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Earthsky Tonight- January 24: Moon and Pleiades in south at nightfall
Posted By Gary Wamsley On January 24, 2010 @ 10:29 am In Earth & Sky | Comments Disabled
Courtesy of EarthSky
A Clear Voice for Science
www.EarthSky.org [1]
The waxing gibbous moon [3] and the Pleiades star cluster are found high in the southern sky at nightfall and early evening. Although the moonlit glare may make it difficult to see this tiny, dipper-shape cluster of starlets tonight, be sure to check out the Pleiades on a dark, moonless night.
Starting the first weekend of February, the moon will leave the evening sky for at least a week, staging the Pleiades in a dark starry sky. Then, you can use Orion’s Belt to find the sky’s most famous star cluster, as we show on tomorrow’s chart [4].
As evening deepens into late night, the Pleiades follows the moon westward across the sky. They set in tandem beneath the west-northwest horizon in the wee hours after midnight. The farther north you live, the later they set. The farther south you live, the earlier. At mid-northern latitudes in North America, the moon and Pleaides sink below the horizon tomorrow around 3:00 a.m. local time.
Despite the moonlit glare, you can still use binoculars to gaze at the Pleiades to the east (or left) of the moon tonight. This cluster is also called the Seven Sisters [5], even though most people can only see six Pleiades’ stars with the unaided eye. Stories about the missing Pleiad abound in sky lore.
Related:
Pleiades star cluster enjoys worldwide renown [6]
Written by Bruce McClure
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URL to article: http://www.berthoudrecorder.com/2010/01/24/earthsky-tonight-january-24-moon-and-pleiades-in-south-at-nightfall/
URLs in this post:
[1] www.EarthSky.org: http://www.EarthSky.org
[2] Image: http://www.earthsky.org
[3] waxing gibbous moon: http://www.earthsky.org/tonightpost/moon-phases/waxing-gibbous
[4] tomorrow’s chart: http://www.earthsky.org/tonighthome/2010-01-25
[5] Seven Sisters: http://www.earthsky.org/faqpost/space/myth-and-science-of-pleiades-star-cluster
[6] Pleiades star cluster enjoys worldwide renown: http://www.earthsky.org/tonightpost/clusters-nebulae-galaxies/pleiades-star-cluster-enjoys-worldwide-renown
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