Sky & Telescope - USA (2019-09)

(Antfer) #1

OBSERVING


September 2019


EVENING: The fi rst-quarter
Moon and Jupiter hang in the
south-southwest above the
Scorpion’s heart, Antares, after
sunset. Watch as they sink
toward the horizon and set before
midnight.


DUSK: The Moon, Jupiter,
and Saturn grace the sky above
the tail of Scorpius. Watch as the
Moon follows Jupiter to the horizon,
setting near midnight.


EVENING: Algol shines at
minimum brightness for roughly two
hours centered at 11:05 p.m. PDT.


DUSK: Golden Saturn glows
upper right of the waxing gibbous
Moon, hanging above the Teapot of
Sagittarius.


DUSK: Find the fattening
gibbous Moon and slew some 7°°
to the right or lower right to spot
Saturn — Moon and planet hover
above and left of the Teapot’s
handle.


EVENING: Algol shines at
minimum brightness for roughly two
hours centered at 10:54 p.m. EDT.


DAWN: If you’re up before
sunrise, look high in the southern
sky toward Taurus to see the
waning gibbous Moon in the
Hyades, not far right of Aldebaran.


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MORNING: The Moon is in
Gemini and forms a triangle with
Castor and Pollux.

AUTUMN BEGINS in the
Northern Hemisphere at the
equinox, 3:50 a.m. EDT.

MORNING: The waning
crescent Moon is equidistant
from the Beehive Cluster (M44) in
Cancer, appearing to the cluster’s
upper right on the 24th, then to its
lower left the next morning.

DAWN: The thin sliver of the
Moon is in Leo, a mere 3° left of
Regulus.

DAWN: At northern latitudes,
the zodiacal light is visible in the
east beginning some two hours
before morning twilight. Look for
a tall pyramid of dim light tilted
toward the right, stretching up
through Cancer and Gemini
to Taurus. Find a dark
viewing spot to enjoy this
phenomenon over the next
two weeks.

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EVENING: Algol shines at
minimum brightness for roughly two
hours centered at 9:34 p.m. PDT.
— DIANA HANNIKAINEN

qAround the equinoxes, the setting Sun
casts a shadow in a certain suggestive
way on the El Castillo pyramid at Chichén
Itzá in the Yucatán. The head of a serpent
is at the bottom of the steps, and the set-
ting Sun contributes to the illusion of the
Feathered Serpent, Kukulkán.
WU SWEE ONG / MOMENT / GETTY IMAGES

skyandtelescope.com • SEPTEMBER 2019 41


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