You've probably noticed a star rising in the east at about sunset and standing overhead at midnight, a blazing beacon brighter than any other star. Well, it's not a star at all; it's Jupiter. The golden disk hovering in the black of space to Jupiter's right is the moon Io, and even in the smallest telescope or binocular you can see four moons aligned in a row near their parent, the Galilean moons. In order: Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto - only Io is close enough to see in this photo:


Click the image to see the story about Jupiter's close approach.

Jupiter: god of the planets, banded by atmospheric streamers whipping the cloud-tops at hundreds of miles per hour in opposite directions, resulting in amazing storms - including the famous Great Red Spot and now the Little Red Spot as seen in this photo:


Click the image to see the story about the Little Red Spot.

We'll not be as close to this mighty planet until 2022, so get out there and look for it! If it stops storming sometime over the next few days, I'm thinking of doing an astronomy camp-out and spending some quality time with my favorite planet.

Chris
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From: [identity profile] bogwitch64.livejournal.com


Thanks, Chris! I think I saw it last night. (I didn't get this until this morning.) Is that it? Or will it be back tonight?

From: [identity profile] mckitterick.livejournal.com


Oh, it'll keep getting brighter (and closer) for the next few days, then remain the brightest "star" (besides the Sun) in the sky for a long time to come.

From: [identity profile] bogwitch64.livejournal.com


Oh, goody! By the time it goes away, I'll have seen it enough times to KNOW that's what I'm looking at. THANKS!
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