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[Preston Dyches] What's Up for August?
See Saturn at dusk and dawn,
the Perseid meteors return
and a “super blue moon.”
In August, we've lost Venus and Mars from the evening sky,
but we'll have great views of Saturn all night.
Saturn reaches opposition this month, meaning
it's directly opposite the sun, as seen from Earth.
Planets in opposition rise just after sunset
and are visible until dawn,
and it's when they appear at their biggest
and brightest for the year.
Look for the giant planet low in the eastern sky around 9 p.m.
by mid-month,
appearing a bit higher each evening as August continues.
On the morning of August 3rd, Saturn appears just a couple
of finger widths apart from the nearly full Moon.
Find them in the west before sunrise.
The Moon then makes a nice pairing
with the Pleiades star cluster
on the morning of the ninth with Jupiter hanging nearby.
The Moon then has a super-close meet up with the reddish star
Antares, brightest star in the constellation Scorpius,
on the evening of August 24th.
August brings one
of the best known annual meteor showers, the Perseids.
And this year, the stage is set for a good show as the peak
night, August 12th and into the 13th, is near the new moon.
The meteors are bits of dust, most no larger
than sand grains, that originate from comet Swift-Tuttle.
Earth sweeps through the comet's debris trail every year
about this same time, resulting in the annual shower.
The radiant,
the point in the sky where the meteors appear
to originate, is toward the northeast,
appearing in between the upside down “W” of constellation
Cassiopeia and bright star Capella.
Observing the Perseids is easy.
Just find yourself a safe, dark spot to lie down
with your feet pointing roughly
toward the northeast and look straight up.
The best time to view them is between midnight and dawn.
As the radiant rises higher in the sky.
Meteor activity
likely will be at its greatest in the hour preceding dawn.
Now, the crescent moon also rises
in the couple of hours before dawn,
but it's only about 7% illuminated,
so it shouldn't pose
a significant problem for viewing the meteors.
You might also see a few meteors in the early morning hours
during the week before and after the peak.
August begins and ends with a full moon
making for a special occurrence
that only happens every couple of years.
You see, a second full moon in a single calendar month
is commonly called a “blue moon.”
They happen every 2 to 3 years because the Moon's monthly cycle
is just a bit shorter than the average length of a month.
So eventually a full moon will happen at the beginning
of a month, with enough days left for a complete lunar cycle.
When that happens, we get a blue moon.
But there's more!
The August 30th blue moon is also a supermoon.
The Moon's orbit isn't a perfect circle,
so sometimes it's
a little farther away from Earth and sometimes closer.
At its closest point called perigee,
it's 14% closer than at its farthest.
About 3 to 4 times a year, the full moon phase
happens to coincide with the Moon reaching perigee,
and we call that event a supermoon.
While it technically appears a bit bigger and a tad brighter
than the average full moon,
the difference is not super noticeable to the eye.
The combination of these two special full moons
making for a “super blue moon,” occurs about every ten years
on average, though, the time between any two occurrences
can vary from two months to two decades or more.
So enjoy this month's two full moons.
And while the second one won't appear super-sized
or any bluer than usual, now you know what makes it special.
Here are the phases of the Moon for August.
Stay up to date with all of NASA's missions
to explore the solar system and beyond at NASA.gov.
I'm Preston Dyches from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
And that's What's Up for this month.