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  13 Stargazing Events for 2013
 


13 Stargazing Events for 2013 — Listed In Chronological
Order:


 


 1) January 21 — Very
Close Moon/Jupiter Conjunction


 


A waxing gibbous moon (78% illuminated) will pass within
less than a degree to the south of Jupiter high in the evening sky. Your closed
fist held out at arms length covers 10 degrees. These two wont get that close
again until 2026.


 


2) February 2-23 — Best Evening View of Mercury


 


The planet Mercury will be far enough away from the glare of
the Sun to be visible in the Western sky after sunset. It will be at its
brightest on the 16th and dim quickly afterwards. On the 8th it will skim by
the much dimmer planet Mars by about 0.4 degrees.


 


3) March 10-24 — Comet PANSTARRS at its best


 


First discovered in 2011, this comet should be coming back
around for about 2 weeks. It will be visible low in the northwest sky after
sunset. Here are some sources predicting what the comets may look like in the
sky;




 




 


 


4) April 25 — Partial Lunar Eclipse


 


A very minor, partial lunar eclipse (not visible in North
America) where only about 2 percent of the moon’s diameter will be inside the
dark shadow of the Earth.


5) May 9 — Annular Eclipse of the Sun (“Ring of Fire”
Eclipse)


 


It will be visible in Northern Australia and parts of Papua
New Guinea but mostly within the Pacific Ocean. See all the solar eclipse paths
for 2001-2020 here.




 


 


6) May 24-30 — Dance of the Planets


 


Mercury, Venus and Jupiter will seemingly dance between each
other in the twilight sky just after sunset as they will change their positions
from one evening to the next. Venus will be the brightest of all, six times
brighter than Jupiter.


 


7) June 23 — Biggest Full Moon of 2013


 


It will be the biggest full moon because the moon will be
the closest to the Earth at this time making it a ‘supermoon’ and the tides
will be affected as well creating exceptionally high and low tides for the next
few days.


 


8) August 12 — Perseid Meteor Shower


 


 Polar Ring  Galaxy NGC 4650A: A Disk of Red Stars Ringed By Dust, Gas, and More Stars
Source: Hubblesite.org
One of the best and most reliable meteor showers of the year
producing upwards of 90 meteors per hour provided the sky is dark. This year
the moon won’t be in the way as much as it will set during the evening leaving
the rest of the night dark. Here is a useful dark-sky finder tool. -
http://bit.ly/UdcDUY


 


9) October 18 — Penumbral Eclipse of the Moon


 


Visible mostly in Asia, Europe and Africa, at this time the
76% of the moon will be covered by the penumbral shadow of the Earth.


10) November 3 — Hybrid Eclipse of the Sun


 


A Hybrid Eclipse meaning, along its path, the eclipse will
turn from Annular to Total and in this case most of the path will appear to be
Total as there will be a slight ring of sunlight visible near the beginning of
the track. This one will begin in the Atlantic (near the East Coast of the
U.S.) and travel through Africa. The greatest eclipse (with 100 seconds of
totality) will appear in Liberia, near the West Coast of Africa.


 Eclipse Path - http://1.usa.gov/VrJggj


 


 


11) Mid-November through December — Comet ISON


 


The second comet this year, ISON, could potentially be
visible in broad daylight as it reaches its closest point to the Sun. It will
reach that point on November 28 and it is close enough to the Sun to be
categorized as a ‘Sungrazer’. Afterwards it will travel towards Earth (passing
by within 40 million miles) a month later.


 


12) All of December — Dazzling Venus


 


The brightest planet of them all will shine a few hours
after sundown in the Southwestern sky and for about 1.5 hours approaching New
Years Eve. Around December 5th, a crescent moon will pass above the planet and
the next night Venus will be at its brightest and wont be again until 2021.


 


13) December 13-14 — Geminid Meteor Shower


 


This is another great (if not the best) annual meteor
shower. This year put on a show at about 120 meteors per hour and in 2013 it
won’t be much different so expect another fantastic show. However, the moon -
as it is a few days before full phase - will be in the way for most of the
night obscuring some of the fainter meteors. You might have to stay up in the
early morning hours (4am) to catch the all the meteors it has to offer.



The Central Region of the  Star-Burst  Spiral Galaxy NGC 3310
Source: Hubblesite.org Hubble Interacting Galaxy NGC 5754
Source: Hubblesite.org Hubble Interacting Galaxy MCG02-001
Source: Hubblesite.org Spiral Galaxy NGC 5653 in Infrared
Source: Hubblesite.org Celestial Maternity Ward N81 in the Small Magellanic Cloud
Source: Hubblesite.org Galaxies Magnified by Galaxy Cluster Abell 1689
Source: Hubblesite.org Galaxy Cluster Abell 520 (HST-CFHT-CXO Composite)
Source: Hubblesite.org Gravitational Lens Captures Image of Primeval Galaxy
Source: Hubblesite.org Abell 902
Source: Hubblesite.org Galaxy Cluster MACS 1206
Source: Hubblesite.org Close-Up of Galaxies from the Hubble Ultra Deep Field Image
Source: Hubblesite.org Galaxies on a Collision Course in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field Image
Source: Hubblesite.org
 
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