EarthSky Tonight—October 13, Moon is waxing, but still low in sky
"Why are the evening crescent and the first quarter moon always so low in the autumn evening sky?"
News for Norther Colorado and the world
"Why are the evening crescent and the first quarter moon always so low in the autumn evening sky?"
every year at this time, we get questions about three different stars that are flashing different colors.
The bright star near the moon on October 11 is Antares,
Antares is a red supergiant star, hundreds of millions of times more voluminous than our sun!
Tonight presents the final pairing of the moon and the planet Venus in the evening sky until the autumn of 2011
Capella is located at one corner of the constellation Auriga. Capella marks the Charioteer’s left shoulder.
No meteor storm is expected this year. However, you might see more than a handful of “shooting stars.”
Capella’s red and green flashes do not come from the star itself. They come from refraction of Capella’s light by our atmosphere, when this star is low in the sky.
You need a dark sky location to see the zodiacal light, somewhere where city lights are not obscuring the natural lights in the sky. The zodiacal light is a pyramid-shaped…
At this time of year, you can use the Summer Triangle – and the constellation Cygnus the Swan – to locate the plane of our Milky Way galaxy.