Skynotes: December 2024

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Summer Solstice

Earth will have its solstices this month on Thursday 21st - Summer Solstice in the Southern Hemisphere, Winter Solstice in the Northern Hemisphere. Solstice comes from the Latin meaning the standing still of the sun. This is when the path and position of the Sun in the sky reaches its furthest extremes and ‘pauses’ before beginning its six-month reverse to the next solstice.

At the summer solstice the Sun will rise and set at its most southerly points on the horizon. With Earth’s axis tilted at 23.5 degrees the southern hemisphere will be leaning towards the sun, its rays will be almost perpendicular giving maximum heat to oceans and land, the sun’s path will be the highest and longest of the year, and daylight hours will therefore be greatest.

The opposite conditions of winter will apply in the northern hemisphere where that hemisphere will be leaning away from the sun, sunlight will be at a shallow angle giving least warmth, the sun’s path will be low and short, and daylight hours will be the shortest of the year.

Explore:
Bureau of Meteorology – Solstices and Equinoxes
Timeanddate – December Solstice

Solstices and Equinoxes from a Southern Hemisphere perspective (not to scale). Credit: Australian Bureau of Meteorology.

Explore:
Bureau of Meteorology – Solstices and Equinoxes
Timeanddate – December Solstice

Melbourne Sun times

Date Rise Set Day length Solar noon*
Sunday 1st 5:51am 8:26pm 14:34hours 1:09pm
Wednesday 11th 5:51am 8:35pm 14:44hours 1:13pm
Saturday 21st 5:54am 8:41pm 14:47hours 1:18pm
Tuesday 31st 6:00am 8:45pm 14:44hours 1:23pm

Moon phases

Phase Date
New Moon Sunday 1st
First Quarter Monday 9th
Full Moon Sunday 15th
Third Quarter Monday 23rd

Moon distances

Lunar apogee (furthest from Earth) is on Tuesday 24th at 404,485 km.

Lunar perigee (closest to Earth) is on Friday 13th at 365,361 km.

*When the sun is at its highest, crossing the meridian or local longitude.

Planets

Mercury, as a daytime object, is too near the Sun to be seen from Melbourne this month.

Venus is bright as the ‘evening star’ visible from around 9pm in the west before setting by 11:30pm.

Mars is heading to opposition (directly opposite the Sun) and will be easily seen in the north-east from 1am early in the month, from 12:30am mid-month, and from 11:30pm late December. It will fade in the early dawn light by 5:30am.

Jupiter is visible from 9pm in the north-east. It will move across the northern sky before fading in the north-west by 4:30am.

Saturn, faint and yellowish, will be seen from 9.20pm in the north-west until it sets by 1am.

Meteors

This month, from the 4th–17th and peaking on the night of 13th/14th, the Gemini meteors will appear in the north-east. Unlike most meteor showers which occur as Earth passes through the trail of particles left by comets, the Geminids are associated with asteroid Phaethon. Up to 120 meteors per hour could be seen from dark locations.

Explore:
NASA - The Geminids
NASA - Meteors & Meteorites
Timeanddate - Geminids

Stars and constellations

In the East

Summer offers a rich selection of features to enjoy from north-east to south-east.

Sirius, the principal star in the constellation Canis Major (Greater Dog), sits directly east in our evening skies. To the left is Orion (the hunter) with three bright stars forming a line as his belt. In our southern view, his two shoulders are Bellatrix at lower left and red-giant star Betelguese at lower right. His two feet are marked by Rigel at upper left and Saiph upper right.

Well known to many is the local asterism, The Saucepan. Being ‘right way up’ its base is Orion’s belt and its handle forms the hunter’s scabbard.

In the North

Taurus (the bull) can be seen by finding the red giant star Aldebaran which marks its red eye and is one corner of an inverted V which forms the bull’s head. At 65 light years away, Aldebaran is closer to us than the other stars that are at 150 light years and form an open cluster known as the Hyades.

To the left of Aldebaran is the beautiful Pleiades star cluster or Seven Sisters.

In many widely separated cultures this open cluster often represents a group of women, sometimes connected to the figure of a man as represented by the nearby stars of Orion.

In the West

in the south-west sits Sagittarius (the centaur-archer). Low in the west is Capricornus (the sea goat), and higher up is bright Formalhaut (Alpha Piscis Austrini) the principal star in Piscis Austrinus (Southern Fish).

In the South

Low in the south and upside down at this time of the year is Crux (Southern Cross) with the Pointers (Alpha and Beta Centauri) to its right guiding the eye to Crux. Our galaxy’s two small neighbouring galaxies, the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, sit high in the south.

Stretching from south to north is the Milky Way’s dense arc of stars containing large interstellar dust clouds that block our visible light view of more distant stars, among them the Coal Sack that sits beside the Southern Cross.

Very close to the Beta Crux (the second brightest star in the Southern Cross) is the famous Jewel Box star cluster NGC 4755 – a popular telescope target. From dark locations It can be seen as a small fuzzy object with the naked eye.

From a 2009 survey of the southern skies, at centre sits the Jewel Box cluster. Part of the dark dusty Coal Sack Nebula lies below, and the bright star at top right is Beta Crux, one of the four principal stars of the Southern Cross. Image: ESO.
In ‘close up’, the beautiful Jewel Box star cluster NGC 4755 is young having formed around 10 million years ago. It has four prominent blue supergiants and a single red supergiant at centre, but the cluster has over 100 stars and is 7000 light years away.
A mid-December 10pm view looking south with the two Pointers (lower right), Southern Cross (upside down at centre), and in brackets near Beta Crux is the Jewel Box. Stellarium/Museums Victoria.

International Space Station

ISS orbits every 90 minutes at an average distance of 400 km appearing like a bright star moving slowly across the night sky. Here are some of the brightest passes expected this month over Melbourne.

Evening

Saturday 7th 10:40pm to 10:47pm West-North-West to South-East
Sunday 8th 9:51pm to 9:57pm North-West to South-East

Morning

Wednesday 11th 4:19am-4:26am South-West to North-East

Heavens Above gives predictions for visible passes of space stations and major satellites, live sky views and 3D visualisations. Be sure to first enter your location under ‘Configuration’. 


On this day

1st 1922, solutions to Einstein’s equations for space-time and mass-energy are developed by Alexander Friedman.

2nd 1915, Einstein’s General Relativity is published on gravity-acceleration equivalence and space-time curvature.

2nd 1971, Mars 3 (USSR) - first soft landing and return of data from Mars.

3rd 2014, JAXA explorer Hyabusa 2 (Japan) is launched to asteroid Ryugu with a planned sample return to Earth.

3rd 1973, Pioneer 10 (USA) makes the first fly-by of Jupiter and returns the first close-up images of the planet.

7th 1676, Danish astronomer Ole Remer calculates first accurate speed of light by observing eclipses of moon Io by Jupiter.

7th-19th 1972, Apollo 17 (USA): last moon mission and longest on lunar surface at 74 hours, 59 mins by astronauts Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt.

7th 1995, Galileo probe (USA) makes first orbit of Jupiter after six years in transit.

8th 1977, HEAO 1 (USA), High Energy Astro Observatory, is launched into orbit.

8th 2010, SpaceX is first private company to launch, orbit and recover a spacecraft, its SpaceX Dragon.

10th 1993, the faulty optics of the Hubble Space Telescope (USA) are repaired.

11th 1863, birth of astronomer Annie Jump Canon compiler of Draper Star Catalog.

12th 1970, Explorer 42 (USA) satellite is launched to study x-rays.

14th 1546, Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe, whose data aided Kepler in his laws of planetary motion, is born.

14th 1962, Mariner 2 (USA) is first probe to fly past Venus.

15th 1970, Venera 7 (USSR) is first probe to land safely on another planet, and first to return data, when it arrived at Venus.

21st 1988, Cosmonauts Vladimir Titov and Musa Manarov make longest space flight (365 days, 22 hours, 39 min) on Soviet space station Mir.

21st – 27th 1968, Apollo 8 (USA) first manned craft to orbit the Moon - 10 orbits at 110km from the surface,  imaging landing sites and the iconic ‘Earthrise’ photo.

24th 1979, ESA’s first launch vehicle Ariene 1 (France) orbits its first test satellite CAT1.

27th 1571, discoverer of laws of planetary motion, Johannes Kepler, is born.

28th 1612, Neptune is observed for the first time but mistaken as a star by Galileo.

30th 1924, astronomer Edwin Hubble (USA) announces faint ‘nebulae’ are actually galaxies beyond our own.

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