NATURE MONCTON NATURE NEWS
October 4, 2024
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Aldo
Dorio sends a photo of Dunlin and Greater Yellowlegs enjoying the
wetlands at that site.
**On
Thursday morning at sunrise Brian Stone noticed that a light fog had set in and
the conditions appeared to be right for a fogbow to appear. He went
outside into his driveway and was rewarded with the beautiful sight of a fairly
strong fogbow in the sky opposite the sunrise. The fogbow faded in and out of
visibility as the density of the fog fluctuated, but after several photo sessions
with it, he got the results he was hoping for and sends his best images.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fog_bow
The Pleiades star cluster, which is located in the shoulder of Taurus the Bull,
is rising around 8:30 pm now as a harbinger of winter. In a month it will be
rising at sunset. Due to its shape, this eye-catching cluster has been mistaken
for the Little Dipper. Most of us can count six stars in the Pleiades under
good conditions but keen-eyed wonders have picked out twice that number from a
dark sky. A low power view of it in binoculars will show a couple of dozen
stars and it is one of the prettiest sights you will see in the night sky. I
always look for the hockey stick in the binocular view.
According to Wikipedia, the name Pleiades likely comes from the ancient Greek
word “plein,” which means “to sail.” Sailing season in the Mediterranean Sea
typically began when the cluster was first spotted before sunrise. In mythology
it became the seven daughters of Atlas and Pleione, hence its common name of
the Seven Sisters. Somewhere along the way one of them got lost. Astronomers
also know it as M45 from the Messier catalogue. The cluster played a
significant role in marking time for several ancient cultures, including the
Maori, Mayan, Aztec and some First Nations.
Perhaps you have seen the Pleiades while stuck in traffic and just haven’t
realized it. The six-star logo of Subaru automobiles depicts the Pleiades, as
Subaru is the Japanese name for the cluster. The name, which means “united,”
was chosen because the large company was formed from a merger of five.
This Week in the Solar System
Saturday’s sunrise in Moncton is at 7:23 and sunset will occur at 6:50, giving
11 hours, 27 minutes of daylight (7:28 and 6:56 in Saint John). Next Saturday
the Sun will rise at 7:32 and set at 6:37, giving 11 hours, 5 minutes of
daylight (7:37 and 6:43 in Saint John).
The Moon is just below the red supergiant star Antares on Monday evening and
it is at first quarter on Thursday. Use a telescope to look for the
illuminated Lunar X just within the shadow line around 9 pm on Wednesday. Venus
shines brightly low in the southwest in the early evening, and Saturn is at its
highest and best for observing at 11 pm. Jupiter’s moon Ganymede emerges
from the planet’s shadow at 11:34 pm on Tuesday, five minutes before Io
disappears into the shadow, and the Red Spot will also be in view. Jupiter
reaches its first stationary point Wednesday, after which it begins westward
motion against the stars. Mercury is out of sight man. Rural observers can look
for the subtle wedge of the zodiacal light in the east 90 to 60 minutes before
sunrise. By next weekend comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-ATLAS will be appearing
low in the southwest after sunset.
The Saint John Astronomy Club meets in the Rockwood Park Interpretation Centre
this Saturday at 7 pm. Tune in to the Sunday Night Astronomy Show at 8 pm on
the YouTube channel and Facebook page of Astronomy by the Bay. The Fredericton
Astronomy Club meets at the UNB Forestry-Earth Sciences building on Tuesday at
7 pm.
Questions? Contact Curt Nason at nasonc@nbnet.nb.ca.
Nelson Poirier
Nature Moncton