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In the Sky this Week – May 18, 2021

By Robert Trembley  |  18 May 2021  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

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This entry is part 195 of 253 in the series In the Sky This Week

Yesterday, I gave a remote presentation to my wife’s middle-school astronomy students; using the Windows app SpaceEngine, I gave them a “Tour of the Milky Way Galaxy:” I took them to a couple exoplanets, double and multiple star systems, star-forming regions, several planetary nebula, a supernova remnant, 2 black holes, a globular cluster, the Large Magellanic Cloud, and the Andromeda Galaxy. I orbited around the Milky Way and showed the galaxy to the students from every possible angle – including edge-on, which I LOVE doing!

M 13 over the Milky Way
Artist’s concept of globular cluster M 13 seen far over the disk of the Milky Way Galaxy; the blue crosshair shows the location of the Sun. Credit: Bob Trembley / SpaceEngine.

I also flew the students thru the galaxy’s arms and dust lanes at impossible faster-than-light speeds – just like the old Windows screensaver! I wanted to give the students the impression that the Milky Way is an ocean full of stars.

This presentation was a lot of fun – I’m going to have to tweak it a bit, and add some items to the object list – like Betelgeuse! I can see this becoming something I present frequently!

  • The Sky
  • The Moon
  • The Sun
  • Asteroids
  • Fireballs
  • The Solar System
  • Spacecraft News
  • Exoplanets
  • Aurora
  • Light Pollution
  • The Universe

I mentioned last week that I sound like a broken record mentioning every week that Jupiter and Saturn continue to appear in the southeastern predawn sky – but there they are, so broken record it is! Jupiter is moving away from Saturn a little bit each week; I suppose I could keep mentioning that too!

Southeastern predawn sky
Jupiter and Saturn appear in the southeastern predawn sky all week… just like last week… and the week before… Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

Mars and Mercury appear above the western horizon after sunset.

Western horizon after sunset
Mars and Mercury appear above the western horizon after sunset. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

The Moon appears in conjunction with the star Regulus on May 18th and 19th.

  • High in the west-southwestern sky after sunset
    The Moon appears near the star Regulus high in the west-southwestern sky after sunset on May 18th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.
  • High in the west-southwestern sky after sunset
    The Moon appears near the star Regulus high in the west-southwestern sky after sunset on May 19th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.
Regulus compared with the Sun
The star Regulus compared with the Sun. Credit: Bob Trembley / Universe Sandbox.

The Moon appears in conjunction with the star Spica on May 22nd and 23rd.

  • Southern sky after sunset
    The Moon appears near the star Spica in southern sky after sunset on May 22nd. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.
  • Southern sky after sunset
    The Moon appears near the star Spica in southern sky after sunset on May 23rd. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.
Spica compared with the Sun
The star Spica compared with the Sun. Credit: Bob Trembley / Universe Sandbox.

The star Vega appears almost directly overhead at 4:30 AM all week.

Vega directly overhead
The star Vega is almost directly overhead* at 4:30 AM this week (*seen from 42°N – my location). Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.
Vega compared with the Sun
The star Vega compared with the Sun. Credit: Bob Trembley / Universe Sandbox.

The Moon is a Waxing Crescent – visible toward the southwest in early evening.

The First Quarter Moon occurs on May 19th – visible high in the southern sky in early evening.

After May 19th, the Moon will be a Waxing Gibbous – visible to the southeast in early evening, and up for most of the night.

Moon
The Moon from May 18-24, 2021. Visualizations by Ernie Wright / NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio.

If you click on the Moon image above, or click this link, you will go to NASA’s Moon Phase and Libration, 2021 page – it will show you what the Moon looks like right now. If you click the image on that page, you will download a high-rez TIFF image annotated with the names of prominent features – helpful for logging your lunar observations!

Moon News:

📷 New image from our Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, and it's a landslide.

The western wall of Klute crater on the far side of the Moon has slumped towards the crater floor, likely as a result of a nearby moonquake or surface impact event. https://t.co/YTHRkUbQ2X pic.twitter.com/DyuY2myPow

— NASA Moon (@NASAMoon) May 12, 2021

The Sun on May 11, 2021. Credit: SDO/HMI

The Sun has 2 spots – one of the 2 from last week is rotating out of view, and a new spot is rotating into view, and it’s crackling with C-class flares.

Spaceweather.com reports: “GEOMAGNETIC STORM WATCH: Minor G1-class geomagnetic storms are possible on May 18-19 when a pair of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) is expected to hit Earth’s magnetic field. The two CMEs left the sun on consecutive days: One from sunspot AR2822 on May 13th, the next from sunspot AR2823 on May 14th. Individually, the CMEs appear to be weak and insubstantial; however, they could add up to a geomagnetic storm when they arrive in quick succession today or tomorrow.”

A couple intense regions of coronal loop activity are rotating towards the center of the Sun’s face

The northern coronal hole remains small, but this week, the southern coronal hole has determined that it’s taking over! The southern hole itself is huge, and has merged with a very large hole, stretching up past the equator! Watch the left side of the video, you can see the coronal loops buckle and return after a couple flares!

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/2021/05/17/20210517_1024_0193.mp4
The Sun seen in 193 angstroms on April 26, 2021

Moderate prominence activity; the region rotating into view is spitting-out flares like crazy!

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/2021/05/17/20210517_1024_0304.mp4
The Sun seen in 304 angstroms on April 26, 2021
Videos courtesy of NASA/SDO and the AIA, EVE, and HMI science teams.
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.

 

Solar Activity on Facebook – Run by Volunteer NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador Pamela Shivak

Sun
SOLARACTIVITY PICTURE OF THE DAY for Tuesday, May 18th, 2021 is this awesome sunspot image by Gabriel Corban. Equipment details: “AR1282, using the DayStar Quark h-alpha filter for Chromosphere, SW ED 120 refractor, and a Flir USB3 mono camera. Negative version”.

Solar Corona

Solar wind speed is 393.3 km/sec, with a density of 7.9 protons/cm3 at 1210 UT.

Sun
SOHO LASCO C2 Latest Image

Click here to see a near real-time animation of the corona and solar wind from the Solar & Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO).

Sun News:

The Sun’s surface is over 10,000° Fahrenheit, but farther from the surface, its atmosphere is somehow 300 times hotter.

Goddard scientists will study this mystery with a sounding rocket.

The mission, EUNIS, is set to launch today from New Mexico. 🚀https://t.co/UXG678ZOw1

— NASA Goddard (@NASAGoddard) May 18, 2021

Our instrument aboard the @ESA & NASA #SolarOrbiter mission has just captured its first solar eruption! ☀️ Learn more about the sun-watching spacecraft and its observations: https://t.co/e5r6SlxNhY pic.twitter.com/JnCa38R3aV

— NASA (@NASA) May 17, 2021

  • Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) discovered this month: 175, this year: 1043 (+106), all time: 25,839 (+98)
  • Potentially hazardous asteroids: 2178 (+1) (updated 2021-05-18)
  • Total Minor Planets discovered (NASA): 1,082,130 (+1545)
  • Total Minor Planets discovered (MPC): 1,069,907 (updated 2021-04-27)

Upcoming Earth-asteroid encounters:

Asteroid Date(UT) Miss Distance Velocity (km/s) Diameter (m)
2021 JY5 2021-May-18 3.6 LD 3 12
2021 JF3 2021-May-18 11.9 LD 11.7 52
2021 JR4 2021-May-18 7.1 LD 7.6 35
2021 JC9 2021-May-18 13.1 LD 12.6 30
478784 2021-May-18 15.8 LD 5 27
2021 KA 2021-May-19 4 LD 5.1 11
2021 JJ3 2021-May-20 17.2 LD 6.3 29
2021 JE1 2021-May-20 7.4 LD 7.6 17
2021 JQ6 2021-May-21 5.9 LD 19.4 25
2021 JT6 2021-May-21 19.6 LD 6.1 18
2021 KC 2021-May-21 7.9 LD 7.9 71
2021 HJ2 2021-May-22 16.1 LD 8.2 69
2021 JK7 2021-May-22 19 LD 22.4 49
2021 JJ5 2021-May-23 13.1 LD 8.7 32
2021 JJ7 2021-May-24 5.8 LD 11.4 42
2021 FN4 2021-May-24 6.1 LD 8.3 84
2021 HD3 2021-May-25 12.2 LD 7.9 47
2013 VO11 2021-May-25 3.5 LD 10.2 8
2021 JG1 2021-May-26 2.2 LD 9.2 37
2021 JN7 2021-May-26 18.8 LD 7.4 37
2021 JF1 2021-May-27 13.7 LD 17.3 126
2021 JX2 2021-May-27 5.7 LD 3 15
2021 JP3 2021-May-28 11.6 LD 7.1 21
2021 JN6 2021-May-28 13.7 LD 7.1 19
2018 LB 2021-Jun-01 2.9 LD 7.7 22
2021 JW6 2021-Jun-02 8.1 LD 5.4 21
2021 JM6 2021-Jun-12 11.1 LD 8.4 33
441987 2021-Jun-25 15.6 LD 13.4 187
2021 GM4 2021-Jul-01 12.1 LD 6.3 150
2020 AD1 2021-Jul-04 2.8 LD 4.9 20
2019 AT6 2021-Jul-13 4.2 LD 5.1 11

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

Asteroid News:

In the early morning of May 9, 2021, 5 citizen astronomers from the Unistellar network successfully completed a unique challenge : Detect asteroid Patroclus to aid NASA Lucy spacecraft, the first-ever mission to the Trojan asteroids.https://t.co/YyyWbwzso3 pic.twitter.com/lqfxbjI1zh

— Franck Marchis (@AllPlanets) May 14, 2021

On May 17, 2021, the NASA All Sky Fireball Network reported 6 fireballs!
(6 sporadics)

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). Credit: SpaceWeather.com

Fireball News:

Peebinga, Australia – May 6, 2021, 3:24 PM local time, USG sensors detected a large meteor fireball travelling southeast at 27 km/s, ending northeast of Peebinga. Possibly interstellar meteor! https://t.co/duGQgry305 pic.twitter.com/FadOPjNQBO

— Strewnify (@strewnify) May 14, 2021

If you see a bright meteor or a fireball, please REPORT IT to the American Meteor Society and the International Meteor Organization!

Position of the planets & several spacecraft in the inner solar system on May 18th; the Parker Solar Probe has crossed the orbit of Mercury.

Inner Solar System
The inner solar system on May 18, 2021. The Parker Solar Probe has nearly crossed the orbit of Mercury. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Position of the planets in the middle solar system:

Middle Solar System
Middle solar system on May 18, 2021 – the orbit of comet 67P is highlighted. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Position of the planets, and a several spacecraft in the outer solar system on May 18, 2021 seen from dwarf planet Eris.

Outer Solar System
Outer Solar System on May 18, 2021 – seen from dwarf planet Eris. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Solar System News:

Evidence of “recent” volcanic activity on Mars:

These three images are of the one king of the Solar System, all captured simultaneously in 2017. Hubble observed Jupiter in ultraviolet and visible light, while @GeminiObs in Hawai’I observed it in infrared. https://t.co/0c6ZfsIRgK

— Hubble Space Telescope (@HubbleTelescope) May 11, 2021

Read more about Mercury’s sodium tail here: https://science.nasa.gov/mercurys-sodium-tail

China Becomes 2nd Nation to Land a Rover on Mars!

Touchdown Confirmed! #Zhurong (祝融), the 1st Created-in-China Mars Rover, has landed in Utopia Planitia on Mars! China 🇨🇳 becomes the 2nd nation to land a rover successfully on Mars (3rd for a lander). Credit also to #Tianwen1 science instrument & tracking partners: 🇪🇺🇦🇷🇫🇷🇪🇸🇦🇹🇦🇺 pic.twitter.com/au9yfeLjUy

— Chinese Zhurong Mars Rover (@MarsZhurong) May 15, 2021

Dragonfly Mission to Titan

.@NASA's Dragonfly mission to Saturn’s moon, Titan, is on track to launch in 2027. The rotorcraft will explore environments where liquid water & organic materials key to life once existed together. Discover more about the landing site in this #STIdoc: https://t.co/eQ29wdlbq6 pic.twitter.com/3ULMZVWvJp

— NASA STI Program (@NASA_STI) May 13, 2021

International Space Station:

The Exp 65 crew kicked off the workweek on Japanese science gear, a U.S. immune system study, and spacewalk preps. More… https://t.co/LMdyODycIJ pic.twitter.com/i1AZllB44g

— International Space Station (@Space_Station) May 17, 2021

HiRISE – on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter:

HiPOD 16 May 21: An Overflow Channel from Athabasca Vallis

The channel splits into multiple branches, creating about ten streamlined mesas. Vague bumps are visible on the channel floor—perhaps large boulders that were deposited by floodwaters?https://t.co/rte9ac1gyk pic.twitter.com/XtrjSw0fPa

— HiRISE: Beautiful Mars (NASA) (@HiRISE) May 16, 2021

Hubble Space Telescope:

Happy #HubbleFriday! 🎉

This week’s image showcases the emission nebula NGC 2313. Emission nebulae are bright clouds of ionized gas that emit their own light.

At the center is the star V565, which highlights a silvery, fan-shaped veil of gas and dust: https://t.co/hm8aBJ7S7U pic.twitter.com/n7JEASSQtx

— Hubble (@NASAHubble) May 14, 2021

Landsat:

In the southernmost reaches of Burma (Myanmar), along the border with Thailand, lies the Mergui Archipelago. The archipelago in the Andaman Sea is made up of more than 800 islands surrounded by extensive coral reefs [Landsat 5, Michaeal Taylor: https://t.co/038j9CL5Ta] pic.twitter.com/s8KhYF0aC2

— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) May 15, 2021

Satellite Constellations… eww!

"What would happen if we tried to detect satellites instead of meteors with a #globalmeteornetwork camera?" – a total of 616 tracked on the first night with a narrow-field camera (5°x3°) that sees stars down to mag +10. pic.twitter.com/mRuJTWWSyn

— Denis Vida (@meteordoc) May 18, 2021

Space Debris

Crashing Chinese rocket highlights growing dangers of space debris…https://t.co/fiRHp6qEgN pic.twitter.com/lkusZaX6UV

— Wycombe Astro Soc (@Wycombe_Astro) May 13, 2021

See a list of current NASA missions here: https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/?type=current

Exoplanet

ex·o·plan·et /ˈeksōˌplanət/, noun: a planet orbiting a star other than the Sun.

All Exoplanets 4383
Confirmed Planets Discovered by Kepler 2394
Kepler Project Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 2366
Confirmed Planets Discovered by K2 426
K2 Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 889
Confirmed Planets Discovered by TESS 125
TESS Project Candidates Integrated into Archive (2021-03-27 13:00:02) 2684 
Current date TESS Project Candidates at ExoFOP 2684
TESS Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 1473 (-4)

Data from the NASA Exoplanet Archive
* Confirmed Planets Discovered by TESS refers to the number planets that have been published in the refereed astronomical literature.
* TESS Project Candidates refers to the total number of transit-like events that appear to be astrophysical in origin, including false positives as identified by the TESS Project.
* TESS Project Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed refers to the number of TESS Project Candidates that have not yet been dispositioned as a Confirmed Planet or False Positive.

Visit NASA’s Eyes on Exoplanets site and explore exoplanets in 3D: https://eyes.nasa.gov/apps/exo/#/

Exoplanet News

When we talk about the enormity of the cosmos, it can be hard to wrap our minds around how far and how numerous celestial bodies are. To get a better sense of distances to exoplanets – planets around other stars – let's start with the Milky Way galaxy. https://t.co/ECkBRTMhm8 pic.twitter.com/w0bH3K12lq

— NASA Exoplanets (@NASAExoplanets) May 17, 2021

SAR Arc & Aurora. Taken by Alan Dyer on May 11, 2021 near Gleichen, Alberta

SpaceWeather.com Realtime Aurora Gallery: https://spaceweathergallery.com/aurora_gallery.html

An old college buddy told me that his brother lives in this city.

We've got some good news! Crestone, Colorado, USA, has been designated as an International Dark Sky Community. This helps further plans for an Intl. Dark Sky Reserve including much of the San Luis Valley of CO & northern Sangre De Cristo Mtns.

Learn more: https://t.co/wRsq9Vw6w7

— DarkSky International (@IDADarkSky) May 14, 2021

Visit an International Dark Sky Park: https://www.darksky.org/our-work/conservation/idsp/parks/

If you live in Michigan, visit the Michigan Dark Skies site: https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/darkskies/

Digitized Sky Survey – Beautiful Universe: Simeis 147 (Sh2-240) Supernova Remnant

Simeis 147
Simeis 147 – supernova remnant in Torus. Credit: Davide De Martin & the ESA/ESO/NASA Photoshop FITS Liberator

Stay safe, be well, and look up!


Software Apps used for this post:

NASA Eyes on the Solar System: an immersive 3D solar system and space mission simulator – free for the PC /MAC. I maintain the unofficial NASA Eyes Facebook page.
SpaceEngine: a free 3D Universe Simulator for Windows. Steam version with VR support available.
Stellarium: a free open source planetarium app for PC/MAC/Linux. It’s a great tool for planning observing sessions. A web-based version of Stellarium is also available.


Section header image credits:
The Sky – Stellarium / Bob Trembley
Observing Target – Turn Left at Orion / M. Skirvin
The Moon – NASA/JPL-Caltech
The Sun – NASA/JPL-Caltech
Asteroids – NASA/JPL-Caltech
Fireballs – Credited to YouTube
Comets – Comet P/Halley, March 8, 1986, W. Liller
The Solar System – NASA Eyes on the Solar System / Bob Trembley
Spacecraft News – NASA Eyes on the Solar System / Bob Trembley
Exoplanets – Space Engine / Bob Trembley
Light Pollution – NASA’s Black Marble
Aurora – Bob Trembley
The Universe – Universe Today

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