sky
Mars near the Pleiades high in the western sky after dark on Apr. 2, 2019. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.
Crescent Moon in western sky
A thin waxing crescent Moon in the western sky Apr. 6, 2019, Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.
Mercury and Venus in eastern sky
Mercury and Venus in the eastern sky Apr. 8, 2019, Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.
The Moon, Mars and the Pleiades in the western sky
The Moon joins Mars and the Pleiades in the western sky after dark on Apr. 8, 2019. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.
Coma cluster
This false-color mosaic of the central region of the Coma cluster combines infrared and visible-light images to reveal thousands of faint objects (green). Follow-up observations showed that many of these objects, which appear here as faint green smudges, are dwarf galaxies belonging to the cluster. Two large elliptical galaxies, NGC 4889 and NGC 4874, dominate the cluster’s center. The mosaic combines visible-light data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (color coded blue) with long- and short-wavelength infrared views (red and green, respectively) from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope.
Moon
The Moon from Apr. 2-8, 2019. Visualizations by Ernie Wright / NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio.
Exoplanet WASP 12 b
Exoplanet WASP 12 b. Credit: Space Engine / Bob Trembley.


OSIRIS-REx – Boulders on Bennu’s South Pole

Boy, have I got some weekend reading for you … check out the OSIRIS-REx team's Bennu research that @nature just released in a special collection: https://t.co/8iy4kCBB0s pic.twitter.com/N2wzj8qXdA

— NASA's OSIRIS-REx (@OSIRISREx) March 29, 2019

Want a Bennu of your very own? Have access to a 3D printer?

The latest shape model — made with data derived from my first three months at the asteroid — is now available!

Find the files here: https://t.co/cW6Z1PhgDr pic.twitter.com/LVwdIIxk4e

— NASA's OSIRIS-REx (@OSIRISREx) March 28, 2019

Mars InSight – NASA Working on Drill Problem

With the Mars InSight Lander Stuck, NASA Tries to Hack a Fix With Earthly Clones https://t.co/TQ86WAbt8Z pic.twitter.com/iTNEe5nlaP

— Discover Magazine (@DiscoverMag) March 30, 2019

Climate

Global average sea level is now rising at a rate of 3.3 mm (0.13 inches) per year. That's 1,190 cubic kilometers (about 286 cubic miles) per year in water volume, or about one Lake Erie every five months. https://t.co/f8Cpqopsft

— NASA Climate (@NASAClimate) April 2, 2019


Exoplanet

 

All Exoplanets 3926 
Confirmed Planets with Kepler Light Curves for Stellar Host 2347
Confirmed Planets Discovered by Kepler 2338
Kepler Project Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 2423
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