NATURE MONCTON NATURE NEWS
January 12, 2024
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**John Inman had another flying insect
around the kitchen Thursday to give great photo op opportunities. John felt
that it looked like an Ichneumon Wasp and BugGuide agreed that it
was one of the several species of Ichneumon Wasp we have in New Brunswick. This
was a small one with a body only a centimeter in length.
This is the
second time an unexpected insect has appeared moving about in their home. They
rather wonder if they are not coming in attached to clothing, with the warmer
weather causing them to be moving about.
Shannon Inman
has also noticed very small mushrooms popping up in the area. They seem to be
taking advantage of the warmer temperatures and moisture.
**It’s Friday and time to see what
next week’s night sky has in store for us courtesy of sky guru Curt Nason:
This
Week’s Sky at a Glance, 2024 January 13 – January 20
There is one river seen from New Brunswick that is completely ice-free all
winter, but we can only see it on clear nights. Eridanus the River, the fifth
largest constellation in area of the sky, has its head just off the foot of
Orion near Rigel. Even when it is at its highest in our sky, the river’s
meandering path takes it more than ten degrees below the horizon to where it
terminates at Achernar, the ninth brightest star.
In mythology the river was associated with Phaethon, a mortal son of Apollo.
Apollo drove the Sun, a golden chariot powered by mighty steeds, across the sky
by day. Phaethon was allowed to drive it one day but he couldn’t control the
steeds. They ran amok, scorching the sky (the Milky Way) and the Earth
(Sahara), until Zeus blasted Phaethon with a thunderbolt and he fell to his
death in the river. The twisty constellation Eridanus was also considered to be
the path of souls.
Although we can’t see Achernar without travelling to Florida, there is a
notable star in Eridanus that we can see from outside a city. Omicron-2
Eridani, also called 40 Eridani or Keid (circled on the map), has a famous
fictional and fascinating planet: Vulcan, the home of Spock. Did you know that
there was once believed to be a planet closer to the Sun than Mercury? It was
named Vulcan after the Roman god of fire, metalworking and the forge. Anomalies
in Mercury’s orbit were thought to be due to an interior planet, and some
astronomers even claimed to have seen it crossing the Sun. The anomalies of
Mercury’s orbit were finally explained by Albert Einstein in his General Theory
of Relativity. Coincidentally, regarding the god Vulcan, the constellation
Fornax the Furnace barely crests our horizon near Eridanus.
This Week in the Solar System
Saturday’s sunrise in Moncton is at 7:58 and sunset will occur at 4:57, giving
8 hours, 59 minutes of daylight (8:01 and 5:04 in Saint John). Next Saturday
the Sun will rise at 7:54 and set at 5:06, giving 9 hours, 12 minutes of
daylight (7:56 and 5:13 in Saint John).
The Moon is near Saturn on Sunday, at first quarter Wednesday, and on late
afternoon Thursday it is a thumb-width upper left of Jupiter. This
provides an opportunity to spot Jupiter naked-eye before sunset. After
sunset Monday telescope users might see Jupiter’s moon Europa pop out from
behind the planet at 5:37, disappear into shadow 20 minutes later and reappear
at 8:19, while Io reappears from Jupiter’s shadow at 6:37. Saturn sets
around 8:20 pm midweek so observe it early. Mercury remains a fist-width
lower left of Venus all week, rising around 6:30 am this weekend and followed
by Mars 45 minutes later.
On Sunday evening at 8 pm, tune in to the Sunday Night Astronomy Show via the
Facebook page or YouTube channel of Astronomy by the Bay. Famous Canadian
astrophotographer Alan Dyer will be the guest, talking about how to image the
total solar eclipse in April.
Questions? Contact Curt Nason at nasonc@nbnet.nb.ca.
Nelson Poirier
Nature Moncton
