Month: January 2021

Science Outreach Specialists

Moon Moves into Morning, Mars Migrates from Uranus, Minutes with Mercury in Evening, and a Look at Orion!

This terrific image of the sword of Orion was taken on January 7, 2019 by Rick Foster of Markham, Ontario. The colourful Messier 42 nebula is glowing by the light of young stars formed within it. The area shown here covers about 2 finger widths of the sky. Hello, mid-winter stargazers! Here are your Astronomy…
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Greater Toronto Area Space Station Flyovers for the week of January 31st, 2021

As shown above, on Thursday, February 4 from 6:22 to 6:28 pm EST, the International Space Station will fly overhead of the GTA in an extremely bright pass, rising from the west-northwestern horizon, flying along the Winter Milky Way and closely past Betelgeuse in the Winter Hexagon, and then disappearing into Earth’s shadow low in…
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Evening Mars near Uranus, Suppertime Mercury Swings Sunward, and the Full Wolf Moon Meets the Winter Hexagon!

This image of Messier 35, also nick-named the Shoe-Buckle Cluster, was captured by Fred Espenak on March 29, 2011 from his home in Arizona. He affixed his Canon EOS 550D camera to a Takahashi 180mm Astrograph telescope. The photo spans about a thumb’s width top to bottom. Messier 35 is about 2800 light-years away from…
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Greater Toronto Area Space Station Flyovers for the week of January 24th, 2021

As shown above, on Monday, January 25 from 6:10 to 6:16 pm EST, the International Space Station will fly overhead of the GTA in a bright pass, rising from the western horizon, flying through the Big and Little Dippers, and then entering Earth’s shadow low in the northeastern sky. Artificial satellites are visible because they…
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Watch the Moon Wax, Mercury at Max, Medusa Blink, and Bright Stars Blaze!

An ISS transit on Thursday night, January 21 will pass across the moon’s disk for 0.6 seconds at 6:08:39.8 pm EST. The pass will be observable by observers across Port Perry, northern Toronto / southern Richmond Hill, Brampton, and Cambridge, Ontario. Find details at https://transit-finder.com/ and www.astrogeo.ca/skylights/. This image by Eric Holland was taken from…
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Greater Toronto Area Space Station Flyovers for the week of January 17th, 2021

The ISS transit on Thursday night, January 21 will pass across the moon’s disk for 0.6 seconds at 6:08:39.8 pm EST – for observers across Port Perry, northern Toronto / southern Richmond Hill, Brampton, and Cambridge! Find details at https://transit-finder.com/ Artificial satellites are visible because they are high enough to be bathed in sunlight while…
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The Moon Renewed, Mercury Moves Past Jupiter and Saturn, Mars Approaches Uranus, and Taurus Treasures!

This amazing composite image by Detlef Hartmann shows the continued expansion of the Crab Nebula Supernova Remnant (aka Messier 1) in Taurus over 10 years (Sept 29, 2008 through Sept 22, 2017). It spans about 0.1 degrees of the sky. In the heart of the nebula sits a rapidly rotating neutron star that emits radio…
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Greater Toronto Area Space Station Flyovers for the week of January 10th, 2021

A composite of several images of the ISS taken through a 10″ telescope by James Boone from Tampa, Florida on Apr 27, 2014 Artificial satellites are visible because they are high enough to be bathed in sunlight while the sun is below the horizon for earthbound observers. When the geometry is just right, brilliant beams…
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Mercury joins Jupiter at Sunset, a Waning Moon Leaves Evening to Join Venus at Dawn, Letting us Linger in Auriga!

This long exposure image by Steve Cannistra covers 4 degrees (8 full moon diameters) left-right. It shows the rich nebulae that lurk in the centre of Auriga’s ring of bright stars, especially the Flaming Star Nebula (top left). This image was APOD for Feb 24, 2012. More of Steve’s images can be viewed at http://www.starrywonders.com/…
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Greater Toronto Area Space Station Flyovers for the week of January 3rd, 2021

As shown above, on Monday, January 4 from 6:50 to 6:55 am EST, the International Space Station will fly overhead of the GTA in an extremely bright pass, exiting Earth’s shadow over the west-northwestern horizon, flying along the underside of the Big Dipper, and finally setting in the east-southeast. Artificial satellites are visible because they…
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