OBSERVING
Celestial Calendar
50 July 2014 sky & telescope
Ceres, Meet Vesta!
The two leading asteroids pair up closer than anyone has ever seen.
Have you looked in on Ceres and Vesta in the last few
months? The king and queen of the asteroid belt have
been fl ying in parallel just 2°° or 3° apart since the begin-
ning of spring, looping through eastern Virgo. They were
at opposition in mid-April, as told in the February issue,
page 50 (the names of Ceres and Vesta were swapped on
the chart there), and they remain in binocular view.
Now they’ll pull much closer together as they fade.
They’re already in the same wide-fi eld telescopic view,
and in early July they come into the same high-power
view. They’ll appear closest, 10 arcminutes apart, on the
evenings of July 4th and 5th in the Americas (July 5th
and 6th Universal Time), while cruising 1½° southwest
of 3rd-magnitude Zeta (ζ) Virginis. Ceres is magnitude
8.5 and Vesta is 7.2 around that date. They’re still mod-
erately high in the southwest at nightfall: 30° high if you
May
10 18
26
June 3
11
19
27
July
5
13
21
29
May
10
18
26
June
3
11
19
27
July 5
13
21
29
May
10 18
26
June 3
11
19
27
July 5
13
21
29
α
χ
δ
γ
θ
τ
ψ
ζ
74
76
78
82
84
90
95
Σ 1669
Spica
4487
4504
4517
4527
4536
4546
4592
4593
M104
4632
4636
4643
4665
4666
4684
4691
4697
4699
4700
4731
4742
4753
4772
4775
4781
4802
4818
4845
4900
4941
4939
4958
4981
4995
Path of Mars
Pa
th
of
Ve
sta
Pa
th
o
f^ C
er
es
14 h 00 m 13 h 50 m 13 h 40 m 13 h 30 m 13 h 20 m 13 h 10 m 13 h 00 m 12 h 50 m 12 h 40 m 12 h 30 m
+4°
+2°
0 °
–2°
–4°
–6°
–8°
–10°
–12°
VIRGO
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Star magnitudes