58 AUSTRALIAN SKY & TELESCOPE July 2018
M8
M16
M17
M18
M20
M21
M22
M23
M24 Star Cloud
M25
M28
May
1
22 June
5 19 July 3 17 31 Aug 14
May 1
8
15
22
29
June 5
12
19
26
July 3
10
17 24
31
Aug 7
14
21
28
Sept 4
a
h
+
e
j
j
SERPENS CAUDA
SAGITTARIUS
OPHIUCHUS
Path of Vesta
Path of Saturn
18 h 40 m 18 h 30 m 18 h 20 m 18 h 10 m 18 h 00 m 17 h 50 m 17 h 40 m 17 h 30 m 17 h 20 m
–14°
–16°
–18°
–20°
–22°
–24°
M9
Star magnitudes
2 3 4 5 6 7
TVesta’spositionismarkedwithatickat
0 hUT every seven days.
VESTA: NASA / JPL-CALTECH / UCLA / MPS / DLR / IDA
VESTA’S OPPOSITION by S. N. Johnson-Roehr
See Vesta
at its best
Asteroid 4 Vesta is nice and close,
a lustrous light in the southern sky.
V
esta, the fourth-discovered
asteroid, reaches opposition
(opposite the Sun in the sky
when viewed from Earth) on June 19.
Though neither the largest nor the most
massive of the main belt asteroids,
Vesta is the brightest of them all when
it is at opposition. This year it shines in
Sagittarius at magnitude 5.3 and will
be visible without optical aid under
reasonably dark skies. It’ll be a bit
dimmer for the rest of June and into
July, ranging from magnitude 5.6 to 5.9,
but still within reach of the naked eye
under good skies.
There’s something intrinsically
interesting about observing asteroids
— they’re giant space rocks, after
all — but the success of NASA’s Dawn
mission turned Vesta into a particularly
compelling target. While the Hubble
Space Telescope had resolved some of
its largest surface features in the 1990s,
it wasn’t until the Dawn spacecraft
dropped in on Vesta in 2011 that
scientists were able to study the asteroid
in detail. Vesta is almost, but not quite,