Category Archives: astronomy

Christmas Week Star Party

Christmas week star chart 2004
Christmas week star chart 2004

(NOTE: This is for Christmas 2004)

Every year we send out a Christmas newsletter to family and friends, and each year since the mid-1990s, we’ve included a star chart and a little description of stargazing activities to do in our annual “Christmas Star Party.” I thought it would be fun to share it with the blog readers, too!

This year we’re exploring celestial favorites, starting with Orion in the south-southeast. Look for the Orion Nebula below the three belt stars of Orion. On Dec. 24 the Moon is in Taurus, and is full on December 26. The planet Saturn almost lines up with Castor and Pollux, the two brightest stars in Gemini. The week after Christmas, look for Comet Machholz making its way through Eridanus (to the west of Orion) toward Taurus. Actually, Machholz has been and will be visible for quite a while, but for a couple of nights the Moon will interfere with seeing it in all its glory, so wait a few days after Christmas to see if you can spot it.

A special planetary exploration note: on Christmas Day, the Cassini mission to Saturn will send its Huygens planetary probe to Titan. On January 14, Huygens will be the first craft ever to land on an outer solar system moon and send data about what it finds.

Happy stargazing everybody!

You Never Know….

President of Chile, Ricardo Lagos, at the controls of one of ESOs instruments  Courtesy European Southern Observatory
President of Chile, Ricardo Lagos, at the controls of one of ESO's instruments Courtesy European Southern Observatory

There are astronomers all around us. Carl Sagan once said that we are descended of astronomers. So, it makes sense that the guy standing behind you in the bank line, or the woman ahead of you when you get on the plane MIGHT be an astronomer. Whether or not they’re professional astronomers (meaning they get paid to do it as a living) or amateurs (meaning they do astronomy AND hold down an unrelated job or go to school or something)—that’s another question.

Recently the president of Chile visited the European Southern Observatory. It turns out he’s an avid amateur astronomer and took the opportunity of a private visit to ask a lot of good questions about the technology astronomers were using to scan the skies. (If you want to read more about his visit, click on the European Southern Observatory link above.)

That story reminded me of a favorite pastime of amateurs: finding out which other famous people are into amateur astronomy. It turns out there are a fair number of them in the U.S., and I’m sure many more around the world. There’s Johnny Carson (former king of late-night talk shows in the U.S.), who stargazes from his home in California. Anthony Williams, mayor of Washington, D.C., is reported to be a night skygazer. I’ve also heard that movie stars Steve Martin and Tim Russ (a Star Trek: Voyager actor) do their fair share of stargazing, and rumor has it more than one rock musician is also turned on by the stars! A friend once reported he saw actor James Earl Jones at a star party on the East Coast, and astronaut John Grunsfeld once held a star party on orbit in the space shuttle!

Kinda neat when you think about it—no matter who we are are or how famous we are, stargazing is one of those things that nearly everybody can enjoy and share!