In The Sky This Month – May 2009

This feature highlights a number of meteor showers, comets and asteroids which are visible during the month of May 2009.

Note: If anyone has pictures or observations of these objects/events and want to share them, send me a comment. I’ll post them here.

Planets

Mercury - Last month saw Mercury’s best evening apparition of 2009 (at least for Northern Hemisphere observers). Mercury is now descending back into the glow of the Sun. For the first week or so of the month it is still visible low in the west during evening twilight. Unlike last month, it is much fainter now (+0.9 magnitude on the 1st, +3.7 on the 11th).

Saturn – Saturn is the easiest planet to observe in May. By the end of twilight, Saturn is just south of zenith (straight up) under the eastern part of the constellation of Leo.

This year Saturn is dimmer than usual. At magnitude +0.8 to +0.9, there are at least a dozen stars that are brighter than it. The reason is the rings of Saturn contribute a lot  to the brightness of Saturn. But this year, is a ring plane crossing year meaning that the rings are nearly edge-on. As a result, the rings are reflecting much less light in the Earth’s direction this year. Saturn’s appearance through a telescope will match the below image taken on April 23.

saturn_20090423_0543_crop1

Image of Saturn by C. Hergenrother. April 23 w/ 12" with DMK41AF02 camera.

The Moon will pass a relatively distant 5.5 degrees to the south of Saturn on the evening of May 3.

Venus - Venus continues to slowly climb higher every night. It is currently a morning object and is best seen an hour before sunrise low in the eastern sky. For Southern Hemisphere observers, it will reach its highest point during the 2nd half of the month. For Northern observers, Venus will continue to climb higher until early August.

For binocular and telescope users, Venus will start the month as a large fat crescent, 39″ across and only 25% illuminated. By the end of the month, it will have shrunk to 25″ across but will also be nearly half illuminated at 46%.

Jupiter and Neptune - Jupiter rises a few hours before sunrise. By the end of the month, the king of the planets peaks above the horizon a little after midnight. Other than Venus, it is the brightest “star” in the morning sky at magnitude -2.2 to -2.4. Due to Jupiter’s location in the southern constellation of Capricornus , it never gets very high this year.

For those with a telescope or binoculars and a dark sky, Jupiter will pass close to the planet Neptune on the morning of May 27. At their closest, the 5th and 8th planet will only be 0.39 degrees apart. Jupiter will be a bright magnitude -2.4 while Neptune will be a faint +7.9. That makes Jupiter nearly ~12,000 times brighter than Neptune. Even Jupiter’s 4 large Galilean moons are about a dozen times brighter than Neptune even though they are much smaller. The big reason for the faintness of Neptune is its distance from both the Earth and Sun. It is roughly 6 times further away from us and the Sun as Jupiter. It’s distance also explains its apparent small size of 2.3″. A telescope will be required to see Neptune as anything other than a faint star.

Though Neptune wasn’t discovered until 1846, it was actually observed by Galileo on two occasions in 1612 and 1613. Similar to this month’s circumstances, Jupiter was passing very close to Neptune. Galileo observed and recorded Neptune as a star in the vicinity of Jupiter. There is also evidence that he noticed that Neptune had moved but didn’t follow up on it. So when you observe these 2 planets imagine what Galileo must have been thinking nearly 400 years ago.

Uranus – Uranus is located in western Pisces. It is bright enough to be seen in small binoculars at magnitude +5.9 but will still require a telescope in order to see it as anything other than a star (it’s disk is only 3.4″ across).

Both planets are early morning objects low in the southeastern sky.

Mars – Mars can be seen very low in the eastern sky all month long. At magnitude +1.2, it is only as bright as some of the brighter stars. Venus passed a distant 4 degrees to the north of Mars on April 24. Mars and Venus will continue to move apart until around mid-month when they will be 6.5 degrees apart. After that their distance from each other will shrink as they approach a 2 degree conjunction on June 21.

Meteors

The month of March experiences no major showers and only a few minor ones. It continues the annual lull in meteor activity from mid-January to mid-April.

Sporadic Meteors

Sporadic meteors are not part of any known meteor shower. They represent the background flux of meteors. Except for the few days per year when a major shower is active, most meteors that are observed are Sporadics. This is especially true for meteors observed during the evening. During April, 8 or so Sporadic meteors can be observed per hour from a dark moonless sky.

Major Meteor Showers

Eta Aquarids (ETA)

The Eta Aquarids are a major shower, especially for southern hemisphere observers, when they peak on May 5. For northern observers, the shower will only be observable for an hour or two before dawn. Since the radiant doesn’t get very high for NH observers, rates can be low. The radiant is located near the “jar” of Aquarius.

The ETA were produced by Comet Halley which also gives us the Orionids in October. Models suggest that the ETA were released by Comet Halley no later than 837 AD. The Orionids are easy to see because the particles are hitting the Earth from the anti-solar direction. This means the meteor shower can be seen in the middle of the night. The ETA are produced by meteoroids moving outbound from the Sun, as a result the radiant is located relatively close to the Sun. This means that the ETA radiant is only visible for an hour or so before twilight. By luck, the nearly Full Moon will have just set making the last hour of the night dark.

The shower spans from April 19 to May 28 with a peak around May 5 with a maximum ZHR of ~60.

Additional information on these showers and other minor showers not included here can be found at the following sites: Robert Lunsford’s Meteor Activity Outlook, Wayne Hally’s and Mark Davis’s NAMN Notes, and the International Meteor Organization’s 2008 Meteor Shower Calendar.

Minor Meteor Showers

Minor showers produce so few meteors that they are hard to notice above the background of regular meteors.

Eta Lyrids (ELY)

This shower is associated with Comet C/1983 H1 (IRAS-Araki-Alcock). The comet is a long-period comet which passed within 0.03 AU of the Earth on 1983 May 11. Discovered by astronomers using the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) and two amateur astronomers, Genichi Araki (Yuzawa, Niigata, Japan) and George Alcock (Peterborough, England, UK), the comet brightened to 1st magnitude for a few days around closest approach.

Though the comet is now long gone and will not return for quite some time, particles released during past perihelia can be observed every year in early May. The Eta Lyrids are a minor shower that have never produce more than ~3 meteors per hour. Peak time in on May 8 though some meteors can be seen from May 3-12. Meteors will appear to radiate from a point in the middle of a triangle made up of the bright stars Vega and Deneb and the “head” of the constellation Draco. The Moon, Full on May 7, will spoil the Eta Lyrids for this year.

Comets

Naked Eye Comets (V < 6.0)

None

Binocular Comets (V < 8.0)

None

Small Telescope Comets (V < 10.0)

Comet C/2009 F6 (Yi-SWAN)

Comet C/2009 F6 (Yi-SWAN) is a long-period comet which will pass within 1.27 AU of the Sun on May 7. The comet is currently around magnitude 8.5 making it bright enough to be seen in small telescopes. Right now the nearly Full Moon will make observing the comet difficult but in a few days the Moon will not be a problem for evening observers. The comet is located northeast of the Sun. For southern hemisphere observers, you are out of luck. For northern observers, the comet can be observed in the evening sky.

The comet starts the month in Perseus. As it travels to the southeast, it will enter Auriga by the last week of the month. The comet will never get far from the horizon so a clear dark northwestern horizon is a must to see this comet. By mid-month the comet will be too close to the Sun for easy observation.

On the morning of April 21, I was able to observe Yi-SWAN with 30×125 binoculars. My observing location isn’t too dark with a limiting magnitude of ~+5.5. Even then, the summer Milky Way was faintly visible. The comet was barely visible as it was large and diffuse. Interestingly, the comet was not visible during multiple attempts to observe it during the evening hours. The darker morning sky most definitely helped. Unfortunately, in May the comet will not be visible in the morning.

The comet was found by Dae-am Yi of Yeongwol-kun, Gangwon-do, South Korea on March 26. He noticed the obvious blue-green glow of a comet on 2 images he took with a Canon 5D digital camera and a 90-mm f/2.8 lens. The other discoverer was Robert Matson of Irvine, CA. Mr. Matson found the comet on a series of images taken with the SWAN instrument on the SOHO (Solar Heliospheric Observatory) spacecraft starting on March 29.

A finder chart for Comet Yi-SWAN can be found at Comet Chasing and Aktuelle Kometen (in German).

A nice collection of images can be found at the VdS-Fachgruppe Kometen (Comet Section of Germany) and Seiichi Yoshida’s Comet Homepage.

Comet C/2008 Q3 (Garradd)

Sometimes comets surprise us. From time to time what appears to be a faint run-of-the-mill comet will undergo an outburst and brighten substantially. This is the case with Comet Garradd. Gordon Garradd of the Siding Spring Survey (Australia) used the 0.5-m Uppsala schmidt telescope to discover this comet back on 2008 August 27.

The comet was a faint 19th magnitude at discovery. With perihelion expected on 2009 June 23 at 1.80 AU from the Sun, it was expected to brighten but only to about 12th-14th magnitude. Two weeks ago the comet was sitting at 15th magnitude. Bright enough for CCD imaging but too faint for nearly all visual observers. On April 20th Micheal Jager imaged the comet and found it too be much brighter. Over the next few days, visual observers were able to confirm the outburst and estimated the comet to be as bright as magnitude 8.9.

Whether the comet will continue in its excited state and brighten further as it approaches perihelion is not known. It’s possible that the outburst will be short-lived and the comet may revert back to its original activity level.

Right now this comet is only observable from the Southern Hemisphere as it rockets through the constellations of Indus, Pavo, Apus, Triangulum Australe, and Circinus. For us up north, the comet will become visible in June as an evening object.

I hope to have a link to a finder chart for this comet up soon.

Comet C/2006 W3 (Christensen)

This comet was discovered over 2 years ago on 2006 November 18 by Eric Christensen of the Catalina Sky Survey north of Tucson. At the time the comet was located at 8.7 AU from the Sun which is nearly the distance of Saturn. The comet continues to move closer to the Sun and Earth and is currently 3.8 AU from the Sun and 3.4 AU from the Earth.

The comet is currently around magnitude 9.5 and will slowly brighten during the month.  It is moving near the border of Lacerta and Pegasus.  The comet is best seen in the early morning.

The comet will continue to brighten as it approaches perihelion at a still rather distant 3.12 AU from the Sun on 2009 July 6. At that time, the comet will be 8th magnitude and visible in many smaller backyard telescopes and even binoculars from dark sites. Christensen should remain bright enough to see in modest sized backyard telescopes for all of 2009.

On the morning of April 21, I was able to observe this comet with both 30×125 binoculars and a 12″ dobsonian. The comet was much easier to see in the 12″. Observation was made under a moderately light polluted sky with a limiting mag of ~+5.5.

A finder chart for Comet Christensen can be found at Comet Chasing and Aktuelle Kometen (in German).

A nice collection of images can be found at the VdS-Fachgruppe Kometen (Comet Section of Germany) and Seiichi Yoshida’s Comet Homepage.

Comet C/2009 G1 (STEREO)

Jiangao Ruan of China found this comet on images taken by the SECCHI HI-1B instrument onboard one of the STEREO spacecraft. The comet was first visible on images taken on April 3 UT. Similar to SOHO (a spacecraft that was used to co-discover Comet C/2009 F6 (Yi-Swan)), the two STEREO spacecraft study the Sun and its immediate environment.

With perihelion on April 16 at 1.13 AU from the Sun, the comet is now moving away from the Sun. Luckily it is still moving closer to the Earth, though it will get no closer than 1.06 AU from Earth. With a current estimated magnitude of ~9.0, the comet may brighten a bit as it gets closer.

The comet starts the month in southern Aquarius and will pass through Sculptor before finishing the month in the far southern constellation of Phoenix. It was never an easy object for northern observers and is now only observable from southern latitudes.

A finder chart for Comet STEREO can be found at Comet Chasing.

A nice collection of images can be found at Seiichi Yoshida’s Comet Homepage.

Comet C/2009 E1 (Itagaki)

This comet was found by amateur astronomer Koichi Itagaki of Yamagata, Japan on March 14. Comet C/2009 E1 (Itagaki) is a long-period comet which will come within 0.60 AU of the Sun at perihelion on April 7. It is also periodic in that it returns once every ~250 years according to the latest orbit.

This is the 1st comet to bear Koichi Itagaki’s name but it is not his 1st discovery. Back in 1968, he was a co-discoverer of Comet Tago-Honda-Yamamoto. Due to the rule that only the 1st 3 discoverers can have their name attached to a comet, his name was left off. Only a few months ago, he also re-discovered long-lost comet Giacobini.

The comet is located in the morning sky moving through Andromeda and to just north of the “square” of Pegasus. Due to its proximity to the Sun over the past few weeks, it hasn’t been observed since early April. At the time, it was magnitude 7.5-8.0. If it is still in the magnitude ~8.0 to 8.5 range then the  comet will bright enough to be seen in a reasonably sized backyard telescope.

A finder chart for Comet Itagaki can be found at Comet Chasing.

A nice collection of images can be found at the VdS-Fachgruppe Kometen (Comet Section of Germany).

Comet C/2008 T2 (Cardinal)

Rob Cardinal, an astronomer at the University of Calgary in Canada, discovered this comet last October. The comet was discovered as part of a survey at  the Rothney Astrophysical Observatory for new Near-Earth asteroids at high declinations. In fact the comet was found within 10 degrees of the North celestial pole. At the time of discovery, the comet was ~14th magnitude.

At perihelion on June 13th of this year, the comet will pass within 1.20 AU of the Sun. The comet is currently ~9.0 to 9.5 magnitude as it moves south across Gemini into Canis Minor in the evening sky. The comet should continue to brighten by another magnitude this month. Similar to most comets, access to a clear western horizon is necessary to see it.

A finder chart for Comet Cardinal can be found at Comet Chasing and Aktuelle Kometen (in German).

A nice collection of images can be found at the VdS-Fachgruppe Kometen (Comet Section of Germany) and Seiichi Yoshida’s Comet Homepage.

Asteroids

Binocular and Small Telescope Asteroids (V < 10.0)

(1) Ceres

Ceres is the biggest asteroid in the Main Belt with a diameter of 585 miles or 975 km. It is so big that it is now considered a Dwarf Planet. Classified as a carbonaceous (carbon-rich) Cg-type asteroid, there are suggestions that it may be rich in volatile material such as water. Some even propose that an ocean exists below its surface. Ceres is one of two targets for NASA’s Dawn spacecraft which is scheduled to visit it in 2015. This month Ceres fades from from magnitude 8.0 to 8.4 as it ends is retrograde motion just north of Leo. If you are observing Saturn with a telescope or pair of binoculars, try your hand at finding Ceres with one of the finder charts linked below.

A finder chart (needs to be flipped upside down for Northern Hemisphere observers) can be found at the Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand. Finder chart for Ceres from Heavens Above.

(8) Flora and (14) Irene

Irene was discovered by John Russel Hind in 1851, being only the 14th asteroid known at the time (if you are wondering ~400,000 asteroids have been discovered to date, we’ve come a long way). It is an S-type asteroid with a stoney or silicate composition. Its takes 6.3 years to orbit the Sun. This month Irene will fade from magnitude 9.0 to 9.7 as it moves through central Virgo.

Though it is a bit fainter than the asteroids I usually present, those up for a challenge can spot the asteroid (8) Flora a few degrees away from Irene.

Flora is a large asteroid roughly 136x136x113 km in dimension. It is innermost large asteroid in the Main Belt. As a result, it can get bright enough for backyard observers with modest sized telescopes and binoculars. Flora is a stoney S-type asteroid and also the largest member of the Flora family. This family was created when a large impact occured on Flora. The other family members are pieces of Flora that were thrown off by the impact.

Flora starts the month at magnitude 9.9. By the end of the month, it has faded to 10.5. Flora and Irene provide us with a 2-for since both objects are located within 5 degrees of each other.

Since I have not been able to find a nice star chart showing the position of Irene and Flora, here is one I made with the C2A program. The bright star that Flora passes close to towards the end of the month (right side of the chart, white circle) is zeta Virginis.

flora_irene_may

New Comet – C/2009 F6 (Yi-SWAN)

A new comet has been discovered that should be the brightest comet in the sky this month. Comet C/2009 F6 (Yi-SWAN) is a long-period comet which will pass within 1.27 AU of the Sun on May 7. The comet is currently around magnitude 8.5 making it bright enough to be seen in small telescopes. Right now the nearly Full Moon will make observing the comet difficult but in a few days the Moon will not be a problem for evening observers. The comet is located north of the Sun. For southern hemisphere observers, you are out of luck. For northern observers, the comet can be observed in both the evening and morning sky.

The below orbit diagram shows the position of the comet at perihelion. Note the high inclination (angle between the orbit of Earth and the comet) of 85 degrees. As a result, the comet is orbiting almost perpendicular to the orbit of the planets. Unfortunately, the comet is rather far from Earth. It has already come as close to Earth as it can at ~1.8 AU and will slowly move away with time.

yi-swan_orbit

Orbit of Comet C/2009 F6 (Yi-SWAN). Position of the comet and planets valid for May 5. Produced with C2A.

Currently the comet is located in Cassiopeia. It is moving to the east and will enter Perseus by mid-month. The comet should continue to brighten as it approaches perihelion and may be as bright as magnitude 8.0.

yi-swan3

Finder chart for Comet Yi-SWAN for April 10 to May 1 UT. Note the dates lie directly to the right of the corresponding position. The chart was created with the C2A program.

The comet was found by Dae-am Yi of Yeongwol-kun, Gangwon-do, South Korea on March 26. He noticed the obvious blue-green glow of a comet on 2 images he took with a Canon 5D digital camera and a 90-mm f/2.8 lens. According to a post on the MPML mailing list by Maik Meyer, this is the 1st comet discovered by and named for a Korean citizen in the modern age. There were first sightings of comet by Koreans in the 18th century before the comets were named for their discoverers.

The other discoverer was Robert Matson of Irvine, CA. Mr. Matson found the comet on a series of images taken with the SWAN instrument on the SOHO (Solar Heliospheric Observatory) spacecraft starting on March 29. The SWAN insturment images the entire sky for solar Lyman-alpha particles that are backscattered off of neutral hydrogen atoms. In this way, SWAN can monitor the activity of the far-side of the Sun. This instrument is also excellent at detecting the glow of hydrogan in the extended coma of comets.

In The Sky This Month – 2009 April

This feature highlights a number of meteor showers, comets and asteroids which are visible during the month of April 2009. The month sees the return of the borderline major meteor shower, the Lyrids. The highlight of the month is the lunar occultation of Venus right before dawn on April 22.

Note: If anyone has pictures or observations of these objects/events and want to share them, send me a comment. I’ll post them here.

Planets

Mercury - This month brings us the best opportunity of the year to observe Mercury in the evening sky (for Northern Hemisphere observers). Mercury will be at its highest on April 26, though even then it will be low in the western sky 30-60 minutes after sunset.

The Moon will also located just above Mercury on the evening of April 26. The image below shows what the scene will look like from North America. Note that the Pleiades open star cluster will be located between Mercury and the Moon. It will be a great sight via your eye or binoculars. In a telescope, Mercury will appear as a fat crescent with ~36% of its disk illuminated.

mercury_moon_apr26

Map of the Moon-Mercury-Pleiades conjunction on the evening of April 26. Map made with Stellarium.

Saturn – Saturn is the only planet visible in the evening sky. By the end of twilight, Saturn is high in the southeast under the eastern part of the constellation of Leo.

This year Saturn is dimmer than usual. At magnitude +0.6 to +0.7, there are at least 11 stars that are brighter than it. The reason is that the rings of Saturn contribute a lot  to the brightness of Saturn. But this year, is a ring plane crossing year meaning that the rings are nearly edge-on. As a result, the rings are reflecting much less light in the Earth’s direction this year. Saturn’s appearance through a telescope will match the below image taken by Bob Lunsford on March 28. Note the small dark spot near the top edge of Saturn’s disk, this is a shadow cast by Saturn’s largest moon, Titan.

saturn_20090328_1007_lunsford

Image of Saturn by Bob Lunsford from 2009 March 28. Titan's shadow seen near top.

The Moon will pass a relatively distant 5.5 degrees to the south of Saturn on the evening of April 6.

Venus - After spending the past few months dominating the evening sky, Venus will now spend the rest of the year as a morning object. If you live south of the Equator, Venus will appear to rocket higher and higher every morning. In fact it should be an easy sight by the 2nd week of April if you have a clear eastern horizon. Venus will reach its highest in late May.

For those of us north of the Equator, Venus will take a little longer to gain altitude. Though it is already visible for observers with a clear eastern horizon, Venus will slowly climb higher every night. For  northern observers, Venus won’t reach its highest till August. Regardless of where you are observing, Venus will be at its brightest on April 29 though it is always a very bright object.

For binocular and telescope users, Venus will start the month as a large thin crescent, 59″ across and only ~2% illuminated. By mid-month, it will have shrunk to ~50″ across but it will also become a fatter crescent with ~12% of the disk illuminated. By the end of the month, it is 39″ across and 25% illuminated

Venus is also involved in the coolest event of the month. On the morning of April 22, the Moon will occult (or pass in front) of Venus for observers in most of North America. The below map from the International Occultation Timing Association (IOTA) shows where the occultation will be visible. Times for the beginning and end of the occultation can be found at IOTA’s site. I’ll write more about this as the date draws closer.

0422venus1

The following diagram gives a good representation of what the occultation will look like right before the Moon passes in front of Venus on the morning of April 22. Note that Mars will be located nearby as well. For those with binoculars or a telescope, Venus will appear as a thin crescent similar to, but much smaller than, the Moon.

venus_moon_mars_april22

The Moon, Venus and Mars just before the start of the occulatation of Venus on the morning of April 22. Sky map produced with Stellarium.

Jupiter - Jupiter rises a few hours before sunrise. Other than Venus, it is the brightest “star” in the morning sky at magnitude -2.2. Due to Jupiter’s location in the southern constellation of Capricornus , it never gets very high this year.

Mars – Mars can be seen very low in the eastern sky all month long. At magnitude +1.2, it is only as bright as some of the brighter stars. Venus will pass a distant 5.5 degrees to the north of Mars on April 24. As a result, Mars will be located just below the spectacular Moon-Venus occultation.

Meteors

The month of March experiences no major showers and only a few minor ones. It continues the annual lull in meteor activity from mid-January to mid-April.

Sporadic Meteors

Sporadic meteors are not part of any known meteor shower. They represent the background flux of meteors. Except for the few days per year when a major shower is active, most meteors that are observed are Sporadics. This is especially true for meteors observed during the evening. During April, 8 or so Sporadic meteors can be observed per hour from a dark moonless sky.

Major Meteor Showers

Lyrids (LYR)

April brings the first major meteor shower since the Quadrantids in early January. The Lyrids are produced by Comet Thatcher, a comet on a ~400 years orbit that has only been observed in 1861. The Lyrids, on the other hand, can be seen every year.

The radiant is located between the constellations of Lyra and Hercules. Though the radiant rises during the evening, the best time to see Lyrids is after 11 pm when the radiant is high in the sky.

The shower is active from April 16 to 25 with a peak on the morning of April 22. The shower only shows good levels of activity on the night of the peak. Even then, this is the most minor of the major showers with a peak rate of ~15-25 meteors per hour.

Though there are no predictions on enhanced activity, the Lyrids have been known to put on grand displays. The 1st great display goes back almost 25oo years while the last happened in 1982. So you never know, this year could be the next good display.

Minor Meteor Showers

Minor showers produce so few meteors that they are hard to notice above the background of regular meteors.

Pi Puppids (PPI)

The Pi Puppids are usually a very low activity shower. In 1977 and 1982, the shower put on a good display with up to 60 meteors per hour being observed. This shower radiates from the far southern constellation of Puppis and can not be seen from most of North America and Europe.

We now know that the Pi Puppids are created by Comet 26P/Grigg-Skjellerup. P/G-S is a small Jupiter family comet that orbits the Sun once every 5.3 years.

There are no predictions for enhanced material this year. The shower is active from April 15-28 with a peak on April 23. At its best we should expect 1-2 meteors per hour with even that number being optimistic for northern observers.

Eta Aquarids (ETA)

The Eta Aquarids are a major shower, especially for southern hemisphere observers, when they peak on May 5. During the month of April, the shower can be considered a minor shower.

The ETA were produced by Comet Halley which also gives us the Orionids in October. Models suggest that the ETA were released by Comet Halley no later than 837 AD. The Orionids are easy to see because the particles are hitting the Earth from the anti-solar direction. This means the meteor shower can be seen in the middle of the night. The ETA are produced by meteoroids moving outbound from the Sun, as a result the radiant is located relatively close to the Sun. This means that the ETA radiant is only visible for an hour or so before twilight.

The shower spans from April 19 to May 28 with a peak around May 5 with a maximum ZHR of ~60. The last week of April will see some low activity (ZHR < 10) from the ETAs.

Additional information on these showers and other minor showers not included here can be found at the following sites: Robert Lunsford’s Meteor Activity Outlook, Wayne Hally’s and Mark Davis’s NAMN Notes, and the International Meteor Organization’s 2008 Meteor Shower Calendar.

Comets

Naked Eye Comets (V < 6.0)

None

Binocular Comets (V < 8.0)

None

Small Telescope Comets (V < 10.0)

Comet C/2009 E1 (Itagaki)

This recently discovered comet was found by amateur astronomer Koichi Itagaki of Yamagata, Japan. Comet C/2009 E1 (Itagaki) is a long-period comet which will come within 0.60 AU of the Sun at perihelion on April 7. It is also periodic in that it returns once every ~250 years according to the latest orbit.

This is the 1st comet to bear Koichi Itagaki’s name but it is not his 1st discovery. Back in 1968, he was a co-discoverer of Comet Tago-Honda-Yamamoto. Due to the rule that only the 1st 3 discoverers can have their name attached to a comet, his name was left off. Only a few months ago, he also re-discovered long-lost comet Giacobini.

The comet is located in the evening sky north of the constellation of Aries. As the month progresses the comet will move north of the Sun as it travels through Triangulum, northern Pisces and Andromeda. Only observers with a clear view of the northwestern horizon in the evening and northeastern horizon in the morning will be able to see the comet. By May the comet will only be visible in the morning sky and will be much easier to see.

At magnitude ~8.0 to 8.5, the comet is bright enough to be seen in a reasonably sized backyard telescope. Having said that, I was just barely able to see it from my backyard in Tucson with my 12″ telescope due to the city lights and the bright twilight.

A finder chart for Comet Itagaki can be found at Comet Chasing.

A nice collection of images can be found at the VdS-Fachgruppe Kometen (Comet Section of Germany).

Comet C/2009 F6 (Yi-SWAN)

A new comet has been discovered that should be the brightest comet in the sky this month. Comet C/2009 F6 (Yi-SWAN) is a long-period comet which will pass within 1.27 AU of the Sun on May 8. The comet is currently around magnitude 8.5 making it bright enough to be seen in small telescopes. Right now the nearly Full Moon will make observing the comet difficult but in a few days the Moon will not be a problem for evening observers. The comet is located north of the Sun. For southern hemisphere observers, you are out of luck. For northern observers, the comet can be observed in both the evening and morning sky.

Currently the comet is located in Cassiopeia. It is moving to the east and will enter Perseus by mid-month. The comet should continue to brighten as it approaches perihelion and may be as bright as magnitude 8.0.

On the morning of April 21, I was able to observe Yi-SWAN with 30×125 binoculars. My observing location isn’t too dark with a limiting magnitude of ~+5.5. Even then, the summer Milky Way was faintly visible. The comet was barely visible as it was large and diffuse. Interestingly, the comet was not visible during multiple attempts to observe it during the evening hours. The darker morning sky most definitely helped.

yi-swan4

The comet was found by Dae-am Yi of Yeongwol-kun, Gangwon-do, South Korea on March 26. He noticed the obvious blue-green glow of a comet on 2 images he took with a Canon 5D digital camera and a 90-mm f/2.8 lens. The other discoverer was Robert Matson of Irvine, CA. Mr. Matson found the comet on a series of images taken with the SWAN instrument on the SOHO (Solar Heliospheric Observatory) spacecraft starting on March 29. The SWAN insturment images the entire sky for solar Lyman-alpha particles that are backscattered off of neutral hydrogen atoms. In this way, SWAN can monitor the activity of the far-side of the Sun. This instrument is also excellent at detecting the glow of hydrogan in the extended coma of comets.

Comet C/2007 N3 (Lulin)

Comet Lulin was discovered by the Lulin Sky Survey in Taiwan on 2007 July 11. At the time the comet was located beyond the orbit of Jupiter. The comet will be closest to the Sun on 2009 January 10 at 1.21 AU from the Sun. It will be closest to Earth in late-February when it will be only 0.41 AU from us.

The comet is fading after its closest approach to Earth in late February. It is a evening object and spends all of April moving westward through western Gemini. The comet starts the month around magnitude 8.5 and should fade to magnitude 10.0 or fainter by the end of the month.

A finder chart for Comet Lulin can be found at Comet Chasing.

A nice collection of images can be found at the VdS-Fachgruppe Kometen (Comet Section of Germany) and Seiichi Yoshida’s Comet Homepage.

Comet C/2006 W3 (Christensen)

This comet was discovered over 2 years ago on 2006 November 18 by Eric Christensen of the Catalina Sky Survey north of Tucson. At the time the comet was located at 8.7 AU from the Sun which is nearly the distance of Saturn. The comet continues to move closer to the Sun and Earth and is currently 3.8 AU from the Sun and 3.4 AU from the Earth.

The comet is currently around magnitude 9.5 and will slowly brighten during the month.  It is moving near the border of Lacerta and Pegasus.  The comet is best seen in the early morning. I was able to observe the comet visually with my backyard 12″ reflecting telescope back in November. Being small and condensed, the comet was fairly easy to see.

The comet will continue to brighten as it approaches perihelion at a still rather distant 3.12 AU from the Sun on 2009 July 6. At that time, the comet will be 8th magnitude and visible in many smaller backyard telescopes and even binoculars from dark sites. Christensen should remain bright enough to see in modest sized backyard telescopes for all of 2009.

On the morning of April 21, I was able to observe this comet with both 30×125 binoculars and a 12″ dobsonian. The comet was much easier to see in the 12″. Observation was made under a moderately light polluted sky with a limiting mag of ~+5.5.

A finder chart for Comet Christensen can be found at Comet Chasing.

A nice collection of images can be found at the VdS-Fachgruppe Kometen (Comet Section of Germany) and Seiichi Yoshida’s Comet Homepage.

Asteroids

Binocular and Small Telescope Asteroids (V < 10.0)

(1) Ceres

Ceres is the biggest asteroid in the Main Belt with a diameter of 585 miles or 975 km. It is so big that it is now considered a Dwarf Planet. Classified as a carbonaceous (carbon-rich) Cg-type asteroid, there are suggestions that it may be rich in volatile material such as water. Some even propose that an ocean exists below its surface. Ceres is one of two targets for NASA’s Dawn spacecraft which is scheduled to visit it in 2015. Last month Ceres was at opposition (at its closest to the Earth and at its brightest). This month Ceres will fade from from magnitude 7.4 to 8.0 as it ends is retrograde motion just north of Leo. If you are observing Saturn with a telescope or pair of binoculars, try your hand at finding Ceres with one of the finder charts linked below.

A finder chart (needs to be flipped upside down for Northern Hemisphere observers) can be found at the Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand. Finder chart for Ceres from Heavens Above.

(2) Pallas

Pallas is also a carbonaceous asteroid though with a slightly bluish B-type spectrum. Due to its high inclination (tilt of its orbit with respect to Earth’s orbit) of 34 degrees it is a difficult target for future spacecraft missions. Pallas is large with dimensions of 350x334x301 miles or 582x556x501 km. This month it continues moving north, leaving the constellation of Orion and entering Monoceros. It fades from  magnitude 8.7 to 8.9 over the course of the month.

A finder chart (needs to be flipped upside down for Northern Hemisphere observers) can be found at the Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand. Finder chart for Pallas from Heavens Above.

(8) Flora

Flora is a large asteroid roughly 136x136x113 km in dimension. It is innermost large asteroid in the Main Belt. As a result, it can get bright enough for backyard observers with modest sized telescopes and binoculars. Flora is a stoney S-type asteroid and also the largest member of the Flora family. This family was created when a large impact occured on Flora. The other family members are pieces of Flora that were thrown off by the impact.

Flora starts the month at magnitude 10.0. It reaches its maximum brightness on April 22 at magnitude 9.8. By the end of the month, it has slightly faded to 9.9. Flora and Irene provide us with a 2-for since both objects are located within 5 degrees of each other.

Since there I have not been able to find a nice star chart showing the position of Flora, here is one I made with the C2A program. It also shows the position of Irene.

flora_irene_april

(14) Irene

Irene was discovered by John Russel Hind in 1851, being only the 14th asteroid known at the time (if you are wondering ~400,000 asteroids have been discovered to date, we’ve come a long way). It is an S-type asteroid with a stoney or silicate composition. Its takes 6.3 years to orbit the Sun.

This month Irene will brighten from magnitude 9.2 to a maximum of 8.9 on April 24 as it retrogrades through western Virgo. Remember Flora is located within 5 degrees of Irene.

(15) Eunomia

Discovered in 1851, Eunomia is one of the largest stoney S-type asteroids. Its dimensions are roughly 357×255×212 km. Similar to Flora, Eunomia is also the parent body of its own family.

Eunomia spends all of April in the constellation of Corvus, just to the south of Virgo. With opposition on April 2, the asteroid is as bright as it’s going to get this year at magnitude 9.8. As the month progresses it will fade to 10.0. This year Eunomia is at aphelion, its furthest from the Sun making this one of its faintest oppositions. When at perihelion, it can get as bright as magnitude ~8.

Since there I have not been able to find a nice star chart showing the position of Eunomia, here is one I made with the C2A program.

eunomia_april

(29) Amphitrite

Discovered in 1854, Amphitrite was the 29th asteroid to be discovered. Similar to Euterpe, Amphitrite is also a stoney S-type asteroid. With an average diameter of  127 miles (212 km) it is bigger than Euterpe though its further distance from the Earth and Sun keeps it from getting as bright.

Amphitrite fades from magnitude 9.5 to 10.1 this month. It spends the entire month in eastern Virgo not far from Saturn. If you are observing Saturn, take a short star-hopping trip to Amphitrite

Since there I have not been able to find a nice star chart showing the position of Amphitrie, here is one I made with the C2A program.

amphitrite_april

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