A thin crescent Moon will rise in accompaniment with Venus tomorrow morning. A brilliant Venus, shining at -4.0 magnitude, will rise about 5.5° from a 7% illuminated Moon. The pair will rise about 04:10HST and be about 30° above the horizon at sunrise.
Category: Sky Events
Sky events
Mercury Exits the Evening Sky
Mercury is ending it’s last evening apparition of 2012. Over the next few days the planet will slide into the sunset heading for inferior conjunction on November 17th and begin a morning apparition beginning in waning days of November.
A Cometary Breakup
While Comet 168P Hergenrother may be a bit of a mouthful, it is the proper designation for an interesting comet. Discovered in 1998, the comet is one of dozens that orbit in the inner solar system. Normally inconspicuous objects, these comets orbit quietly, objects that only astronomers love, or even know about. You would normally have needed a substantial telescope to see 168P, shining very dimly at magnitude 15.5 at it’s brightest. A community of amateur astronomers keeps tabs on these comets, occasionally photographing them, updating the orbits.
As the comet approached perihelion during the beginning of October, it became apparent that something had happened. Several observers were reporting that the comet had brightened. Suddenly the comet was far brighter, eventually reaching near 8th magnitude, over 500 times brighter than expected. We have seen this sort of thing before, a cometary breakup. Observations from several large telescopes, including Gemini North here on Mauna Kea, showed that the comet has split into at least four pieces.
When a breakup occurs it exposes a great deal of fresh material and debris, dramatically adding to the supply of dust and gas in the coma and creating a far brighter object. It is not the comet itself we see, that is fairly small. It is the coma and tail, the cloud of dust and gas that reflects the sunlight and gives a comet the synonymous appearance.
Comet 168P Hergenrother currently sports a small fan shaped tail, easily visible in the telescope. We enjoyed this classic comet shape in the telescopes last new moon at the Mauna Kea VIS. Setting up a telescope and CCD camera last night allowed me to photograph the comet, appearing much the same as it did a few weeks ago.

Saturn Appears in the Dawn
As Saturn emerges from solar conjunction it will appear in the dawn sky. This week the planet will become visible to alert skywatchers low in the sunrise sky. Saturn will dance with Mercury and Venus in the dawn during late November and early December. On November 26th, Venus and Saturn will be less than a degree from each other.
The Moon and Jupiter
Tonight the bright pair of the Moon and Jupiter will dominate the sky. The Moon will be about 7° from Jupiter.
The following night, November 1st, the Moon will have moved east of Jupiter, but be even closer, about 5° away.
Full Moon
Mercury at Maximum Elongation
Today Mercury reaches maximum elongation, the furthest point it will reach from the Sun in the sky and the highest it will be above the sunset this apparition. The planet is easily visible as a bright, starlike object about 15° above the setting Sun as the sky grows dark. Over the next couple weeks Mercury will slide back into the sunset, heading for inferior conjunction on November 17th.
Saturn at Superior Conjunction
Today at 22:06HST Saturn will pass through superior conjunction with the Sun. The planet will reappear in the dawn sky in the second week of November.
The Moon and Mars
Low in the evening sky a thin crescent Moon will be just 6° below Mars tonight. The Moon, only 10% illuminated, will be below and to the north of the planet. Tomorrow the pair will still be close, but the Moon will be above the planet.
The Moon and Mercury
There will be a very close conjunction of the Moon and Mercury this evening. A very thin moon, only 4% illuminated will pass the planet at a mere 42 arc-minutes separation. Taking into account the 30 arc-minute diameter of the Moon will leave Mercury less than 30 arc-minutes from the limb of the Moon. Mercury will be shining brightly at -0.2 magnitude, a nice match for the very young Moon. The pair will be about 15° above the horizon at sunset, allowing an excellent view of the conjunction.