NATURE MONCTON NATURE NEWS
January 3, 2025
Nature
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**On Thursday, Gordon Rattray had a visit from an adult Sharp-shinned
Hawk that perched long enough for Gordon to get some excellent back view
photographs to show some pertinent field
marks.
This slate grey mantle
colour and what can be seen of the horizontal chest barring indicate it is an
adult bird.
The pencil-thin legs,
chest barring right down to the undertail coverts, dark nape, very narrow white
terminal tail band, no evidence of any raised crest feathers on the head, and
sharper slope of the forehead to the bill are some of the clues that build a
case for a Sharp-shinned Hawk over the similar Cooper’s Hawk.
**This Week’s Sky at a Glance, 2025 January
4 – January 11
Looking at a constellation it is easy to imagine its component stars being
fairly close together in space, as if it is an actual body. Let us look at two
prominent winter constellations to see if that is true. Surely the three stars
of Orion’s Belt are equidistant; at first glance they appear to be almost
equally bright. Alnitak, the left star, is 1260 light years (ly) away, slightly
farther than dimmer Mintaka on the right. Alnilam, the middle star, is much
farther at 2000 ly. Saiph and bright Rigel, marking Orion’s feet or knees, are
650 ly and 860 ly distant, respectively. In the giant hunter’s shoulders orange
Betelgeuse is about 550 ly away and Bellatrix is 250 ly.
Following the belt to the lower left we arrive at Canis Major, the Big Dog,
with brilliant Sirius at its heart. Sirius is the brightest star of the
night sky and the closest naked-eye star we can see in New Brunswick at 8.6
ly (only 82 trillion kilometres), which is the main reason it is the brightest.
If Rigel were that close it would be about as bright as the quarter Moon.
Adhara, in the dog’s rear leg, is the 23rd brightest star and 400 ly away,
Wezen in the dog’s butt is 1600 ly, and the tail star Aludra is 1100 ly
distant. Obviously, the constellations are just chance alignments of stars from
our viewpoint. The distances cited here are taken from Wikipedia, but other
sources could vary significantly as stellar distances are difficult to
determine precisely.
This Week in the Solar System
Saturday’s sunrise in Moncton is at 8:01 and sunset will occur at 4:47, giving
8 hours, 46 minutes of daylight (8:03 and 4:55 in Saint John). Next Saturday
the Sun will rise at 7:59 and set at 4:55, giving 8 hours, 56 minutes of
daylight (8:01 and 5:03 in Saint John). The Earth is at perihelion, its minimum
distance from the Sun, this Saturday morning.
This Saturday the Moon cruises just below Saturn between noon and 1 pm, a
challenge for telescope users. The Moon is at first quarter on Monday
and it passes through the Pleiades star cluster on Thursday, an event worth
watching with binoculars or a telescope throughout the entire evening. The
following evening it is within a binocular view above Jupiter. Venus dominates
the early evening sky in the southwest, setting around 9 pm and heading toward
a meet-up with Saturn. On Wednesday evening telescope users might see
Jupiter’s Red Spot for two hours centred on 6:30, its moon Europa emerge from
eclipse at 7:44, and Io disappear behind the planet a few hours later. Mars is
brightening as it retrogrades through Cancer, heading toward opposition in
mid-January. Mercury rises more than an hour before sunrise and remains bright
enough to be an easy binocular target in the southeast.
The Saint John Astronomy Club meets in the Rockwood Park Interpretation Centre
at 7 pm this Saturday. Tune in to the Sunday Night Astronomy Show at 8 pm on
the YouTube channel and Facebook page of Astronomy by the Bay.
Questions? Contact Curt Nason at nasonc@nbnet.nb.ca.
**Ten minutes more of daylight next
Saturday than there will be tomorrow. Curt just said so!
Nelson
Poirier
Nature Moncton