SATURN DAILY SPACE DAILY TERRA DAILY MARS DAILY MOON DAILY SPACE TRAVEL SPACE WAR ENERGY DAILY
  Saturn News  
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  
Search All Our Sites at SpaceBank
Saturn, The Moon And A Swarm Of Stars

The view facing east a few hours after sunset will feature the moon, the Beehive Cluster, and Saturn. Image credit: NASA
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 10, 2006
A celestial swarm of stars will hover near a honey-colored Saturn for the next several months. Sky watchers will see the ringed planet together with the Beehive cluster, or M44, a group of stars that also make their home in the Milky Way galaxy.

Saturn and the fainter cluster of stars can be spotted below the moon on Feb. 10. On Feb. 11, Saturn will be visible above the moon. And at sunset on Feb. 12, the full moon will rise to join Saturn, a pale golden glow in the eastern sky.

A few hours after sunset. the full moon will have climbed a third of the distance above the horizon. You'll be able to spot Saturn above the moon even from the city. The bright stars of the constellations Leo and Gemini will frame the celestial scene.

The Beehive cluster, named M44 in the 18 th century, has enchanted amateur astronomers for thousands of years. Known to the ancients, the Beehive cluster is one of the few star clusters visible to the unaided eye. Galileo first trained his telescope on the starry cluster in the 1600s.

He was amazed to resolve 40 individual stars through his eyepiece. You'll see perhaps a dozen loosely clustered stars in a space the size of the full moon near Saturn with your unaided eye. With binoculars or a telescope, you'll see one hundred or more stars in a cluster more than twice the size of the moon.

The Beehive Cluster lies about 600 light-years away. By comparison, Saturn is about 70 light minutes distant, and our moon is 1 light second away.

This celestial beehive will be visible near Saturn for many months to come. In late June, Mars and Saturn have a close conjunction with M44 near the western horizon just past sunset.

Related Links
NASA

See Saturn At Its Best This Friday
Cambridge MA (SPX) Jan 26, 2006
No planet holds the fascination of ring-girdled Saturn - especially the first time you view it with a backyard amateur telescope. Right now Saturn is as close and bright as it will get this year, shining like a yellow star in the eastern evening sky. Many telescope users consider it the most beautiful thing in the heavens, and a view of it in a good scope often draws gasps from first-timers.






Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar News
  • Questioning Pluto
  • New Outer Planet Is Larger Than Pluto
  • Planet X Found To Be Larger Than Pluto
  • New Horizon On Course For Jupiter Transfer To Pluto And Beyond

  • New Viewing Technique Bolsters Case For Life On Mars
  • Making 3D Images Of Fossils Will Have Applications Beyond Earth
  • Spirit Makes It Four Miles At Home Plate
  • Hardened Lava Meets Wind on Mars

  • Venus Express Passive Cruise Phase Begins
  • Shadows Of Venus
  • Earth-Moon Observations From Venus Express

  • Messenger Engine Burn Puts Spacecraft On Track For Venus
  • Messenger Assembly Under Way Messenger Project
  • Messenger's Propulsion System Is a Go
  • A Mercurial Message Of Hot Data

  • NASA Budget Shuts Out Icy Moons Mission
  • Jupiter's Massive Winds Likely Generated From Deep Inside Its Interior
  • University Of Alberta Scientist Offers Clues To Windy Jupiter
  • Organised Wind Chaos On Jupiter

  • Spitzer Uncovers Hints Of Mega Solar Systems
  • Disks Encircling Hypergiant Stars May Spawn Planets In Inhospitable Environment
  • Study Shows Most Milky Way Stars Are Single Red Dwarfs
  • Closer To Home

  • The Lunar Olympics
  • Ancient Impacts Created Man In The Moon
  • The Smell Of Moondust
  • SMART-1 To Crash Into Lunar Surface In August

  • NASA Awards Colorado Satellite Observation Grants
  • Converging Satellites Unlock Sudden Demise Of Hurricane Lili
  • Satellites Support Businesses Working For Sustainable Development
  • Keeping New York City "Cool" Is The Job Of NASA's "Heat Seekers"

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement