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In the Sky This Week – April 16, 2019

By Robert Trembley  |  16 Apr 2019

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This entry is part 23 of 253 in the series In the Sky This Week

NEOs

Updating the Near-Earth Object stats for this post, I noticed that the number of known NEO’s has crossed the 20,000 threshold! I need to update this chart every time I talk about asteroids – note the steep angle of the discovery curve, and how the curve keeps growing… precipitously!

NEOs The following chart shows the cumulative number of known Near-Earth Asteroids (NEAs) versus time. Totals are shown for NEAs of all sizes, those NEAs larger than ~140m in size, and those larger than ~1km in size. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Alan Chamberlin

If you get up at the crack of dawn, and look really low towards the eastern horizon, you may catch a glimpse of Mercury near Venus. Both planets will appear a bit lower in the sky each morning this week.

Eastern sky before sunrise Mercury and Venus LOW in the eastern sky just before sunrise at 6:10 AM on Apr. 17th. The red and yellow dots show the positions of Mercury and Venus over the week. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.

Saturn, Jupiter and the star Antares appear in southern predawn sky all week; it’s interesting to note that for the last several weeks these all appeared in the south-southeastern predawn sky.

Southern predawn sky Saturn and Jupiter and the star Antares in the southern predawn sky on Apr. 17, 2019. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.

Mars and the constellations Orion and Taurus appear in the western sky after sunset. Mars has dimmed significantly since last year; it and the two constellations appear a bit lower in the western sky each evening.

Western sky after sunset Mars and the constellations Orion and Taurus in the western sky after sunset on Apr. 16, 2019. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.

Mars continues a slow crawl away from the Pleiades in the western sky after sunset. Mars appears very near the star Tau Tauri (τ Tau) on April, 18th.

Mars and τ Tau Mars continues a slow crawl away from the Pleiades in the western sky after sunset from Apr. 16-22, 2019. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.

The full Moon appears near the star Spica in the southeastern sky after sunset on April 18th.

Moon and Spica The full Moon near the star Spica in the southeastern sky after sunset on Apr. 18, 2019. Credit: Stellarium / Bob Trembley.


The Moon is a waxing gibbous, visible to the southeast in early evening, and up for most of the night.

The full Moon occurs on Apr. 19th, rising at sunset, visible high in the sky around midnight, and visible all night long.

After the 19th, the Moon will be a waning gibbous, rising after sunset, visible high in the sky after midnight, and visible to the southwest after sunrise.

Moon The Moon from Apr. 16-22, 2019. Visualizations by Ernie Wright / NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio.

Moon News

As I was writing this post:

50 years ago, NASA continued preparing for the first Moon landing. At @NASAKennedy, workers stacked the Apollo 11 spacecraft on its Saturn V rocket. At the Manned Spacecraft Center, now Johnson Space Center, the crew continued training for the mission. https://t.co/AKAfmWutCC pic.twitter.com/I0vhwkUH7R

— NASA's Johnson Space Center (@NASA_Johnson) April 16, 2019


AR2738 continues to rotate across the face of the Sun, coronal loops following it; in previous days the region was blowing off multiple B-class solar flares, but now it appears to be quieting down. Astrophographer Marty Wise took this beautiful image of AR2738 showing a “light bridge” crossing the spot!

AR 2738 AR 2738 with light bridge. Credit: Marty Wise

The northern coronal hole remains closed, and it appears as if the southern hole has greatly diminished. 

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/movies_1080/20190415_1080_0171.mp4

Light prominence activity around the Sun’s limb; you can see a few things being spewed out of AR2738 over the last couple days..

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/movies_1080/20190415_1080_0304.mp4

The solar wind speed is 381.9 km/sec (↓), with a density of 2.1 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 E-TBEx CubeSats and the Space Environment Testbeds will study how #SpaceWeather can affect communications transmissions 📡 and satellite hardware 🛰 https://t.co/7zX3AiJMSz

— NASA Sun & Space (@NASASun) April 12, 2019


Upcoming Earth-asteroid encounters:

Asteroid
Date(UT)
Miss Distance
Velocity (km/s)
Diameter (m)
2012 XO134
2019-Apr-18
14.8 LD
11
56
2019 FN2
2019-Apr-18
4.1 LD
7.8
68
522684
2019-Apr-19
19 LD
11.5
214
2019 GM
2019-Apr-21
19.4 LD
10.4
37
2019 FV2
2019-Apr-22
15.6 LD
2.3
33
2019 GF1
2019-Apr-27
4.7 LD
1.9
11
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
2019 GT1
2019-May-17
6.1 LD
4
36
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
12.3 LD
8.4
135
2014 MF18
2019-Jun-06
8.8 LD
3
22

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: 141, this year: 685, all time: 20077 (+98)
Potentially hazardous asteroids: 1967 (last updated  Feb. 26, 2019)
Minor Planets discovered: 794,460  (+338)

Asteroid News

Asteroid 3200 Phaethon is the second-largest “potentially hazardous” asteroid in Earth’s proximity. Here’s what it looks like, courtesy of Arecibo Observatory. https://t.co/PueAYD3Xh7 pic.twitter.com/Djts2iJFbx

— Astronomy Magazine (@AstronomyMag) April 15, 2019


Keep an eye out for meteors and fireballs during the Lyrid meteor shower this week!

Active from April 16th to April 28th, 2019

The Lyrids are a medium strength shower that usually produces good rates for three nights centered on the maximum. These meteors also usually lack persistent trains but can produce fireballs. These meteors are best seen from the northern hemisphere where the radiant is high in the sky at dawn. Activity from this shower can be seen from the southern hemisphere, but at a lower rate.

Shower details – Radiant: 18:04 +34° – ZHR: 18 – Velocity: 30 miles/sec (medium – 48.4km/sec) – Parent Object: C/1861 G1 (Thatcher)

Next Peak – The Lyrids will next peak on the Apr 21-22, 2019 night. On this night, the moon will be 92% full. – American Meteor Society

Lyrids Meteor Shower Radiant Lyrids Meteor Shower Radiant. Credit: Stellarium

On Apr. 15, 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

Fireball News

Nice #fireball caught from Monte Castelo, #Brazil on April 12th

If you see this kind of event, please report it here: https://t.co/qRilnZsyyF

Learn more about fireballs here:https://t.co/xg1AiMyhD0

Event page: https://t.co/7RXbroCLJZ pic.twitter.com/Sduebr1RY5

— AMSMETEORS (@amsmeteors) April 16, 2019

#Fireball over #SanAntonio, TX on April 10th (caught on video from #Houston , TX).
If you see this kind of event, please report it here: https://t.co/N0EuOVkOgj

Event page: https://t.co/xKV4LcnbTI pic.twitter.com/zCdijyKucw

— AMSMETEORS (@amsmeteors) April 12, 2019


A Comet over Notre Dame, 1858

I saw this illustration posted numerous times on Twitter after part of Notre Dame burned down on April 15, 2019. My wife and I have not visited Paris; my daughter, who visited Paris a couple years ago, is devastated!

Notre Dame Contemporary illustration of Donati’s Comet (C/1858 L1) over Notre Dame, 4 October 1858 – published in the fifth edition of Amédée Guillemin’s “Le Ciel: Notions D’Astronomie” (1877).

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

Solar System News

During @CassiniSaturn’s last look at Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, scientists gathered data that reveal what fills the moon's northern lakes — and how surprisingly deep they are: https://t.co/YDik8EIjSb pic.twitter.com/230Do30Wkw

— NASA JPL (@NASAJPL) April 15, 2019


OSIRIS-REx – Observing Asteroid Bennu from Oblique Angles

Here's another view of Bennu's largest boulder, which protrudes from the asteroid's southern hemisphere. I took this on Mar. 7 during Flyby 1 of Baseball Diamond phase. To get this angle, I pointed PolyCam down and west while flying over the equator.

➡️ https://t.co/ta9BeB8gLj pic.twitter.com/h7vtSlOsI8

— NASA's OSIRIS-REx (@OSIRISREx) April 15, 2019

Congratulations to Goddard’s production team, members of which were named NASA’s “Videographers of the Year” with their first-place video “Arriving at Asteroid Bennu.” The video explores the @OSIRISREx team’s excitement as the mission arrived at asteroid Bennu. pic.twitter.com/EzXesdSh7W

— NASA Goddard (@NASAGoddard) April 14, 2019

Juno at Jupiter

Happy #CitSciDay2019! This JunoCam image of Jupiter was processed by citizen scientist Kevin Gill. JunoCam's raw images are available for the public to peruse and process into image products at https://t.co/3VG1TGeVA9 pic.twitter.com/ZCYuhEc0h1

— NASA's Juno Mission (@NASAJuno) April 13, 2019

In the arms of the maelstrom: in this view from JunoCam, bright white clouds can be seen popping up in and around the arms of a rotating northern hemisphere storm. https://t.co/p5ms1ZhFa2 pic.twitter.com/p0s1KlCPvL

— NASA's Juno Mission (@NASAJuno) April 4, 2019

JAXA HAYABUSA2 – Performs First Collision Experiment with an Asteroid

[SCI] The deployable camera, DCAM3, successfully photographed the ejector from when the SCI collided with Ryugu’s surface. This is the world’s first collision experiment with an asteroid! In the future, we will examine the crater formed and how the ejector dispersed. pic.twitter.com/eLm6ztM4VX

— HAYABUSA2@JAXA (@haya2e_jaxa) April 5, 2019

From the History Books: Deep Impact’s Impact Experiment on Comet Tempel 1 in 2005

Flyby spacecraft Deep Impact shows the flash that occurred when comet Tempel 1 ran over the spacecraft’s impactor probe. It was taken by the flyby craft’s High Resolution Instrument, Visual CCD camera (HRIV) over a period of about 40 seconds. Black borders are the result of image stabilization. Animation recreated from the original raw encounter data (FITS images) downloaded from Small Bodies Mission. Credit: Paul Stephen Carlin / Public Domain

Mars Insight – Investigations into Drill Problem Continue

What’s the latest on my robotic mole? The international team back on Earth is testing a new theory as to what might be slowing its progress—and ideas about how to proceed. Exploration is always an adventure!

More details: https://t.co/X2EfmX1fzH pic.twitter.com/EfkQIzc34m

— NASA InSight (@NASAInSight) April 12, 2019

Climate

Using the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) 🛰🛰 satellites, @NASA scientists tracked trends in aquifers 💧 around the planet 🌏 from 2002 to 2016 and used other satellite data to determine the causes of regional changes in water storage. https://t.co/hUkFxURlH8 pic.twitter.com/aacJjErcfc

— NASA Earth (@NASAEarth) April 15, 2019

Earth Climate Observing Satellites from NASA’s Eyes on the Earth app – you can see info on each satellite, and overlay and animate satellite data on the globe.

Earth Climate Observing Satellites Earth observing satellites, Apr. 16, 2019. Credit: NASA Eyes on the Earth / Bob Trembley.

Exoplanet

TESS numbers are starting to climb!

All Exoplanets 3940  (+14)
Confirmed Planets with Kepler Light Curves for Stellar Host 2349
Confirmed Planets Discovered by Kepler 2342
Kepler Project Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 2421
Confirmed Planets with K2 Light Curves for Stellar Host 393
Confirmed Planets Discovered by K2 360 
K2 Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 535 
Confirmed Planets Discovered by TESS 9 
TESS Project Candidates 548  (+66)
TESS Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 349  (+56)

Data from the NASA Exoplanet Archive

Exoplanet News

Read about TESS' latest discovery of an Earth-sized exoplanet here: https://t.co/gLcO1YBZNt

Apologies for the bad link!

— Planetquest (@PlanetQuest) April 15, 2019

Exoplanet Artwork by Bob Trembley

 Kepler-16b Exoplanet Artwork – Kepler-16b. Credit: Space Engine / Bob Trembley.

Kepler-16 b  – The existence of a world with a double sunset, as portrayed in the film Star Wars more than 30 years ago, is now scientific fact. NASA’s Kepler mission has made the first unambiguous detection of a circumbinary planet – a planet orbiting two stars – 200 light-years from Earth.

Unlike Star Wars’ Tatooine, the planet is cold, gaseous and not thought to harbor life, but its discovery demonstrates the diversity of planets in our galaxy. Previous research has hinted at the existence of circumbinary planets, but clear confirmation proved elusive. Kepler detected such a planet, known as Kepler-16b, by observing transits, where the brightness of a parent star dims from the planet crossing in front of it.

[Read More: NASA’s Kepler Mission Discovers a World Orbiting Two Stars]

Kepler-1
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