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In the Sky this Week – December 7, 2021

By Robert Trembley  |  7 Dec 2021  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

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This entry is part 216 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|

Endeavour Space Academy

Another after-school astronomy club meeting, another instance of me being shocked and saddened; I asked the students if they’d ever heard of the Horsehead nebula – none of them had… I said “When I was your age, I had a poster of this up on my bedroom wall!” I had several slides prepared – showing wide-angle and close-up shots of the Horsehead nebula, and a side-by side comparison of the nebula in visible light and infrared.

One student commented that it looked like a cobra – well… it kinda does! That’s an interesting perspective from someone who’d never seen it. Next week I’m showing the Ring nebula and Helix nebula.

Warren Astronomical Society

Also yesterday, I moderated a panel of members of the Warren Astronomical Society for a discussion on “Anti-Science Sentiment in the U.S.” This panel was modeled after a similar panel held during the 2014 North American Science Fiction Convention in Detroit. I was interested to see how this discussion has evolved in nearly a decade.

Something that came up in 2014, and I brought up last night as a discussion topic, was that we need a lot more scientists and science-minded people in the halls of government. Back in 2014, a panelist, who was a scientist, suggested that she’d have a hard time “giving up doing what she loves and having to ‘deal with those people.'” Diane Hall, the current president of the W.A.S. mentioned that she works with a scientist who is a politician in Michigan, who is doing the science she loves, to the benefit of everyone. More of that, please!

More than one instance was discussed of schools denying their students a viewing of a solar eclipse – even when eye protection was being offered for free. I showed hundreds of students at my wife’s school a transit of Mercury through my telescope – using a BIG solar filter.

David Levy commented that it’s vitally important to get kids and young students interested in astronomy – something that many members of astronomy clubs across southeastern Michigan do frequently. I know for a fact that some people have been inspired by their interactions with amateur astronomers to follow their dreams and pursue a field of science – or maybe even discover in interest in some field of science they were not aware of.

But there are a LOT of kids, and more every year who could benefit of learning about astronomy and space science. It’s never a bad idea to #TeachKidsSpace!

The Sky - In the Sky

Mars continues to appear low above the southeastern horizon before sunrise all week – moving ever-so slightly south each morning.

Southeastern horizon on before dawn
Mars appears low above the southeastern horizon before sunrise all week. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

An “increased probability of car wrecks” conjunction of planets and the Moon occurs in the south-southwestern sky after sunset all week; Jupiter, Saturn, Venus and the Moon appear near each other from Dec. 7-10th. If you must ogle at this conjunction, please do so while not operating a motor vehicle.

South-southwestern sky after sunset

South-southwestern sky after sunset

South-southwestern sky after sunset

South-southwestern sky after sunset

South-southwestern sky after sunset

South-southwestern sky after sunset

South-southwestern sky after sunset

South-southwestern sky after sunset

The constellations Canis Major, Orion and Taurus appear in the west-southwestern sky before sunrise.

West-southwestern sky before sunrise

West-southwestern sky before sunrise

The Moon - In the Sky
  • The Moon is a Waxing Crescent – visible toward the southwest in early evening.
  • The First Quarter Moon occurs on Dec. 10th – visible high in the southern sky in early evening.
  • After Dec. 10th, 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 Dec. 6-13, 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 Close-Up – Dec. 10th

Moon
Close-up of the Moon’s terminator on Dec. 10, 2021 @ 0100 UT. Visualizations by Ernie Wright / NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio.

Moon News

10 new astronaut candidates

We’re welcoming 10 new astronaut candidates to the team! These intrepid explorers may one day be chosen for missions to the Moon on @NASA_Orion and @NASA_SLS. https://t.co/bgvpGRiiMM

— NASA Artemis (@NASAArtemis) December 6, 2021

Another astronaut announcement - this time from Chris Hadfield!

In 30 minutes @nasa will announce the world's newest professional astronauts - people that will begin to settle the Moon. Watch here: https://t.co/HQuMUIEtBE pic.twitter.com/bPa4LaaXQs

— Chris Hadfield (@Cmdr_Hadfield) December 6, 2021

The Sun - In the Sky

The Sun has 1 spot – Spaceweather.com says “Sunspot AR2904 has a stable, uncomplicated magnetic field that poses no threat for strong solar flares.”

The Sun on December 7, 2021. Credit: SDO/HMI

The Sun seen in 193 angstroms on December 6th

The northern coronal hole is open and large, the southern hole is open and only a little smaller. There is one large coronal hole in the northern hemisphere, and a smaller one in the southern hemisphere. There’s a lot of coronal loop activity near the coronal hole in the northern hemisphere.

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/2021/12/06/20211206_1024_0193.mp4

The Sun seen in 304 angstroms on December 6th

Prominences, filaments and loops everywhere! Whatever is rotating out of view on the right is blowing a LOT of flares!

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/2021/12/06/20211206_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

Total solar eclipse 2021, from Union Glacier Antarctica. Credit: Jayson A. Wells

Solar Corona

Solar wind speed is 509.2 km/sec ▲ with a density of 8.1 protons/cm3 ▼ at 1316 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 ESA’s Solar Orbiter completes Earth flyby – with a lot of fanfare about flying through Earth’s space debris fields.

☀️ @NASASun is taking us on a #SolarTour, and the latest stop is the aurora!

Sounding rockets are used to research the effects auroras have on our everyday lives. Watch the video below to learn about VISIONS-2, launched Dec. 7, 2018, from Norway: https://t.co/AjVzm4A7SQ https://t.co/eWgc564THI pic.twitter.com/BKoomZV9V1

— NASA Wallops (@NASAWallops) December 6, 2021

Asteroids - In the Sky
  • Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) discovered this month: 63, this year: 2957 (+143), all time: 27,651 (+63)
  • Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs): 2234 (+3 updated 2021-11-30)
  • Total Minor Planets discovered (NASA): 1,113,527 (updated 2021-08-17) – not updated for many weeks.
  • Total Minor Planets discovered (MPC): 1,143,371 (-64, updated 2021-12-07)

Upcoming Earth-asteroid encounters:

Asteroid Date(UT) Miss Distance Velocity (km/s) Diameter (m)
2021 XA3 2021-Dec-07 14.6 LD 8.2 19
2021 XN2 2021-Dec-07 2.3 LD 7.4 13
2021 XC 2021-Dec-08 6.5 LD 6.9 20
2021 WT4 2021-Dec-08 10.8 LD 6.4 16
2021 WA3 2021-Dec-09 17.2 LD 7 17
2021 WW3 2021-Dec-09 5.6 LD 7.6 15
2021 XX2 2021-Dec-09 2 LD 6.3 7
2021 XZ2 2021-Dec-10 8.3 LD 18.9 21
2021 WV1 2021-Dec-11 1.5 LD 3 7
2021 XQ2 2021-Dec-11 10 LD 16.4 28
2021 XG 2021-Dec-11 7.7 LD 4.8 9
4660 2021-Dec-11 10.3 LD 6.6 759
2021 XD2 2021-Dec-11 3.5 LD 6.9 13
2021 WJ3 2021-Dec-11 9.9 LD 5.5 21
2021 WQ1 2021-Dec-12 7.8 LD 8.8 27
2021 WZ5 2021-Dec-13 4.6 LD 1.9 5
2021 VW27 2021-Dec-13 18.7 LD 8.4 38
2019 XQ1 2021-Dec-13 14.1 LD 9.1 30
2021 WW2 2021-Dec-13 14.3 LD 10.9 28
2021 VT6 2021-Dec-14 7.7 LD 6.9 50
2021 WZ4 2021-Dec-14 5 LD 14 39
2004 YC 2021-Dec-15 18.4 LD 8.1 27
163899 2021-Dec-17 14.2 LD 5.6 1093
2021 LX3 2021-Dec-18 19.7 LD 6.5 124
2016 YY10 2021-Dec-21 11.3 LD 9.2 23
2017 XQ60 2021-Dec-21 13.7 LD 15.7 47
2016 TR54 2021-Dec-24 16.9 LD 15.5 135
2018 AH 2021-Dec-27 11.9 LD 12.7 112
2017 AE3 2021-Dec-29 9.3 LD 19.1 155
2014 YE15 2022-Jan-06 19.3 LD 6.4 8
2020 AP1 2022-Jan-07 4.6 LD 5.7 4
2013 YD48 2022-Jan-11 14.6 LD 14.8 107
2021 BA 2022-Jan-18 9.8 LD 9.1 22
7482 2022-Jan-18 5.2 LD 19.6 1732
2018 PN22 2022-Jan-21 11.4 LD 2.7 11
2017 XC62 2022-Jan-24 18.7 LD 4.3 112
2021 BZ 2022-Jan-27 17.6 LD 14.6 39
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:

Asteroid Ryugu sample now at the NASA Johnson Space Center!

JAXA has safely delivered a part of the asteroid Ryugu sample (returned to Earth by Hayabusa2 in 2020) to the NASA Johnson Space Center! Accessible by researchers from around the world, the sample could provide a clue about how the solar system began. https://t.co/wHCJZzmN0c pic.twitter.com/I7XMMs7rXR

— JAXA Washington DC (@jaxa_wdc) December 7, 2021

I'll happily give you samples of asteroid Bennu in 2023, for a sample of asteroid Ryugu today!

In return, NASA will offer samples of asteroid Bennu, after our #OSIRISREx mission drops them off in 2023. https://t.co/TV72vUGec4

— NASA Solar System (@NASASolarSystem) December 7, 2021

Geminid #MeteorShower is caused by an "active #asteroid"

The Geminid #MeteorShower is this month! Did you know they are actually caused by something called an "active #asteroid"? Download the lesson to learn more.https://t.co/qOc1Kan3z7 pic.twitter.com/wRJ1xLtmK9

— Asteroid Day ☄ (@AsteroidDay) December 6, 2021

#Sentry2 potential impact monitor

As they track thousands of potentially hazardous asteroids, @NASA scientists have a new tool. Called #Sentry2, the system monitors potential impacts, taking into account the latest data from asteroid surveys and from missions such as #OSIRISREx. https://t.co/8DyXPNiukD pic.twitter.com/lyDpdx2B6b

— NASA Solar System (@NASASolarSystem) December 6, 2021

German astronomer Wilhelm Tempel was born Dec. 5

#OnThisDay 200 years ago the German astronomer Wilhelm Tempel was born, famous for discovering historical comets and also 5 #asteroids between 1861 and 1868:https://t.co/TxelgiOOaS pic.twitter.com/QliuICzxiC

— Asteroid Day ☄ (@AsteroidDay) December 5, 2021
Fireballs - In the Sky

On December 6, 2021, the NASA All Sky Fireball Network reported 21 fireballs!
(15 sporadics, 4 sigma Hydrids, 1 Nov. omega Orionid, 1 Geminid)

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:

Bright #Fireball spotted this morning East of #Charlotte, NC

If you saw it: https://t.co/N0EuOVkOgj
Map & video: https://t.co/BYjIas363F pic.twitter.com/CjDONwVrmX

— AMSMETEORS (@amsmeteors) December 3, 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 December 6th:

Inner Solar System
Top-down view of the inner solar system on Dec. 7, 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 Dec. 7, 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 Dec. 7, 2021. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Solar System News

What’s up in December skies:

🪐 See three planets after sunset
☄️ Hunt for a newly discovered comet
💫 Get up early on the 14th to watch for Geminid meteors
https://t.co/Jc15v5POLo pic.twitter.com/2ewp3FH01i

— NASA Solar System (@NASASolarSystem) December 2, 2021

Spacecraft News - In the Sky

Hubble Space Telescope

Hubble is fully back!

The telescope is now operating with all four active instruments after the @NASA team recovered the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on Monday, Dec. 6.

For more information: https://t.co/MJnzAC4yLt pic.twitter.com/AbVbmfNaoL

— Hubble (@NASAHubble) December 7, 2021

Flight 16 of the Mars Helicopter

Mars Helicopter is there, somewhere!

HiRISE - Beautiful Mars

Get out your red/blue glasses!

HiRISE 3D: Central Peak of Crater in Solis Planum

There are some possible bedrock exposures in this peak, along with possible breccias (rock consisting of angular fragments cemented together).https://t.co/b9kRSugMWW
NASA/JPL/UArizona#Mars #science pic.twitter.com/jZuUQjLfBl

— HiRISE: Beautiful Mars (NASA) (@HiRISE) December 6, 2021

Live space lecture from the Chinese Space Station - Dec. 9 2:40 am Eastern

Shenzhou-13 astronauts Zhai Zhigang, Wang Yaping and Ye Guangfu will deliver a live space lecture from the China Space Station at 0740 UTC (2:40 am Eastern, 15:40 Beijing time) Dec. 9 (Thursday), CMSA announces. Will be broadcast on CCTV https://t.co/qthEWh2LC8 pic.twitter.com/ZjK3uHg0Yt

— Andrew Jones (@AJ_FI) December 6, 2021

Laser Communications Relay Demonstration in space!

The @ulalaunch #AtlasV brought @NASA's Laser Communications Relay Demonstration (LCRD) to space! LCRD will use infrared lasers to communicate science data to and from space. pic.twitter.com/TRnRvCsYIx

— NASA Laser Communications (@NASALaserComm) December 7, 2021

"Alliances for Climate Action" virtual forum series

In October, @FEMA and @NASA hosted the "Alliances for Climate Action" virtual forum series, with thought leaders from across agencies discussing how we can work together to confront the challenges of a changing climate. Details ⬇️https://t.co/19MtXHogTD

— NASA Climate (@NASAClimate) December 2, 2021

CO2

📈 415.41 ppm #CO2 in the atmosphere December 6, 2021 📈 Up from 413.11 ppm a year ago 📈 Mauna Loa Observatory @NOAA data & graphic: https://t.co/MZIEphYygh 📈 https://t.co/DpFGQoYEwb tracking: https://t.co/PTTkLiPGm2 🙏 View & share often 🙏 pic.twitter.com/UhpeY660kr

— CO2_Earth (@CO2_earth) December 7, 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 4576 (+1)
Confirmed Planets Discovered by Kepler 2402
Kepler Project Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 2361
Confirmed Planets Discovered by K2 477
K2 Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 1022
Confirmed Planets Discovered by TESS 173 (+1)
TESS Project Candidates Integrated into Archive (2021-11-19 12:04:01) 4708 (+4)
Current date TESS Project Candidates at ExoFOP 4708 (+4)
TESS Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 3124 (-3)

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:

Exoplanets are too far away to see clearly even with our most powerful telescopes. To depict how they look, we start with science. Squiggles on charts and columns of numbers can indicate red, blue or green worlds, with half-frozen oceans or bubbling lava. https://t.co/xMGPNkXs6A pic.twitter.com/14bMe0KyTh

— NASA Exoplanets (@NASAExoplanets) December 6, 2021

Aurora - In the Sky
Aurora. Taken by Sarah E Baur  on November 3, 2021 @ About 10 miles NE of Anaconda, Montana

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

Latest Aurora Oval Forecast

Aurora – 30 Minute forecast. Credit: NOAA. Click image to see northern and southern hemisphere Aurora forecast.
Light Pollution - In the Sky

We are proud to announce @PNRMillevaches in France is the world’s newest Intl Dark Sky Reserve! The park is a vast territory classified as a nature reserve since 2004 for the quality of landscapes, unique environment, & rich biodiversity.

Learn more: https://t.co/XhuEdSCFM3

— DarkSky International (@IDADarkSky) November 30, 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

The mere fact that gravitational waves can be detected – just blows me away!

Ninety Gravitational Wave Spectrograms and Counting: https://t.co/F2pBFvzF3C by @NSF, LIGO, VIRGO, KAGRA, Georgia Tech, Vanderbilt U.;sGraphic : Sudarshan Ghonge & Karan Jani pic.twitter.com/DtiP1vwAcH

— Astronomy Picture Of the Day (@apod) December 7, 2021

Beautiful Universe: Horsehead Nebula

I showed this image to students during my after-school astronomy and space science club:

Horsehead Nebula. Credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage Team (AURA/STScI); ESO

This image shows two different views of the Horsehead Nebula. On the right is a view of the nebula in visible light, taken using the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope in Chile (eso0202a). The image on the left shows the nebula in the infrared, using observations from Hubble’s high-resolution Wide Field Camera 3.

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.
Stellarium: a free web-based planetarium app. It’s a great tool for planning observing sessions.

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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