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In the Sky this Week – June 14, 2022

By Robert Trembley  |  14 Jun 2022  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

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This entry is part 233 of 253 in the series In the Sky This Week

M19
Feature|The Sky|The Moon|The Sun|Asteroids|Fireballs|The Solar System|Spacecraft News|Exoplanets|Aurora|Light Pollution|The Universe|

Tucson Meteor Cams

In case you missed my teaser post about the new meteor cameras in the Tucson area:

Check out our new Meteor Cameras in Tucson!

The Sky - In the Sky

Venus, Jupiter and Mars appear in the eastern predawn sky all week.

Eastern sky before dawn
Venus, Mars and Jupiter appear in the eastern sky before dawn. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

Mercury joins Venus, Mars and Jupiter appear in the eastern predawn sky early next week.

Eastern sky before sunrise
Mercury appears near Venus in the eastern predawn sky early next week. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

The Moon appears in the middle of the constellation Sagittarius in the southern sky in the early morning hours on June 15th.

Southern sky in the early morning
The Moon in Sagittarius in the southern sky in morning of June 15th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

The Moon appears near Saturn in the southeastern sky in the early morning hours on June 18th.

Southeastern sky in the early morning
The Moon near Saturn in the southeastern sky in the morning on June 18th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.
The Moon - In the Sky
  • The Full Moon occurs on June 14th – rising at sunset, visible high in the sky around midnight, and visible all night.
  • After June 14th, the Moon will be a Waning Gibbous – rising after sunset, visible high in the sky after midnight, and visible to the southwest after sunrise.
  • The Third Quarter Moon occurs on June 20th – rising around midnight, and visible to the south after sunrise.
Moon
The Moon from June 7-13, 2022. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium

If you click on the Moon image above, or click this link, you will go to NASA’s Moon Phase and Libration, 2022 page – it will show you what the Moon looks like right now. If you click the image on that page, you will download a high-rez TIFF image annotated with the names of prominent features – helpful for logging your lunar observations!

Moon News

#Strawberry #SuperMoon

🍓🍯🍻🌹 The June full moon is the sweetest of the year – called Strawberry, Honey, Mead, or Rose Moon.

It's also a supermoon! The Moon appears a little bigger and brighter than average because it's closer to Earth in its elliptical orbit. https://t.co/em5wrKIxAt pic.twitter.com/zkiTtwRDag

— NASA Moon (@NASAMoon) June 13, 2022

The Sun - In the Sky

The Sun has six named sunspots – up from four last week.

Spaceweather.com says: “Sunspot group AR3032 (sandwiched between 3030 and 3033) has a ‘beta-gamma’ magnetic field that harbors energy for M-class solar flares.” Also: “A CME launched by yesterday’s slow-motion solar flare is expected to pass near Earth on June 15th. Geomagnetic storms are possible if the CME makes contact. NOAA forecasters say minor G1-class storms are likely, with a chance for G2 (moderate) and a slight chance of G3 (strong) storms.”

The Sun on June 14, 2022. Credit: SDO/HMI

The Sun seen in 193 angstroms on June 13th.

A gigantic coronal hole is dead in the center of the Sun’s face. Several active regions show bright coronal activity with a moderate about of coronal loops. The small opening at the north pole remains open. A bit of plasma indirection can be seen on the Sun’s limb at the 5:00 o’clock position.

 

 

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The Sun seen in 304 angstroms on June 13th.

WOW! The active region in the northern hemisphere is crackling with flares! Light prominence activity along the Sun’s limb.

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Videos courtesy of NASA/SDO and the AIA, EVE, and HMI science teams.
You can view the Sun in near real-time, in multiple frequencies here: SDO-The Sun Now.
You can create your own time-lapse movies of the Sun here: AIA/HMI Browse Data.
You can browse all the SDO images of the Sun from 2010 to the present here: Browse SDO archive.


Amateur Solar Astrophotography

Sun
The Sun on June 12, 2022. Credit: Gabriel Corban

Solar Corona

Solar wind speed is 472.3 km/sec ▲ with a density of 7.43 protons/cm3 ▲ at 1217 UT.

Sun
SOHO LASCO C2 Latest Image

Click here to see a near real-time animation of the corona and solar wind from the Solar & Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO).

Sun News:

BIG CME!

THE CME ASSOCIATED WITH THE M3 FLARE. Note its intensity, size and speed. It seems to involve about half the Sun. pic.twitter.com/3qOmsDkYtr

— Keith Strong (@drkstrong) June 13, 2022

Asteroids - In the Sky
  • Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) discovered this month: 53, this year: 1303 (+59), all time: 29,227 (+58)
  • Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs): 2270 (+5 updated 2022-06-14)
  • Total Minor Planets discovered (MPC): 1,207,476 (-338 updated 2022-06-14)

Upcoming Earth-asteroid encounters:

Asteroid Date(UT) Miss Distance Velocity (km/s) Diameter (m)
2022 LC2 2022-Jun-15 10.1 LD 10.2 29
2022 LA3 2022-Jun-18 7.4 LD 7.2 21
2022 LX 2022-Jun-22 10.4 LD 10.1 35
2022 LS1 2022-Jun-23 18.9 LD 10 35
2022 LB2 2022-Jun-25 5 LD 8.3 23
2022 LV 2022-Jun-25 2 LD 3.6 22
2015 WP2 2022-Jun-26 18.5 LD 11.4 3
2022 JE1 2022-Jul-03 8.6 LD 5.6 74
2021 EL4 2022-Jul-05 19.8 LD 9.5 25
2015 OQ21 2022-Jul-12 18.3 LD 6.6 9
2022 LR1 2022-Jul-16 9.3 LD 4.7 42
2022 KY4 2022-Jul-17 15.9 LD 7.6 91
2021 OT 2022-Jul-17 16.5 LD 11.2 20
349068 2022-Jul-19 17.6 LD 22.9 756
2017 RX2 2022-Jul-24 17.2 LD 14.2 17
2016 CZ31 2022-Jul-29 7 LD 15.6 129
531944 2022-Jul-30 18.2 LD 5.9 192
2020 PP1 2022-Aug-01 13.1 LD 3.7 17
2020 PN1 2022-Aug-03 9.7 LD 4.6 29
Notes: LD means “Lunar Distance.” 1 LD = 384,401 km, the distance between Earth and the Moon. 1 LD also equals 0.00256 AU. MAG is the visual magnitude of the asteroid on the date of closest approach.

WGSBN Bulletin 2, #8 – released June 14th with 18 newly named asteroids.

Click here to see NASA’s interactive “Eyes on Asteroids” close approach watch

Asteroid News:

#asteroid #Apophis was used in a #planetarydefense exercise with the participation of more than 100 astronomers worldwide. Check out the findings in this @physorg_space article:https://t.co/R0UPXZsaWz pic.twitter.com/gRAKQrTif4

— Asteroid Day ☄ (@AsteroidDay) June 10, 2022

Fireballs - In the Sky

On June 13, 2022, the NASA All Sky Fireball Network reported 5 fireballs!
(5 sporadics)

In this diagram of the inner solar system, all of the fireball orbits intersect at a single point–Earth. The orbits are color-coded by velocity, from slow (red) to fast (blue). Source: SpaceWeather.com

Fireball News:

The Vatican Observatory has installed meteor cameras in the Tucson area. These cameras are part of the Global Meteor Network.https://t.co/wcLvJxK4Xf

— Vatican Observatory vaticanobservatory.bsky.social (@VaticanObserv) June 11, 2022

If you see a bright meteor or a fireball, please REPORT IT to the American Meteor Society and the International Meteor Organization!

Visit the Vatican Observatory’s Tucson Meteor-Cam Page
The Solar System - In the Sky

Position of the planets & several spacecraft in the inner solar system on June 14nd:

Inner Solar System
Top-down view of the inner solar system on June 14, 2022. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Position of the planets in the middle solar system – June 2022:

Middle Solar System
Top-down view of the middle solar system on June 2, 2022. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Position of the planets in the outer solar system first half of 2022:

Outer Solar System
Top-down view of the outer solar system on Mar. 15, 2022. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Click here to see NASA’s interactive solar system website

Solar System News

https://twitter.com/AstroBalrog/status/1536328674760335365
Spacecraft News - In the Sky

Astra launch failure destroys 2 NASA satellites

#Astra #NASA #TROPICS #cubesats

NASA pausing the upcoming TROPICS launches, as the FAA investigates Astra's launch failure from yesterday https://t.co/DzblILntQf

— Loren Grush (@lorengrush) June 13, 2022

Concept Comet Interceptor to be stationed at L2

James Webb Space Telescope struck by dust-sized micrometeroid

No worries tho – it was designed for that.

In late May, Webb sustained a dust-sized micrometeroid impact to a primary mirror segment. Not to worry: Webb is still performing at a level that exceeds all mission requirements. Our first images will #UnfoldTheUniverse on July 12: https://t.co/9jp0uq7ytS pic.twitter.com/VKkSp16yrg

— NASA Webb Telescope (@NASAWebb) June 8, 2022

NASA's Mars Helicopter team awarded prestigious Collier Trophy

Click to see Perseverance on NASA’s Solar System Orrery

Yesterday, the #MarsHelicopter team accepted the prestigious Collier Trophy, awarded by the National Aeronautic Association for the greatest achievement in aeronautics or astronautics in America.

Please help us congratulate the Ingenuity team! 👏 pic.twitter.com/rEM5Uh1XQC

— NASA JPL (@NASAJPL) June 10, 2022

Lucy in the sky without a solar panel

#LucyMission Update: A multi-stage effort is underway to further deploy the spacecraft’s unlatched solar array. The process is putting the solar array under more tension, further stabilizing it - and that may be enough to fly the mission as planned. https://t.co/CD6cRPOs4s pic.twitter.com/vDezVvhyi9

— NASA Solar System (@NASASolarSystem) June 8, 2022

HiRISE - Beautiful Mars

IMPACT!

Click to see Mars on NASA’s Solar System Orrery

Candidate new impact site formed between January 2008 and July 2012 - https://t.co/HqQL783J2t pic.twitter.com/k96xhPxuOR

— HiRISE Bot (@HiRISEBot) June 9, 2022

International Space Station

Click to see the ISS on NASA’s Solar System Orrery

This week on #SpaceToGround, space-related vision changes are investigated, the next generation of spacesuits is under development, and the station crew shares photos and experiences from orbit. pic.twitter.com/6HzwjLV556

— International Space Station (@Space_Station) June 10, 2022

GAIA Mission Data Release 3

Gaia Data Release 3 (Gaia DR3) will be released on 13 June 2022. The data will become available through the Gaia Archive

Keep posted while we explain this enormous, wealthy #GaiaDR3 data set and the wide variety of data products inside: https://t.co/qXTDmKTAxl pic.twitter.com/FaewLV9rMB

— ESA Gaia (@ESAGaia) June 13, 2022

Space Debris / Collision Avoidance

Collision avoided! 💥 On Wednesday eve, Swarm-Bravo successfully avoided a recently-launched satellite part of a telecom constellation 🛰️ Bravo, our "lonely" upper satellite, was manoeuvred down & is safe and sound. This doesn't affect the 10 week orbit raise of Alpha & Charlie. pic.twitter.com/Qa42Wivfws

— ESA's Swarm mission (@esa_swarm) June 9, 2022

CO2

421.30 ppm #CO2

📈 421.30 ppm #CO2 in the atmosphere for the 23rd week of 2022 📈 Up from 419.61 a year ago 📈 @NOAA Mauna Loa data: https://t.co/CkSjvjkBfQ 📈 https://t.co/DpFGQoYEwb updates: https://t.co/idlRE62qB1 📈 Add a weekly CO2 tracker to your site: https://t.co/NnwgaBoCCa 📈 pic.twitter.com/qYZQonGDQe

— CO2_Earth (@CO2_earth) June 13, 2022

Global Wildfire Information System (GWIS)

The Global Wildfire Information System (GWIS) combines data and models to give a comprehensive view of wildfire risk.

Learn about 3 @NASA Applied Sciences projects that contribute to GWIS, making it a more effective tool for tracking fires & saving lives https://t.co/LMSrzq4MeT pic.twitter.com/EGfgIpbMLZ

— NASA Earth (@NASAEarth) June 13, 2022

See a list of current NASA missions here: https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/missions?mission_status=current

Exoplanets - In the Sky

ex·o·plan·et /ˈeksōˌplanət/, noun: a planet orbiting a star other than the Sun.

All Exoplanets 5044(+9)
Confirmed Planets Discovered by Kepler 2709
Kepler Project Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 2057
Confirmed Planets Discovered by K2 537
K2 Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 969
Confirmed Planets Discovered by TESS 221 (+4)
TESS Project Candidates Integrated into Archive (2022-06-07 13:00:02) 5767 (+42)
Current date TESS Project Candidates at ExoFOP 5767 (+42)
TESS Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 3862 (+23)
Data from the NASA Exoplanet Archive

* Confirmed Planets Discovered by TESS refers to the number planets that have been published in the refereed astronomical literature.
* TESS Project Candidates refers to the total number of transit-like events that appear to be astrophysical in origin, including false positives as identified by the TESS Project.
* TESS Project Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed refers to the number of TESS Project Candidates that have not yet been dispositioned as a Confirmed Planet or False Positive.

Click here to see NASA’s interactive exoplanet website

Exoplanet News:

June 9, 2022

Nine New Planets, Including Two From Gaia

Almost 8.5 years after its launch with the goal to create the largest and most precise 3-D map of the Milky Way galaxy, the Global Astrometric Interferometer for Astrophysics (Gaia) mission has detected two confirmed transiting exoplanets: Gaia-1 b and Gaia-2 b. Read the discovery paper by Panahi et al. (2022).

Pro Tip: Other Gaia data in the archive include distances and magnitudes in the Planetary Systems and Planetary Systems Composite Parameters tables, and Gaia and HIPPARCOS data are used to calculate masses of known planets, such as bet Pic b. Also, ExoFOP links to Gaia data for each star (currently DR2, and soon DR3).

There are seven other new planets in the archive this week: TOI-1107 b, Ross 508 b, HD 83443 c, mu 2 Sco b, and HD 28109 b, c, & d. – NASA Exoplanet Archive

You've got questions. We've got answers. https://t.co/8OfWVviuak

— NASA Exoplanets (@NASAExoplanets) June 13, 2022

Aurora - In the Sky

Copper Harbor! My old stomping grounds! This is where my wife and I saw aurora all the time!

Aurora. Taken by Marybeth Kiczenski  on June 6, 2022 @ Copper Harbor, MI

SpaceWeather.com Realtime Aurora Gallery: https://spaceweathergallery.com/aurora_gallery.html

Latest Aurora Oval Forecast

Aurora – 30 Minute forecast. Credit: NOAA. Click image to see northern and southern hemisphere Aurora forecast.
Light Pollution - In the Sky

We are excited to announce the publication of the: “Artificial Light at Night: State of the Science 2022” report! It finds the world transformed by electric light in less than 150 years since its introduction.

You can read it now, here: https://t.co/iUQQmSV4HM

— DarkSky International (@IDADarkSky) June 13, 2022

  • Visit an International Dark Sky Park: https://www.darksky.org/our-work/conservation/idsp/parks/
  • If you live in Michigan, visit the Michigan Dark Skies site: https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/darkskies/
The Universe - In the Sky

Impromptu STEM this kid will never forget!

I let my daughter’s friend hit the deliver button on the Curiosity Rover's sol 3492 post drive imaging. She’s pretty happy about it 😀 pic.twitter.com/7VsWyCyzXx

— Kevin M. Gill (@kevinmgill) June 7, 2022

Messier Tour: M19

M19
Messier 19 (M19). Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA

In the above image, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has captured the brilliance of the compact centre of Messier 70, a globular cluster. Quarters are always tight in globular clusters, where the mutual hold of gravity binds together hundreds of thousands of stars in a small region of space. Having this many shining stars piled on top of one another from our perspective makes globular clusters a popular target for amateur skywatchers and scientists alike. Messier 70 offers a special case because it has undergone what is known as a core collapse. In these clusters, even more stars squeeze into the object’s core than on average, such that the brightness of the cluster increases steadily towards its centre.

The legions of stars in a globular cluster orbit about a shared centre of gravity. Some stars maintain relatively circular orbits, while others loop out into the cluster’s fringes. As the stars interact with each other over time, lighter stars tend to pick up speed and migrate out toward the cluster’s edges, while the heavier stars slow and congregate in orbits toward the centre. This huddling effect produces the denser, brighter centres characteristic of core-collapsed clusters. About a fifth of the more than 150 globular clusters in the Milky Way have undergone a core collapse.

Although many globular clusters call the galaxy’s edges home, Messier 70 orbits close to the Milky Way’s centre, around 30 000 light-years away from the Solar System. It is remarkable that Messier 70 has held together so well, given the strong gravitational pull of the Milky Way’s hub.

Messier 70 is only about 68 light-years in diameter and can be seen, albeit very faintly, with binoculars in dark skies in the constellation of Sagittarius (The Archer). French astronomer Charles Messier documented the object in 1780 as the seventieth entry in his famous astronomical catalogue.

This picture was obtained with the Wide Field Camera of Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys. The field of view is around 3.3 by 3.3 arcminutes. – ESA/NASA

Messier 19. Credits: Doug Williams, REU Program/NOIRLAB/NSF/AURA

Messier 19 appears as a fuzzy patch of light in 2-inch binoculars. Amateur telescopes will show a cluster about 6 arc minutes in size visually and 13.5 arc minutes photographically. The cluster’s elliptical shape is evident even in small instruments. A 10-inch telescope, on the other hand, will reveal the cluster’s bright core about 3 by 4 arc minutes in apparent size and a halo occupying a region 5 by 7 arc minutes in size. The best time of year to see the cluster is in the summer months.

Messier 19 contains a number of variable stars, including four Cepheids and RV Tauri type stars, and at least one RR Lyrae type variable with a known pulsation period. The cluster has four confirmed RR Lyrae variables.

The brightest stars in the cluster are 14th magnitude and the average visual magnitude of the 25 brightest stars is 14.8. – messier-objects.com

M18
Artist’s depiction of M18’s position in relation to the Sun and the Milky Way’s core – oblique view. Credit: Bob Trembley / SpaceEngine.

Here’s my obligatory “What would a planet look like if it were near that Messier object” pic:

Globular cluster M19 and the disk of the Milky Way rising over the horizon of a dark sky site on a hypothetical life-bearing exoplanet – best viewed in a dark room.

M19
Artist’s depiction of globular cluster M19 and the disk of the Milky Way rising over the horizon of a hypothetical life-bearing exoplanet. Credit: Bob Trembley / SpaceEngine.

Click here to view M19 in the Worldwide Telescope web client

Cover Image: Messier 19. Credit: Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA

Messier Object List: [Link]


Software Apps used for this post:

NASA Eyes on the Solar System: an immersive 3D solar system and space mission simulator – free for the PC /MAC.
Stellarium: a free web-based planetarium app. It’s a great tool for planning observing sessions. Latest update released on April 16, 2022.
SpaceEngine – Explore the universe in 3D and VR! Latest update released on May 16, 2022.
Worldwide Telescope – operated by the American Astronomical Society (AAS). Latest update released on March 31, 2022.

Feature|The Sky|The Moon|The Sun|Asteroids|Fireballs|The Solar System|Spacecraft News|Exoplanets|Aurora|Light Pollution|The Universe|

Clear skies, stay safe, be well, and look up!

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