[MIham] The Great Cosmic Coincidence of Feb. 24, 2009

Frank frank at mountcalvarygreenville.org
Mon Feb 23 09:43:25 EST 2009


Space Weather News for Feb. 23, 2009
http://spaceweather.com

COSMIC COINCIDENCE: What are the odds? On Tuesday, Feb. 24th, Saturn and 
Comet Lulin will converge in the constellation Leo only 2 degrees apart. At 
the same time, Comet Lulin will be making its closest approach to Earth--the 
comet at its best!-- while four of Saturn's moons transit the disk of the 
ringed planet in view of backyard telescopes. Oh, and the Moon will be New, 
providing dark skies for anyone who wishes to see the show.

The best time to look is around 1 a.m. Tuesday morning (your local time) 
when the planet-comet combo ascend high in the southern sky. To the unaided 
eye, Comet Lulin looks like a faint patch of gas floating next to golden 
Saturn. Point your backyard telescope at that patch and you will see a 
lovely green comet with a double tail.

Visit http://spaceweather.com for full coverage including photos, sky maps, 
and a live webcast.

Geographic Notes: Comet Lulin is visible from all parts of the globe--all 
longitudes and both hemispheres. Directions are reversed in the southern 
hemisphere; there the comet is located in the northern sky around 1 am. 
Saturn is globally visible, too, but the special quadruple transit of 
Saturn's moons starting around 3 a.m. PST on Feb. 24th is visible only to 
observers around the Pacific Rim.  Details may be found here: 
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2009/19feb_quadrupletransit.htm



More information about the MIham mailing list