Astronomy - February 2014

(John Hannent) #1
10°

Mid-February, 4 A.M.
Looking south

OPHIUCHUS

VIRGO

CORVUS

CENTAURUS
SCORPIUS LUPUS

LIBRA

Mars
Spica
Saturn

Antares

Mars and Saturn grow brighter (^)
February 1, 30 minutes after sunset
Looking west-southwest
AQUARIUS
PEGASUS
Fomalhaut
Enif
Moon
Mercury
10°
The Moon and Mercury (^)
36 ASTRONOMY t FEBRUARY 2014
Visible to the naked eye
Visible with binoculars
Visible with a telescope
MARTIN RATCLIFFE and ALISTER LING describe the
solar system’s changing landscape as it appears in Earth’s sky.
February 2014: Venus shines brilliantly
P
lanets adorn the night
sky from dusk to dawn
in February. Just one
month removed from its
peak visibility, Jupiter
provides a smorgasbord of
details from sunset until the
wee hours. Mercury continues
to shine brightly in the eve-
ning sky in early February,
but it soon passes between the
Sun and Earth and re-emerges
before dawn at month’s end.
The morning sky also offers
superb views of Mars and Sat-
urn as they approach their
springtime peaks. But the
focus of naked-eye observers
during the predawn hours has
to be Venus, which shines at
its brightest this month.
As February opens, inner-
most Mercury is in the midst
of its best evening apparition
for northern observers during



  1. (It peaked at greatest
    elongation January 31.) On the
    1st, the planet lies 11° high in
    the west-southwest 30 min-
    utes after sunset. Coinciden-
    tally, Mercury appears the
    same distance below a slender
    crescent Moon. Grab your
    binoculars and scan halfway
    between the Moon and the
    horizon. You shouldn’t have
    any trouble spying the planet,
    which shines brightly at mag-
    nitude –0.6.
    Mercury fades quickly
    during the next week, dim-
    ming by 0.2 magnitude with
    each passing day. It dips to 1st
    magnitude by February 7 and
    becomes difficult to spot in
    the twilight. Just a week later,
    on February 15, it passes
    between the Sun and Earth
    and slips into the morning
    sky, where we will visit later.
    Uranus provides more of
    a challenge to binocular
    observers. In mid-February,
    the magnitude 5.9 planet
    stands about 20° above the
    western horizon as twilight
    fades to darkness. Look for it


in southern Pisces some 5°
southwest of 4th-magnitude
Delta (δ) Piscium. On Febru-
ary 3, the planet lies 3° south
of the crescent Moon.
Don’t confuse Uranus with
a similarly bright star just 0.5°
to its east. You can tell the two
apart through a telescope,
which reveals the planet’s
3.4"-diameter disk and blue-
green color. Uranus lies within
0.25° of this same star from
February 11 to 18, and their
relative motion from night to
night should be easy to spot.
After the challenge of spot-
ting Uranus, Jupiter will seem
like a breeze. The planet gleams
at magnitude –2.5 and stands
some two-thirds of the way to
the zenith in the eastern sky as
darkness falls. Jupiter reached
opposition and peak visibility
in early January and shows
little decline this month. The
giant world’s disk shrinks only
slightly, from 46" to 42" across,
which is still plenty big enough
to show fine details through
telescopes of any aperture.
Look for two dark equatorial
belts sandwiched around a
brighter equatorial zone on

any clear night. When Earth’s
turbulent atmosphere settles
down and the jovian disk
appears exceptionally crisp,
look for a whole series of alter-
nating belts and zones.
Jupiter lies in the central
part of Gemini the Twins. This
region passes nearly overhead
for Northern Hemisphere
observers in mid-evening and
doesn’t set until after 4 a.m.
local time. The planet moves
westward against the starry
background during February,
ending the month some 2°
south of 3rd-magnitude Epsi-
lon (ε) Geminorum.
The world’s four bright
moons offer endless enter-
tainment. Once in a while,
the satellites line up in order
of their distance from the
planet. The evening of Febru-
ary 24 provides perhaps the
month’s best opportunity to
see such an alignment. Io then
lies east of and closest to the
planet with Europa, Gany-
mede, and Callisto lined up
in order west of Jupiter.
As each moon orbits the
giant planet this month, it
experiences a similar sequence

SKYTHIS


MONTH


Mars and Saturn climb higher in the sky after midnight as they both prepare
to reach their peak this spring. ASTRONOMY: R O EN K EL LY

Martin Ratcliffe provides plane-
tarium development for Sky-Skan,
Inc., from his home in Wichita,
Kansas. Meteorologist Alister
Ling works for Environment
Canada in Edmonton, Alberta.

The Moon points the way to Mercury in early February, when the innermost
planet appears near its maximum altitude after sunset. ASTRONOMY: ROEN KELLY
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