What's Up in the Night Sky?

June 2020 - Vol. 24, No. 6

Astra's Star Gate

This Month's Night Sky - NOTE: The next paragraph describes the sky as it appears at 10 pm EST (11 pm EDT) near mid- month. The sky also looks this way at 11 pm EST (midnight EDT) during the beginning of the month and at 9 pm EST (10 pm EDT) by month's end.

Spica (Virgo) glows in the SW while Regulus (Leo) vanishes over the W horizon before midnight. The "big dipper" (Ursa Major's asterism) now stands on its "handle" in the north. Antares in Scorpius is low on the S horizon. The Eastern sky is dominated by the "summer triangle" asterism: Deneb (Cygnus), Vega (Lyra) and Altair (Aquila). An interesting star tour begins at the last star of the big dipper's handle, Alkaid. Following the curve of the handle, "arc to Arcturus". Now, following the same curve, "spike to Spica" and "continue to Corvus", its distinctive four star, kite-shaped, asterism.

MERCURY is well place for observing in the northern hemisphere, visible after sunset although it will start setting earlier after it reaches greatest E. elongation on the 4th. VENUS reaches inferior conjunction on the 3rd, reemerging in the morning sky by mid-month. MARS reaches western quadrature on June 7, making a 90-degree angle with Earth and Sun. By month's end the red planet will reach -0.5 mag, and rise around 1am, slipping into the constellation of Pisces. JUPITER continues its retrograde motion in Sagittarius this month heading toward opposition on July 14. SATURN also continues its retrograde motion in Capricornus toward opposition on July 20. Keep watching this pair as Saturn will appear above Jupiter by the end of the month. URANUS emerges from the morning twilight sky, though it will be hard to spot from the northern hemisphere. NEPTUNE in Aquarius is in the morning sky.

Review how to determine Angular Measurement.

Calendar of Events

NOTE: For those observers not in the ET zone, convert the calendar times to your zone's time by subtracting one hour for CT, two for MT and three for PT. Don't forget to adjust for Daylight Savings Time when necessary by subtracting one hour from your planisphere's time. Dawn and dusk times must also be corrected. See your local newspaper, TV news, or cable TV's Weather Channel for sunrise and sunset times or check with the U.S. Naval observatory. Unfortunately some of these events may occur during daylight hours in your area.

DATE EVENT
03 Moon at perigee.
This month's full moon is called the "strawberry" moon. This month again full moon occurs quite near to lunar perigee and will be larger than the full moon that occurs near apogee. The full moon occurs this month at 19:12 UT on June 5.
Venus at inferior conjunction.
04 Mercury at greatest elongation E. (24 deg.) Great for the northern hemisphere.
05 Penumbral lunar eclipse.
Venus at descending node.
07 Mars at western quadrature.
08 Jupiter 2 deg. N. of Moon.
09 Saturn 3 deg. N. of Moon.
Check out the dance of the planets this year!
12 Mercury at descending node.
Mars 1.7 deg. S. of Neptune.
13 Mars 3 deg. N. of Moon.
15 Moon at apogee.
17 Uranus 4 deg. N. of Moon.
Mercury stationary.
19 Venus 0.7 deg. S. of Moon, occultation from Azores, Canary Islands, N & E Canada, Greenland, NW Europe, N & C Russia, N Mongolia.
20 Solstice, Sun reaches northernmost position.
21 Annular solar eclipse.
23 Mercury at aphelion.
Neptune stationary.
24 Venus stationary.
30 Moon at perigee.

Lunar Almanac for June 2020

Phases of the Moon Phase and Date(s) Best viewed before local midnight
new moon New
21
Deep Space Objects
first quarter moon 1st. Qtr
28
Planets & Moon
full moon Full
05
Moon
last quarter moon Last Qtr
13
Deep Space & Planets

Topic of the month: Virgo constellation

Virgo constellation image created in Stellarium 2020

Virgo is well known as the constellation of the Virgin. Virgo is one of the ecliptic constellations that has a long history. William Herschel noted that there are more deep sky objects in the constellation than there are bright stars. This is because a great galactic cluster is centered in Virgo. The giant galaxies M87 at the heart of the cluster is a galaxy gobbling x-ray source known as Virgo A. Other bright Virgo cluster members include M88, M89, M90, M58, and M84, that are all located in the Virgo constellation proper. It may even be that the Milky Way itself is an outlying member of this galactic supercluster.

Richard Allen in Star Names cites an observation of Saturn by the Babylonians in this constellation back in 228 BC as it passed the gamma star, Porrima. Because it lies in the Mesopotamian "path of the Moon", Virgo was observed regularly. But the constellation's history goes back long before that.

Virgo's brightest star, Spica (magnitude .95) is located very close to the modern ecliptic, in fact less then 2 degrees away from that thin line representing the plane of Earth's orbit. Its proximity to the ecliptic means that it can be occulted by the Moon, and as in 2013 when Spica was occulted 12 times, every time the Moon came near Virgo! The moon passes through Virgo every lunar month.

Spica was identified as a ripe wheat stalk in the hand of the Virgin. Theoretically, she holds a palm branch in her right hand and a stalk of wheat in the left. She celebrates the growing season and is associated with fertility. Sometimes Spica is identified as an ear of corn, that identification I hesitate to make because corn - - that is maize, is a new world product. Corn in the old world was more of a generic term for a food crop.

The star, β Virginis, commonly known as Zavijava is the constellation's 5th brightest star at 3.55 magnitude. It is even closer to the ecliptic than Spica, according to Wikipedia, it will be occulted by the planet Venus in 2069. The gamma star of the constellation is the well-known star Porrima. It is a double star, with two components at 3.65 and 3.56 magnitude. They orbit each other in 169 years, with the line of sight from Earth causes them to change their separation. They were last closest in 2005 and couldn't be split, but in 2020 they are farther apart and can be resolved in a small telescope. The distance between the two stars varies from 5 AU, (about the distance of Jupiter to the sun) to 81 AU at their farthest.

In my studies, I have encountered an abundance of names and designations for the constellation Virgo. It has been equated with Isis, Ishtar, Persphone, Demeter, Diana, Minerva, Fortuna, Bel's wife, barking dogs, a ship, a maiden in a ship and many more. It is known that sometimes the stars on the eastern side of the constellation were placed in the constellation of Libra, helping to form the image of the scale. In ancient Mesopotamia, Virgo was known as "The Furrow" or "Absinnu" in Akkadian, a constellation that celebrated their agrarian culture. It was a land of farming and irrigation. The two great rivers, Euphrates and the Tigris did not offer up their spring floodwaters in synch with the growing season when the crops needed it, so they learned to regulate the waterways. Naturally, Spica represented barley, their most important crop. Barley was their preferred crop because of its tolerance to the briny environment they grew their crops in.

Marduk's tiara, an alternate view of Virgo

Because Marduk was the primary god of the Babylonians, following a commentary on Marduk's Address to the Demons written in the late Babylonian period by a scribe named Shema'ya and translated by John Z. Wee, I have presented here a whimsical dot-to-dot portrait of Marduk's tiara. I have reconstructed this image by rearranging the constellation lines from Stellarium.

I am always sad when the long hours of daylight and twilight in late Spring quickly wash away the winter constellations as the Sun returns to the north. Virgo will continue to rise in the northern hemisphere visible in the early evening through July.

--See You Under the Stars!
Astra for Astra's Almanac

This installment of "What's Up?" is ©2020 by Dawn Jenkins for Astra's Stargate. View Ron Leeseburg's Farewell Issue for information on where to find information such as is presented in this almanac.