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In the Sky this Week – September 14, 2021

By Robert Trembley  |  14 Sep 2021  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

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This entry is part 208 of 253 in the series In the Sky This Week

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

Civilians in SPACE!

As we near the launch of the Inspiration4 mission, I find myself getting increasingly excited about the concept of an all-civilian spacecraft crew.

Ad astra! @inspiration4x @SpaceX pic.twitter.com/Kxp9lteEs9

— Dr. Sian “Leo” Proctor (@DrSianProctor) September 13, 2021

One of the first things I thought when I heard about this mission was that my granddaughter now lives in a world where her chances of going to space are much greater then mine ever were!

A physician assistant and cancer survivor, @ArceneauxHayley will become the youngest American in space when she blasts off with @inspiration4x tomorrow.

But first, the 29-year-old shared with us a message to her younger self: “You are in for such a wild ride.” pic.twitter.com/SZa1uNuWat

— CBS Mornings (@CBSMornings) September 14, 2021

As a child of the 1960’s, I essentially grew up while the U. S. space program was in its infancy – BOY! How far we come from the days of white shirts with thin black ties on mission control teams, and all male spacecraft crews!

The Sky - In the Sky

Jupiter and Saturn appear in the southeastern sky after sunset all week; the Moon appears in Sagittarius on September 14th. Over the course of several days, the Moon appears near both Jupiter and Saturn.

  • Southeastern sky after sunset
    Jupiter and Saturn appear high in the southeastern sky after sunset all week; the Moon appears in Sagittarius on Sept. 14th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.
  • Southeastern sky after sunset
    The Moon appears near Saturn on Sept. 16th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.
  • Southeastern sky after sunset
    The Moon appears near Jupiter on Sept. 17th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.
  • Southeastern sky after sunset
    The Moon appears near(ish) Jupiter on Sept. 18th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

Venus and Mercury appear low above the southwestern horizon at dusk on Sept. 14th; Mercury vanishes from sight by Sept. 20th.

Southwestern sky after sunset
Venus appear low above the southwestern horizon at dusk all week; Mercury vanishes by Sept. 20th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

Venus, however, does something very interesting! Rather then go below the horizon like Mercury, Venus moves southward, while maintining (pretty much) the same height above the horizon – until early November, when Venus starts to move up and back to the west for several days, before finally dipping below the horizon.

Video showing Venus’ retrograde motion in late fall 2021. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium / OBS Studio / Shotcut.
The Moon - In the Sky
  • The Moon is Waxing Gibbous – visible to the southeast in early evening, up for most of the night.
  • The Full Moon occurs on Sept. 20th – rising at sunset, visible high in the sky around midnight, and visible all night.
  • After Sept. 20th, 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 Sept. 14-20, 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:

By combining Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter data with @NASA_NCCS supercomputer modeling, scientists have created new high-resolution elevation maps of areas at the Moon's south pole. These maps support @NASAArtemis mission planning. https://t.co/XuSysn0MxW pic.twitter.com/y7aoJtks7J

— NASA Moon (@NASAMoon) August 31, 2021

The Sun - In the Sky

Most of the spots covering the Sun’s face last week have vanished or rotated out of view – the Sun currently has 2 sunspots that Earth can see, and they are rotating out of view.

SpaceWeather.com says: “During the early hours of Sept. 13th (~0200 UT), a dark filament of magnetism on the sun exploded. The blast hurled a CME into space, and maybe toward Earth. Initial modeling by NOAA suggests a near miss (or glancing blow) on Sept. 16-17. The fact that the CME overlaps at least two other CMEs makes unraveling its trajectory tricky. Stay tuned for additional analysis.”

The Sun on August 31, 2021. Credit: SDO/HMI

The Sun seen in 193 angstroms on September 13th.

The two sunspots rotating out of view appear very active in this frequency.

The northern coronal hole is still very large, the southern hole has diminished a bit.

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/2021/09/13/20210913_1024_0193.mp4

The Sun seen in 304 angstroms on September 13th.

Large prominences and filaments everywhere! Whatever is rotating into view in the upper left is starting to spit a lot!

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/2021/09/13/20210913_1024_0304.mp4
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.

Amateur Solar Astrophotography

Sun, September 14, 2021. Credit: Rossana Miani in Maserà di Padova

Solar Corona

Solar wind speed is 448.4 km/sec ▲ with a density of 3.4 protons/cm3 ▼ at 1454 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:

This weekend, @ESASolarOrbiter made its third close approach to the Sun, coming within about 54 million miles of the Sun’s surface! 🛰☀️

Preview #SolarOrbiter's entire journey. ⬇️ https://t.co/gkVMC9jO4K

— NASA Sun & Space (@NASASun) September 13, 2021

Asteroids - In the Sky
  • Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) discovered this month: 194, this year: 1998 (+158), all time: 26,833 (+204)
  • Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs): 2207 (+2 updated 2021-09-14)
  • Total Minor Planets discovered (NASA): 1,113,527 (updated 2021-08-17)
  • Total Minor Planets discovered (MPC): 1,116,816 (updated 2021-08-31) – these last two numbers have not been updated by either NASA or the MPC in several weeks now!

Upcoming Earth-asteroid encounters:

Asteroid Date(UT) Miss Distance Velocity (km/s) Diameter (m)
2021 QR3 2021-Sep-14 16.7 LD 14.6 58
2021 RX5 2021-Sep-14 7.2 LD 8.1 65
2021 RZ4 2021-Sep-14 16 LD 6.7 17
2021 RL6 2021-Sep-16 14.7 LD 11.9 16
2021 RM10 2021-Sep-16 16.8 LD 12.3 30
2021 QG2 2021-Sep-16 18.1 LD 7.3 30
2021 QV5 2021-Sep-16 12.8 LD 15.4 42
2021 RQ9 2021-Sep-17 1.3 LD 13.2 18
2021 RY5 2021-Sep-18 3.5 LD 9.2 26
2021 RR4 2021-Sep-18 13.7 LD 5.9 15
2021 RH12 2021-Sep-18 1.1 LD 5.6 7
2021 QA2 2021-Sep-18 10.6 LD 13 54
2021 RZ7 2021-Sep-20 6.2 LD 13.5 23
2017 SL16 2021-Sep-20 12.8 LD 6.1 23
2021 RL3 2021-Sep-20 7.6 LD 22.5 66
2021 RX9 2021-Sep-21 8.3 LD 14.6 23
2021 RP9 2021-Sep-21 15.8 LD 18.1 48
2021 RS 2021-Sep-22 18.6 LD 3.4 37
2021 NY1 2021-Sep-22 3.9 LD 9.4 177
2021 QV6 2021-Sep-24 9.3 LD 13.1 90
2019 SF6 2021-Sep-26 16.4 LD 8.6 20
2021 RP10 2021-Sep-27 9.7 LD 16.4 42
2021 RM5 2021-Sep-29 10.5 LD 4.3 20
2021 RF2 2021-Sep-30 7.3 LD 5.4 25
2021 RP12 2021-Oct-06 5.1 LD 9.5 40
1998 SD9 2021-Oct-06 10.6 LD 10.8 59
2015 TQ21 2021-Oct-07 10.7 LD 20.7 12
2021 RF5 2021-Oct-10 20 LD 8.8 39
2021 QF5 2021-Oct-11 15.4 LD 7.1 49
2019 SE5 2021-Oct-11 16.3 LD 6.6 16
2020 TH6 2021-Oct-19 7.3 LD 5.9 6
1996 VB3 2021-Oct-20 8.8 LD 15.3 135
2021 RE10 2021-Oct-21 15.5 LD 5.1 54
2017 SJ20 2021-Oct-25 18.7 LD 15.7 123
2019 UW6 2021-Oct-26 8 LD 11.1 17
2009 WY7 2021-Nov-02 19.2 LD 14.7 54
2017 TS3 2021-Nov-02 13.9 LD 9.9 135
2005 VL1 2021-Nov-04 17 LD 5.2 18
2020 KA 2021-Nov-06 14.9 LD 4.8 11
2019 XS 2021-Nov-09 1.5 LD 10.7 65
2017 WG14 2021-Nov-10 18.6 LD 11.6 45
Notes: LD means “Lunar Distance.” 1 LD = 384,401 km, the distance between Earth and the Moon. 1 LD also equals 0.00256 AU. MAG is the visual magnitude of the asteroid on the date of closest approach.

Asteroid News:

A new way to estimate the age of the asteroid Vesta

Scientists at @UGAFranklin's Geology Department have created a new method to determine the age of Vesta, the second largest asteroid in the Solar System. Check out the conclusions in this @physorg_com article: https://t.co/xsz7yPP3zA pic.twitter.com/qfw1Ba1ayc

— Asteroid Day ☄ (@AsteroidDay) September 13, 2021

Lucy!

Lucy will be the 1st space mission to explore the Trojan asteroids orbiting the Sun in tandem with Jupiter. Thanks to @NASAHubble images, the Lucy team found a new satellite around the Trojan asteroid, Eurybates. We call this a BONUS science opportunity! https://t.co/UuWRcMvEGa pic.twitter.com/1MPHuZEvsW

— Thomas Zurbuchen (@Dr_ThomasZ) January 9, 2020
Fireballs - In the Sky

On September 13, 2021, the NASA All Sky Fireball Network reported 13 fireballs!
(13 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:

Nice #Winchcombe article by @willhumphries_. Now that both #meteorite and crater are in the museum, let's go find another one!
(BTW the driveway was not "scorched" – the blackness is just dust, not a burn mark.)https://t.co/bXM65NadyV

— UK Fireball Alliance (@UK_Fireball) September 11, 2021

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

The Solar System - In the Sky

Position of the planets & several spacecraft in the inner solar system on September 14th:

Inner Solar System
Top-down view of the inner solar system on September 14, 2021. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Position of the planets in the middle solar system:

Middle Solar System
Top-down view of the middle solar system on September 14, 2021. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Position of the planets in the outer solar system:

Outer Solar System
Top-down view of the outer solar system on September 14, 2021. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Solar System News

#PPOD: There is another exciting mission right now in the solar system – @NASAJuno! This composite image combines two images from perijove 26 and uses artificial vertical relief to show the detail in #Jupiter's storm clouds. Credit: @NASA @NASAJPL @Caltech @SwRI #MSSS @kevinmgill pic.twitter.com/5m5ZKFBHVt

— The SETI Institute (@SETIInstitute) September 6, 2021

Spacecraft News - In the Sky

Spirit and Opportunity rovers each carried a cable guards made from the WTC

A memorial on Mars: The twin Mars Exploration Rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, each carried a cable guard made of aluminum recovered from the site of the World Trade Center towers. https://t.co/IBsbN6RZ4T pic.twitter.com/xCENrcTbde

— NASA Mars (@NASAMars) September 10, 2021

NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover

I’m driving here!

Saying farewell to “Citadelle” and putting more tracks in my rear view, as I head from my last sampling location off to new targets ahead. New personal best for “auto-nav” driving: ~548 feet (167 meters) in one day.

My location: https://t.co/uPsKFhW17J pic.twitter.com/4853HglNwJ

— NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover (@NASAPersevere) September 13, 2021

International Space Station

Life support is good!

Two station crewmates had their mission extended for nearly a year. Meanwhile, the Exp 65 crew works on space biology and life support today.https://t.co/CCqEkmkHkY

— International Space Station (@Space_Station) September 14, 2021

International Space Station

Microgravity research!

The Expedition 65 crew is back on microgravity research aboard station today after kicking off September with three spacewalks in less than two weeks. https://t.co/51uWpy6qeh

— International Space Station (@Space_Station) September 13, 2021

HiRISE - Beautiful Mars

Looking for changes after the 2018 dust storm.

HiPOD: Bright Dunes in Syria Planum

Our purpose with this observation is to re-image bright dunes for changes after the 2018 dust storm. Specifically, we want to look at changes to existing features that formed during or after the storm. https://t.co/ehgAgEbzdk
NASA/UArizona pic.twitter.com/cipg2DxuRu

— HiRISE: Beautiful Mars (NASA) (@HiRISE) September 14, 2021

Landsat Program

Blooming algae.

Algae blooms can be so large, Landsat can capture it from space! Large blooms can affect human health if ingested.

Where is this one? Find out when you read the postcard https://t.co/mHfRpVEGWg pic.twitter.com/Yl5i3tOyyc

— USGS Landsat (@USGSLandsat) September 14, 2021

James Webb Space Telescope ready for launch!

Launch date update! December 18, 2021 is now the target launch date for #NASAWebb! 🚀 This date was coordinated between @NASA @ESA, and @Arianespace.

Next: Webb will be packed for its journey to the launch site in Kourou, French Guiana.

Read more: https://t.co/iOwqMiv79y pic.twitter.com/NLUChLOLG4

— NASA Webb Telescope (@NASAWebb) September 8, 2021

Climate

Attention, graduate students and high school #STEM educators! @NASAGISS has amazing opportunities for you to work with @NASA scientists on research projects and curricula related to climate change. Application deadline: September 19, 2021. Details: https://t.co/Aa1wmmSiJv pic.twitter.com/fDyV7hjIcB

— NASA Climate (@NASAClimate) September 13, 2021

Climate change -vs- global warming

Climate change and global warming: What’s the difference?

They both have to do with long-term patterns and the human impact on our planet, which is why you may have seen the terms used interchangeably. But they are, in fact, different.

Get the answer ⬇️https://t.co/gl3lbOFOr8

— NASA Climate (@NASAClimate) September 13, 2021

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

Exoplanets - In the Sky

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

All Exoplanets 4516 (+2)
Confirmed Planets Discovered by Kepler 2402
Kepler Project Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 2361
Confirmed Planets Discovered by K2 463
K2 Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 889
Confirmed Planets Discovered by TESS 155 (+1)
TESS Project Candidates Integrated into Archive (2021-09-11 13:00:02) 4511 (+40)
Current date TESS Project Candidates at ExoFOP 4511 (+40)
TESS Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 3062 (+19)

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.

Exoplanet News:

The planets beyond our solar system, exoplanets, can be extraordinarily unlike those closer to home.🌎 We've found a puffy pink planet like Styrofoam and a world where the atmosphere is the color of charcoal.⚫️ Explore our favorite Strange New Worlds: https://t.co/EthhNmKZiA pic.twitter.com/nK6nT9DSIC

— NASA Exoplanets (@NASAExoplanets) September 4, 2021

Aurora - In the Sky
Auroras taken by Rayann Elzein  on September 10, 2021 @ Utsjoki, Finnish Lapland

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

Light Pollution - In the Sky

Fantastic news! In Scotland, North Ronaldsay of the Orkney Archipelago has been recognized as a Dark Sky Island and an International Dark Sky Community. This recognition is the outcome of a long process of assessment and community activity.

Learn more: https://t.co/t08z49gzmY

— DarkSky International (@IDADarkSky) September 3, 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/
The Universe - In the Sky

Education and STEM

Be a part of World Space Week 2021: Oct. 4-10

Be a part of World Space Week 2021 and organize, coordinate or participate at a WSW event 💜🚀!

Register your events for WSW 2021 4-10 October on our website. Read more about how to do it here: https://t.co/WurxUVFdZm#wsw2021 #womeninspacewsw #worldspaceweek #wswa pic.twitter.com/zOrfg6mv58

— World Space Week (@WorldSpaceWeek) September 10, 2021

NASA and LEGO Space Team!

Ready to begin 10 weeks of fun-filled learning about the @NASAArtemis I mission?🚀🌕

Join @NASA astronauts/engineers & the LEGO Space Team to kick off an out-of-this-world STEAM learning series!🤩

Let's #BuildToLaunch with #NASASTEM & @LEGO_Education! https://t.co/QbMqOd19Bo pic.twitter.com/ST4cLkDTNl

— NASA STEM (@NASASTEM) September 14, 2021

Hubble – Weird Universe: Gomez’s Hamburger

Gomez’s Hamburger Credit: NASA/ESA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)

Hold the pickles; hold the lettuce. Space is serving up giant hamburgers. The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has snapped a photograph of a strange object that bears an uncanny resemblance to a hamburger.

The object, nicknamed Gomez’s Hamburger, is a sun-like star nearing the end of its life. It already has expelled large amounts of gas and dust and is on its way to becoming a colorful, glowing planetary nebula. The ingredients for the giant celestial hamburger are dust and light. The hamburger buns are light reflecting off dust and the patty is the dark band of dust in the middle. – NASA

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.
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.

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

Stay safe, be well, and look up!

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