Australian Sky & Telescope - April 2018

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46 AUSTRALIAN SKY & TELESCOPE April 2018


SUN, MOON & PLANETS by Jonathan Nally

Mercury masters the morning


This is a good time to spot the innermost planet.


A


pril will see four of the bright
naked-eye planets visible together
in the early morning hours, with
Jupiter, Saturn and Mars all rising in the
late evening, and Mercury joining them
in the pre-dawn sky. Venus is an evening
planet; by the end of April, it and Jupiter
will be seen above opposite horizons
(west and east, respectively) at dusk.
Mercury (mag. 1.7, diameter 10.5 ̋
on April 15; mag. 0.3 and 8.0 ̋ by
month’s end) will be at its best in the
morning from early April through to
mid-May, visible in the eastern sky
before sunrise. The innermost planet
will have reached inferior conjunction
(ie. between the Earth and the Sun)
on April 2, and will then begin to rise
higher above the eastern horizon with
each passing day, reaching a maximum
angle(orelongation)fromtheSunof27
degreesonApril30.Thiswillbethebest
morningapparitionofMercuryfor2018,
somakesureyougrabthisopportunity
togetyourtelescopeoutandtakealook
at this mysterious world.
Venus(–3.9, 11.0 ̋) is t he e ve n i ng
‘star’ during April, and will remain so
right through until mid-October. The
bright planet will be in the constellation
Taurus,andwillappearclosetothe
Pleiades (Messier 45) from April 23 to
26.ThethincrescentMoonwillgetin
on the act too, coming fairly close on
April 18.
Mars(0.0,9.5 ̋)isalateriserin
April, coming up over the horizon at
about11:00pmatthebeginningof
themonth,andjustafter10:00pm
bymonth’send.Tobefoundin
Sagittarius, the Red Planet will make
a few interesting pairings this month,
including coming close to the third-
brightestglobularstarcluster,Messier
22, in the first week of April. The
ringedplanet,Saturn,willbecloseat
the beginning of the month, too (see

STwo planets, the Moon and a globular star
cluster will form a nice grouping.

STheMoonwillvisitAldebaranandthe
Hyades in Taurus, with Venus below.

diagram below), with the two worlds
coming within 1.2 degrees of each
other. Take a look through binoculars
— it’ll be a great sight. The waxing
Moon will appear close to Mars, too,
coming within 4 degrees on April 7,
with Saturn above them to form a nice
triangle. Mars is heading for opposition
in July — opposition is when a planet
and the Sun are on opposite sides of the
Earth, the practical upshot of which is
the planet rises in the east as the Sun
sets in the west, and therefore you have
all night long in which to make your
observations. This’ll be the best Mars
opposition since 2003, with the planet
to reach a brightness of magnitude –2.8
and an apparent diameter of just over
24 arcseconds.
Jupiter(–2 .4, 4 4 ̋) is c u r r e nt ly
undergoing retrograde motion as our
planet laps it on our interior orbit. The
KingofthePlanetsrisesataround

8:00pm at the beginning of April, and by
around 6:00pm at month’s end. Heading
for opposition in May, the giant world
will make a great sight through even a
small telescope; make sure you follow
the movements of its four Galilean
satellites as they change position from
night to night. Also keep an eye out for
two pairings between the planet and our
Moon, on the 3rd and 30th.
Saturn (0.4, 17 ̋) is another late
riser, coming up over the horizon at
roughly the same time as Mars at
month’s beginning, and by just after
9:00pm at month’s end. And like Mars,
the planet is in Sagittarius and will
appear close to Messier 22 at the start
of the month. Watch for the Moon
nearby on the 7th. Saturn will reach the
stationarypointinitsorbitonApril18,
andwillthenbeginalmostfivemonths
ofretrogrademotion(again,asthe
Earth overtakes it on the inside track).
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