Post by Dave Mitsky on Dec 2, 2019 9:58:24 GMT
December Celestial Calendar by Dave Mitsky
All times, unless otherwise noted, are UT (subtract five hours and, when appropriate, one calendar day for EST)
12/2 Asteroid 2 Pallas is in conjunction with the Sun at 2:00
12/4 The earliest end of evening twilight at 40 degrees north takes place today; the Lunar X (Purbach or Werner Cross), an X-shaped illumination effect involving various rims and ridges between the craters La Caille, Blanchinus, and Purbach, is predicted to occur at 06:44; First Quarter Moon occurs at 6:58
12/5 The Moon is at apogee, subtending 29' 33" from a distance of 404,446 kilometers (251,311 miles), at 4:08
12/7 The earliest sunset at latitude 40 degrees north occurs today
12/8 The Moon is 5 degrees north of Uranus at 11:00
12/10 The Moon is 7.3 degrees south of the bright open cluster M45 (the Pleiades or Subaru) in Taurus at 19:00
12/11 Venus is 1.8 degrees south of Saturn at 4:00; the Moon is 2.9 degrees north of the first-magnitude star Aldebaran (Alpha Taurii) at 11:00
12/12 Full Moon (known as the Before Yule, Cold, Long Nights, and Oak Moon) occurs at 5:12; Venus, Saturn, and Pluto lie within a circle with a diameter of 2.7 degrees at 19:00
12/13 The Moon is 1.5 degrees south of the bright open cluster M35 in Gemini at 4:00; the Moon is at the ascending node (longitude 98.4 degrees) at 14:00; Venus (magnitude -3.9) is 1.1 degrees south of Pluto (magnitude +14.3) at 16:00
12/14 The Moon is 5.3 degrees south of the first-magnitude star Pollux (Beta Geminorum) at 18:00; the peak of the Geminid meteor shower (100 to 120 per hour) occurs at 19:00
12/15 The Moon is 1.0 degree north of the bright open cluster M44 (the Beehive Cluster or Praesepe) in Cancer at 16:00
12/16 Mercury is 5.0 degrees north-northeast of the first-magnitude star Antares (Alpha Scorpii) at 7:00
12/17 The Moon is 3.7 degrees north of the first-magnitude star Regulus (Alpha Leonis) at 7:00
12/18 The Moon is at perigee, subtending 33' 16" from a distance of 370,265 kilometers (230,072 miles), at 20:25; the Sun enters the constellation of Sagittarius (ecliptic longitude 266.6 degrees) at 20:00
12/19 Mercury is at the descending node today; Last Quarter Moon occurs at 4:57; Venus is at its southernmost latitude from the plane of the ecliptic (-3.4 degrees) at 23:00
12/20 The Curtiss Cross, an X-shaped clair-obscure illumination effect located between the craters Parry and Gambart, is predicted to be visible at 9:23
12/21 The Moon is 7.2 degrees north-northeast of the first-magnitude star Spica (Alpha Virginis) at 4:00
12/22 The Sun’s longitude is 270 degrees and winter solstice in the northern hemisphere occurs at 4:19
12/23 The Moon is 4.0 degrees south of Mars at 2:00; the peak of the Ursid meteor shower (5 to 10 per hour) occurs at 3:00
12/24 The Moon is 7.1 degrees north-northeast of Antares at 11:00
12/25 The Moon is 1.9 degrees north-northeast of Mercury at 12:00; the equation of time equals 0 (i.e., mean solar time equals apparent solar time) at 16:00
12/26 An annular solar eclipse visible from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, southern India, Sri Lanka, Sumatra, Singapore, Borneo, part of the Philippines, and Guam begins at 3:43 and ends at 7:01; New Moon (lunation 1200) occurs at 5:13; the Moon is 0.3 degree northeast of Jupiter at 8:00; the Moon is at the descending node (longitude 278.4 degrees) at 13:00; the Moon is at its southernmost declination (-23.2 degrees) for the year at 20:00
12/27 The Moon is 1.2 degrees south of Saturn at 12:00; the Moon is 0.6 degree south of Pluto, with an occultation taking place in southern Madagascar, southernmost Africa, Kerguelen Island, portions of Antarctica, South Georgia, and southern South America, at 15:00; Jupiter is in conjunction with the Sun at 19:00
12/29 The Moon is 1.0 degree south of Venus, with an occultation taking place in southernmost South America and Antarctica, at 2:00
12/30 Mercury is at aphelion today; the middle of the eclipse season (i.e., the Sun is at the same longitude as the Moon’s descending node, 278.3degrees) occurs at 8:00
Tycho Brahe, Johannes Kepler, Isaac Newton, E. E. Barnard, and Arthur Eddington were born in December.
Giovanni Cassini discovered the Saturnian satellite Rhea on December 23, 1672. Nicolas Louis de Lacaille discovered NGC 2070 (the Tarantula Nebula) on December 5, 1751. The bright spiral galaxies M81 and M82 in Ursa Major were discovered by Johann Bode on December 31, 1774. William Herschel discovered the galaxy pair NGC 3166 and NGC 3169 in Sextans on December 19, 1783. Caroline Herschel discovered Comet 35P/Herschel-Rigoliet on December 21, 1788. Caroline Herschel discovered Comet C/1791 X1 (Herschel) on December 15, 1791. The Jovian satellite Himalia was discovered by Charles Perrine on December 3, 1905. Audouin Dolfus discovered the Saturnian satellite Janus on December 15, 1966. The Saturnian satellite Epimetheus was discovered by Richard Walker on December 18, 1966.
The peak of Geminid meteor shower occurs on the morning of December 14th but is adversely affected by moonlight from a bright waning gibbous Moon. The Geminids, which are associated with the Palladian asteroid, or possible cometary nucleus, 3200 Phaethon, have become the most reliable meteor shower of the year. Geminid meteors appear to originate from a radiant that’s just northwest of Castor (Alpha Geminorum). That radiant lies almost at the zenith at 2:00 a.m. local time. Geminid meteors travel at a relatively slow speed of 35 kilometers per second (22 miles per second). An article on this year’s Geminids can be found on pages 48 and 49 of the December 2019 issue of Sky & Telescope. The Ursids, a normally minor meteor shower with a maximum zenithal hourly rate of 10 per hour, peak on the morning of December 23rd and are not affected by a thin crescent Moon. A surge of up to 30 meteors per hour may occur this year. The radiant is located close to Kochab (Beta Ursa Minoris), some 15 degrees from the n celestial pole. See earthsky.org/space/everything-you-need-to-know-geminid-meteor-shower and www.imo.net/resources/calendar/ for additional information on the Geminids and earthsky.org/?p=2976 and www.imo.net/resources/calendar/ for more on the Ursids.
Information on Iridium satellite flares and passes of the ISS, the X-37B, the HST, and other satellites can be found at www.heavens-above.com/
The Moon is 4.2 days old, is illuminated 19.1%, subtends 30.4 arc minutes, and is located in Virgo on December 1st at 0:00 UT. Due to the position of the ecliptic, the Moon reaches its highest point in the sky for the year in December. It attains its greatest northern declination (+23.2 degrees) for the month on December 14th and greatest southern declination (-23.2 degrees) on December 27th. Longitudinal libration is at a maximum of +5.0 degrees on December 26th. It’s at a minimum of -4.7 degrees on December 12th. Latitudinal libration is at a maximum of +6.8 degrees on December 7th and a minimum of -6.8 degrees on December 20th. New Moon occurs on December 26th. The Moon is at apogee (a distance of 63.41 Earth-radii) on December 5th and at perigee (a distance of 58.05 Earth-radii) on December 18th. The Moon occults Pluto on December 27th and Venus on December 29th from certain parts of the world. Consult www.lunar-occultations.com/iota/iotandx.htm for more on these events. Visit saberdoesthestars.wordpress.com/2011/07/05/saber-does-the-stars/ for tips on spotting extreme crescent Moons and www.curtrenz.com/moon.html for Full Moon data. Browse www.cambridge.org/features/turnleft/the_moon.htm and www.shallowsky.com/moon/ for information on various lunar features. Click on www.calendar-12.com/moon_calendar/2019/december for a lunar phase calendar for this month. Times and dates for the lunar crater light rays predicted to occur this month are available at www.lunar-occultations.com/rlo/rays/rays.htm
The Sun is located in Ophiuchus, a non-traditional constellation of the zodiac, on December 1st. Sol enters Sagittarius on December 18th. Winter solstice for the northern hemisphere occurs when the Sun is farthest south for the year on December 21st. It is the shortest "day" of the year (9 hours and 20 minutes) at latitude 40 degrees north. An annular solar eclipse visible from western Australia, Asia, the Middle East, eastern Europe, extreme eastern Africa, the Indian Ocean, and the Pacific Ocean occurs on December 26th. It’s the 46th eclipse of 71 in Saros 132. Greatest eclipse takes place in eastern Sumatra (Indonesia) at 05:17:48 UT1 and has an annular duration of 3 minutes 39 seconds. For more on this event, consult www.eclipsewise.com/oh/ec2019.html#SE2019Dec26A or page 49 of the December 2019 issue of Sky & Telescope.
Brightness, apparent size, illumination, distance from the Earth in astronomical units (a.u.), and location data for the planets and Pluto on December 1st: Mercury (magnitude -0.6, 6.3", 69% illuminated, 1.07 a.u., Libra), Venus (magnitude -3.9, 11.6", 89% illuminated, 1.44 a.u., Sagittarius), Mars (magnitude +1.7, 3.9", 98% illuminated, 2.39 a.u., Virgo), Jupiter (magnitude -1.8, 32.1", 100% illuminated, 6.15 a.u., Sagittarius), Saturn (magnitude +0.6, 15.4", 100% illuminated, 10.78 a.u., Sagittarius), Uranus (magnitude +5.7, 3.7", 100% illuminated, 19.18 a.u. on December 16th, Aries), Neptune (magnitude +7.9, 2.3", 100% illuminated, 30.05 a.u. on December 16th, Aquarius), and Pluto (magnitude +14.3, 0.1", 100% illuminated, 34.80 a.u. on December 16th, Sagittarius).
During the evening, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn can be found in the southwest, Uranus in the southeast, and Neptune in the south. Uranus is in the west at midnight. In the morning, Mercury and Mars are located in the southeast.
Venus, Saturn, and Pluto are all located in Sagittarius within a circle with a diameter of 2.7 degrees on December 12th.
A bright gibbous Mercury is visible in the southeastern morning sky in early December. By December 16th, the speediest planet will be too close to the Sun to be seen. It is at the descending node on December 19th. The Moon passes less than two degrees north-northeast of Mercury on December 25th. The closest planet to the Sun is at aphelion on December 30th. Mercury shrinks in apparent size from 6.3 to 4.9 arc seconds but increases in illumination from 69 to 99% during December.
Venus climbs higher into the morning sky and Saturn sinks lower as the month unfolds. The bright globular cluster M22 lies less than one degree to the north of Venus on December 2nd. M75, another globular cluster, lies with one degree of Venus on the night of December 18th and December 19th. Venus and Saturn are five degrees apart on December 6th. The second-magnitude star Nunki (Sigma Sagittarii) is less than two degrees from Venus on that date. Venus passes less than two degrees from Saturn on December 11th. That distance increases to more than ten degrees by December 20th. Venus is at its heliocentric latitude south on December 20th. The Moon passes one degree south of the brightest planet on December 28th. Venus increases in apparent size to 13.0 arc seconds but decreases in illumination to 82% by December 31st.
A tiny Mars exits Virgo and enters Libra early in the month. It climbs higher in the morning sky and reaches an elongation of 40 degrees by the end of December. The Red Planet rises by more than three hours before the Sun as the year ends. Mars is four degrees south of the waning crescent Moon on the night of December 23rd.
Jupiter is lost in the glare of sunset by midmonth. The largest planet is in conjunction with the Sun on December 27th.
Saturn lies very low in the southwest during December. Saturn’s disk spans 15 arc seconds and its rings 35 arc seconds on December 1st. Its rings are tilted by 24 degrees. A slender crescent Moon passes 1.2 degrees south of the Ringed Planet on December 27th.
Uranus lies in southern Aries near the border with Pisces, a region lacking in any bright stars. Uranus is five degrees north of the Moon on December 8th. The gas giant planet attains an altitude of about 60 degrees in the south around 9:30 p.m. local time early in the month and doesn’t set until a few hours after midnight. Visit www.bluewaterastronomy.info/resources/Maps/Charts-2019/09uranus_2019_1.pdf and www.nakedeyeplanets.com/uranus.htm for finder charts.
Neptune is located 1.5 degree west-southwest of the fourth-magnitude star Phi Aquarii on the first day of the month. As December ends, Neptune lies 1.1 degrees from the star. The waxing gibbous Moon passes four degrees south of Neptune on 10th. Neptune sets before midnight this month. Browse www.bluewaterastronomy.info/resources/Maps/Charts-2019/10neptune_2019_1.pdf and www.nakedeyeplanets.com/neptune.htm for finder charts.
Articles on Uranus and Neptune with finder charts appear on pages 48 and 49 of the September 2019 issue of Sky & Telescope and on pages 52 to 55 of the October issue of Astronomy. Finder charts for Uranus and Neptune are also available online at s22380.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/WEB_UrNep_2019-2020_updated.pdf
Click on www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/interactive-sky-watching-tools/ for JavaScript utilities that will illustrate the positions of the five brightest satellites of Uranus and the position of Triton, Neptune’s brightest satellite.
Pluto will not be readily visible again until next year.
For more on the planets and how to locate them, see www.nakedeyeplanets.com/
Comet C/2017 T2 (PanSTARRS) may brighten to ninth magnitude as it heads northwestward along the border of Perseus and Camelopardalis. The comet passes just north of the open cluster NGC 1528 in Perseus on December 15th and through the faint emission nebula Sharpless 2-205. Visit cometchasing.skyhound.com/ and www.aerith.net/comet/future-n.html for information on comets that are visible this month. A list of the closest approaches of comets to Earth is posted at www.cometography.com/nearcomet.html
Asteroid 15 Eunomia shines at tenth magnitude as it travels northeastward through Aquarius this month. It passes 0.8 degree south of the third-magnitude star Alpha Aquarii on December 17th. During the final week of December, Eunomia glides through the Water Jar asterism, which consists of Gamma, Pi, Zeta, and Eta Aquarii. Asteroid 55 Pandora (magnitude +11.1) occults the 6.5-magnitude star 18 Aurigae for up to 7 seconds from Africa, southern United States, and Mexico on the evening of December 6th. Click on www.asteroidoccultation.com/2019_12/1207_55_62270.htm for additional information. Asteroids brighter than magnitude +11.0 reaching opposition this month include 97 Klotho (magnitude +10.1) on December 2nd, 28 Bellona (magnitude +10.5) on December 10th, 132 Aethra (magnitude +10.5) on December 14th, and 69 Hesperia (magnitude +10.5) on December 30th. For information on this year’s bright asteroids and upcoming asteroid occultation events, consult www.curtrenz.com/asteroids.html and asteroidoccultation.com/ respectively.
A wealth of current information on solar system celestial bodies is posted at nineplanets.org/ and www.curtrenz.com/astronomy.html
Various events taking place within our solar system are discussed at cosmicpursuits.com/night-sky-this-month/ and www.bluewaterastronomy.info/styled-4/index.html
Information on the celestial events transpiring each week can be found at astronomy.com/skythisweek and www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/sky-at-a-glance/
The famous eclipsing variable star Algol (Beta Persei) is at a minimum, decreasing in magnitude from +2.1 to +3.4, on December 2nd, 5th, 8th, 10th, 13th, 16th, 19th, 22nd, 25th, 28th, and 30th (UT dates). Algol is at minimum brightness for approximately two hours and is well-placed for observers in N America on the nights of December 4th (centered at 10:18 p.m. EST) and December 25th (centered at 12:02 a.m. EST). Consult page 50 of the December 2019 issue of Sky & Telescope for the times of the eclipses. For more on Algol, see stars.astro.illinois.edu/sow/Algol.html and www.solstation.com/stars2/algol3.htm
Free star charts for the month can be downloaded at www.skymaps.com/downloads.html and www.telescope.com/content.jsp?pageName=Monthly-Star-Chart and whatsouttonight.com/
Data on current supernovae can be found at www.rochesterastronomy.org/snimages/
Finder charts for the Messier objects and other deep-sky objects are posted at freestarcharts.com/messier and freestarcharts.com/ngc-ic and www.cambridge.org/features/turnleft/seasonal_skies_july-september.htm
Telrad finder charts for the Messier Catalog and the SAC’s 110 Best of the NGC are posted at www.astro-tom.com/messier/messier_finder_charts/map1.pdf and sao64.free.fr/observations/catalogues/cataloguesac.pdf respectively.
Information pertaining to observing some of the more prominent Messier galaxies can be found at www.cloudynights.com/topic/358295-how-to-locate-some-of-the-major-messier-galaxies-and-helpful-advice-for-novice-amateur-astronomers/
Author Phil Harrington offers an excellent freeware planetarium program for binocular observers known as TUBA (Touring the Universe through Binoculars Atlas), which also includes information on purchasing binoculars, at www.philharrington.net/tuba.htm
Stellarium and Cartes du Ciel are useful freeware planetarium programs that are available at stellarium.org/ and www.ap-i.net/skychart/en/start
Deep-sky object list generators can be found at www.virtualcolony.com/sac/ and tonightssky.com/MainPage.php and dso-browser.com/
Freeware sky atlases can be downloaded at www.deepskywatch.com/files/deepsky-atlas/Deep-Sky-Hunter-atlas-full.pdf and astro.mxd120.com/free-star-atlases
One hundred and five binary and multiple stars for December: Gamma Andromedae, 59 Andromedae, Struve 245 (Andromeda); Struve 362, Struve 374, Struve 384, Struve 390, Struve 396, Struve 400, Struve 19, Otto Struve 67 (Camelopardalis); Struve 191, Struve Iota Cassiopeiae, Struve 263, Otto Struve 50, Struve 283, Struve 284 (Cassiopeia); 61 Ceti, Struve 218, Omicron Ceti, Struve 274, Nu Ceti, h3511, 84 Ceti, h3524, Lambda Ceti, Struve 330 (Cetus); h3527, h3533, Theta Eridani, Rho Eridani, Struve 341, h3548, h3565, Tau-4 Eridani, Struve 408, Struve 411, h3589, h3601, 30 Eridani, 32 Eridani (Eridanus); h3478, h3504, Omega Fornacis, Eta-2 Fornacis, Alpha Fornacis, See 25, Xi-3 Fornacis, h3596 (Fornax); Struve 268, Struve 270, h1123, Otto Struve 44, h2155, Nu Persei, Struve 297, Struve 301, Struve 304, Eta Persei, Struve 314, Otto Struve 48, Tau Persei, Struve 331, Struve 336, Es588, Struve 352, Struve 360, Struve 369, Struve 382, Struve 388, Struve 392, Struve 410, Struve 413, Struve 425, Otto Struve 59, Struve 426, 40 Persei, Struve 434, Struve 448, Es277, Zeta Persei, Struve 469, Epsilon Persei, Es878 (Perseus); Struve 399, Struve 406, Struve 401, Struve 422, Struve 430, Struve 427, Struve 435, 30 Tauri (Taurus); Epsilon Trianguli, Struve 219, Iota Trianguli, Struve 232, Struve 239, Struve 246, 10 Trianguli, Struve 269, h653, 15 Trianguli, Struve 285, Struve 286, Struve 310 (Triangulum)
Notable carbon star for December: U Camelopardalis
One hundred deep-sky objects for December: NGC 891 (Andromeda); IC 342, K6, St23, Tom 5 (Camelopardalis); Be65, IC 1848, K4, Mel15, NGC 896, NGC 1027, St2, Tr3 (Cassiopeia); M77, NGC 788, NGC 835, NGC 864, NGC 908, NGC 936, NGC 955, NGC 958, NGC 1015, NGC 1016, NGC 1022, NGC 1042, NGC 1052, NGC 1055, NGC 1087, NGC 1094 (Cetus); IC 2006, NGC 1084, NGC 1140, NGC 1187, NGC 1199, NGC 1209, NGC 1232, NGC 1291, NGC 1300, NGC 1309, NGC 1332, NGC 1337, NGC 1353, NGC 1357, NGC 1395, NGC 1400, NGC 1407, NGC 1421, NGC 1426, NGC 1440, NGC 1452, NGC 1453, NGC 1461 (Eridanus); NGC 1079, NGC 1097, NGC 1201, NGC 1292, NGC 1316 (Fornax I Galaxy Cluster), NGC 1317, NGC 1326, NGC 1344, NGC 1350, NGC 1360, NGC 1365, NGC 1371, NGC 1374, NGC 1379, NGC 1380, NGC 1381, NGC 1387, NGC 1398, NGC 1404, NGC 1406, NGC 1425 (Fornax); Bas10, Cz8, IC 351, IC 2003, K5, Mel 20, M34, NGC 869, NGC 884, NGC 957, NGC 1023, NGC 1058, NGC 1161, NGC 1245, NGC 1275 (Perseus I Galaxy Cluster), NGC 1333, NGC 1342, NGC 1444, Tr2 (Perseus); M45 (Taurus); NGC 777, NGC 784, NGC 890, NGC 925, NGC 949, NGC 959, NGC 978A/B (Triangulum)
Top ten binocular deep-sky objects for December: M34, M45, Mel15, Mel20, NGC 869, NGC 884, NGC 1027, NGC 1232, St2, St23
Top ten deep-sky objects for December: M34, M45, M77, NGC 869, NGC 884, NGC 891, NGC 1023, NGC 1232, NGC 1332, NGC 1360
Challenge deep-sky object for December: vdB14 (Camelopardalis)
The objects listed above are located between 2:00 and 4:00 hours of right ascension.
All times, unless otherwise noted, are UT (subtract five hours and, when appropriate, one calendar day for EST)
12/2 Asteroid 2 Pallas is in conjunction with the Sun at 2:00
12/4 The earliest end of evening twilight at 40 degrees north takes place today; the Lunar X (Purbach or Werner Cross), an X-shaped illumination effect involving various rims and ridges between the craters La Caille, Blanchinus, and Purbach, is predicted to occur at 06:44; First Quarter Moon occurs at 6:58
12/5 The Moon is at apogee, subtending 29' 33" from a distance of 404,446 kilometers (251,311 miles), at 4:08
12/7 The earliest sunset at latitude 40 degrees north occurs today
12/8 The Moon is 5 degrees north of Uranus at 11:00
12/10 The Moon is 7.3 degrees south of the bright open cluster M45 (the Pleiades or Subaru) in Taurus at 19:00
12/11 Venus is 1.8 degrees south of Saturn at 4:00; the Moon is 2.9 degrees north of the first-magnitude star Aldebaran (Alpha Taurii) at 11:00
12/12 Full Moon (known as the Before Yule, Cold, Long Nights, and Oak Moon) occurs at 5:12; Venus, Saturn, and Pluto lie within a circle with a diameter of 2.7 degrees at 19:00
12/13 The Moon is 1.5 degrees south of the bright open cluster M35 in Gemini at 4:00; the Moon is at the ascending node (longitude 98.4 degrees) at 14:00; Venus (magnitude -3.9) is 1.1 degrees south of Pluto (magnitude +14.3) at 16:00
12/14 The Moon is 5.3 degrees south of the first-magnitude star Pollux (Beta Geminorum) at 18:00; the peak of the Geminid meteor shower (100 to 120 per hour) occurs at 19:00
12/15 The Moon is 1.0 degree north of the bright open cluster M44 (the Beehive Cluster or Praesepe) in Cancer at 16:00
12/16 Mercury is 5.0 degrees north-northeast of the first-magnitude star Antares (Alpha Scorpii) at 7:00
12/17 The Moon is 3.7 degrees north of the first-magnitude star Regulus (Alpha Leonis) at 7:00
12/18 The Moon is at perigee, subtending 33' 16" from a distance of 370,265 kilometers (230,072 miles), at 20:25; the Sun enters the constellation of Sagittarius (ecliptic longitude 266.6 degrees) at 20:00
12/19 Mercury is at the descending node today; Last Quarter Moon occurs at 4:57; Venus is at its southernmost latitude from the plane of the ecliptic (-3.4 degrees) at 23:00
12/20 The Curtiss Cross, an X-shaped clair-obscure illumination effect located between the craters Parry and Gambart, is predicted to be visible at 9:23
12/21 The Moon is 7.2 degrees north-northeast of the first-magnitude star Spica (Alpha Virginis) at 4:00
12/22 The Sun’s longitude is 270 degrees and winter solstice in the northern hemisphere occurs at 4:19
12/23 The Moon is 4.0 degrees south of Mars at 2:00; the peak of the Ursid meteor shower (5 to 10 per hour) occurs at 3:00
12/24 The Moon is 7.1 degrees north-northeast of Antares at 11:00
12/25 The Moon is 1.9 degrees north-northeast of Mercury at 12:00; the equation of time equals 0 (i.e., mean solar time equals apparent solar time) at 16:00
12/26 An annular solar eclipse visible from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, southern India, Sri Lanka, Sumatra, Singapore, Borneo, part of the Philippines, and Guam begins at 3:43 and ends at 7:01; New Moon (lunation 1200) occurs at 5:13; the Moon is 0.3 degree northeast of Jupiter at 8:00; the Moon is at the descending node (longitude 278.4 degrees) at 13:00; the Moon is at its southernmost declination (-23.2 degrees) for the year at 20:00
12/27 The Moon is 1.2 degrees south of Saturn at 12:00; the Moon is 0.6 degree south of Pluto, with an occultation taking place in southern Madagascar, southernmost Africa, Kerguelen Island, portions of Antarctica, South Georgia, and southern South America, at 15:00; Jupiter is in conjunction with the Sun at 19:00
12/29 The Moon is 1.0 degree south of Venus, with an occultation taking place in southernmost South America and Antarctica, at 2:00
12/30 Mercury is at aphelion today; the middle of the eclipse season (i.e., the Sun is at the same longitude as the Moon’s descending node, 278.3degrees) occurs at 8:00
Tycho Brahe, Johannes Kepler, Isaac Newton, E. E. Barnard, and Arthur Eddington were born in December.
Giovanni Cassini discovered the Saturnian satellite Rhea on December 23, 1672. Nicolas Louis de Lacaille discovered NGC 2070 (the Tarantula Nebula) on December 5, 1751. The bright spiral galaxies M81 and M82 in Ursa Major were discovered by Johann Bode on December 31, 1774. William Herschel discovered the galaxy pair NGC 3166 and NGC 3169 in Sextans on December 19, 1783. Caroline Herschel discovered Comet 35P/Herschel-Rigoliet on December 21, 1788. Caroline Herschel discovered Comet C/1791 X1 (Herschel) on December 15, 1791. The Jovian satellite Himalia was discovered by Charles Perrine on December 3, 1905. Audouin Dolfus discovered the Saturnian satellite Janus on December 15, 1966. The Saturnian satellite Epimetheus was discovered by Richard Walker on December 18, 1966.
The peak of Geminid meteor shower occurs on the morning of December 14th but is adversely affected by moonlight from a bright waning gibbous Moon. The Geminids, which are associated with the Palladian asteroid, or possible cometary nucleus, 3200 Phaethon, have become the most reliable meteor shower of the year. Geminid meteors appear to originate from a radiant that’s just northwest of Castor (Alpha Geminorum). That radiant lies almost at the zenith at 2:00 a.m. local time. Geminid meteors travel at a relatively slow speed of 35 kilometers per second (22 miles per second). An article on this year’s Geminids can be found on pages 48 and 49 of the December 2019 issue of Sky & Telescope. The Ursids, a normally minor meteor shower with a maximum zenithal hourly rate of 10 per hour, peak on the morning of December 23rd and are not affected by a thin crescent Moon. A surge of up to 30 meteors per hour may occur this year. The radiant is located close to Kochab (Beta Ursa Minoris), some 15 degrees from the n celestial pole. See earthsky.org/space/everything-you-need-to-know-geminid-meteor-shower and www.imo.net/resources/calendar/ for additional information on the Geminids and earthsky.org/?p=2976 and www.imo.net/resources/calendar/ for more on the Ursids.
Information on Iridium satellite flares and passes of the ISS, the X-37B, the HST, and other satellites can be found at www.heavens-above.com/
The Moon is 4.2 days old, is illuminated 19.1%, subtends 30.4 arc minutes, and is located in Virgo on December 1st at 0:00 UT. Due to the position of the ecliptic, the Moon reaches its highest point in the sky for the year in December. It attains its greatest northern declination (+23.2 degrees) for the month on December 14th and greatest southern declination (-23.2 degrees) on December 27th. Longitudinal libration is at a maximum of +5.0 degrees on December 26th. It’s at a minimum of -4.7 degrees on December 12th. Latitudinal libration is at a maximum of +6.8 degrees on December 7th and a minimum of -6.8 degrees on December 20th. New Moon occurs on December 26th. The Moon is at apogee (a distance of 63.41 Earth-radii) on December 5th and at perigee (a distance of 58.05 Earth-radii) on December 18th. The Moon occults Pluto on December 27th and Venus on December 29th from certain parts of the world. Consult www.lunar-occultations.com/iota/iotandx.htm for more on these events. Visit saberdoesthestars.wordpress.com/2011/07/05/saber-does-the-stars/ for tips on spotting extreme crescent Moons and www.curtrenz.com/moon.html for Full Moon data. Browse www.cambridge.org/features/turnleft/the_moon.htm and www.shallowsky.com/moon/ for information on various lunar features. Click on www.calendar-12.com/moon_calendar/2019/december for a lunar phase calendar for this month. Times and dates for the lunar crater light rays predicted to occur this month are available at www.lunar-occultations.com/rlo/rays/rays.htm
The Sun is located in Ophiuchus, a non-traditional constellation of the zodiac, on December 1st. Sol enters Sagittarius on December 18th. Winter solstice for the northern hemisphere occurs when the Sun is farthest south for the year on December 21st. It is the shortest "day" of the year (9 hours and 20 minutes) at latitude 40 degrees north. An annular solar eclipse visible from western Australia, Asia, the Middle East, eastern Europe, extreme eastern Africa, the Indian Ocean, and the Pacific Ocean occurs on December 26th. It’s the 46th eclipse of 71 in Saros 132. Greatest eclipse takes place in eastern Sumatra (Indonesia) at 05:17:48 UT1 and has an annular duration of 3 minutes 39 seconds. For more on this event, consult www.eclipsewise.com/oh/ec2019.html#SE2019Dec26A or page 49 of the December 2019 issue of Sky & Telescope.
Brightness, apparent size, illumination, distance from the Earth in astronomical units (a.u.), and location data for the planets and Pluto on December 1st: Mercury (magnitude -0.6, 6.3", 69% illuminated, 1.07 a.u., Libra), Venus (magnitude -3.9, 11.6", 89% illuminated, 1.44 a.u., Sagittarius), Mars (magnitude +1.7, 3.9", 98% illuminated, 2.39 a.u., Virgo), Jupiter (magnitude -1.8, 32.1", 100% illuminated, 6.15 a.u., Sagittarius), Saturn (magnitude +0.6, 15.4", 100% illuminated, 10.78 a.u., Sagittarius), Uranus (magnitude +5.7, 3.7", 100% illuminated, 19.18 a.u. on December 16th, Aries), Neptune (magnitude +7.9, 2.3", 100% illuminated, 30.05 a.u. on December 16th, Aquarius), and Pluto (magnitude +14.3, 0.1", 100% illuminated, 34.80 a.u. on December 16th, Sagittarius).
During the evening, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn can be found in the southwest, Uranus in the southeast, and Neptune in the south. Uranus is in the west at midnight. In the morning, Mercury and Mars are located in the southeast.
Venus, Saturn, and Pluto are all located in Sagittarius within a circle with a diameter of 2.7 degrees on December 12th.
A bright gibbous Mercury is visible in the southeastern morning sky in early December. By December 16th, the speediest planet will be too close to the Sun to be seen. It is at the descending node on December 19th. The Moon passes less than two degrees north-northeast of Mercury on December 25th. The closest planet to the Sun is at aphelion on December 30th. Mercury shrinks in apparent size from 6.3 to 4.9 arc seconds but increases in illumination from 69 to 99% during December.
Venus climbs higher into the morning sky and Saturn sinks lower as the month unfolds. The bright globular cluster M22 lies less than one degree to the north of Venus on December 2nd. M75, another globular cluster, lies with one degree of Venus on the night of December 18th and December 19th. Venus and Saturn are five degrees apart on December 6th. The second-magnitude star Nunki (Sigma Sagittarii) is less than two degrees from Venus on that date. Venus passes less than two degrees from Saturn on December 11th. That distance increases to more than ten degrees by December 20th. Venus is at its heliocentric latitude south on December 20th. The Moon passes one degree south of the brightest planet on December 28th. Venus increases in apparent size to 13.0 arc seconds but decreases in illumination to 82% by December 31st.
A tiny Mars exits Virgo and enters Libra early in the month. It climbs higher in the morning sky and reaches an elongation of 40 degrees by the end of December. The Red Planet rises by more than three hours before the Sun as the year ends. Mars is four degrees south of the waning crescent Moon on the night of December 23rd.
Jupiter is lost in the glare of sunset by midmonth. The largest planet is in conjunction with the Sun on December 27th.
Saturn lies very low in the southwest during December. Saturn’s disk spans 15 arc seconds and its rings 35 arc seconds on December 1st. Its rings are tilted by 24 degrees. A slender crescent Moon passes 1.2 degrees south of the Ringed Planet on December 27th.
Uranus lies in southern Aries near the border with Pisces, a region lacking in any bright stars. Uranus is five degrees north of the Moon on December 8th. The gas giant planet attains an altitude of about 60 degrees in the south around 9:30 p.m. local time early in the month and doesn’t set until a few hours after midnight. Visit www.bluewaterastronomy.info/resources/Maps/Charts-2019/09uranus_2019_1.pdf and www.nakedeyeplanets.com/uranus.htm for finder charts.
Neptune is located 1.5 degree west-southwest of the fourth-magnitude star Phi Aquarii on the first day of the month. As December ends, Neptune lies 1.1 degrees from the star. The waxing gibbous Moon passes four degrees south of Neptune on 10th. Neptune sets before midnight this month. Browse www.bluewaterastronomy.info/resources/Maps/Charts-2019/10neptune_2019_1.pdf and www.nakedeyeplanets.com/neptune.htm for finder charts.
Articles on Uranus and Neptune with finder charts appear on pages 48 and 49 of the September 2019 issue of Sky & Telescope and on pages 52 to 55 of the October issue of Astronomy. Finder charts for Uranus and Neptune are also available online at s22380.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/WEB_UrNep_2019-2020_updated.pdf
Click on www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/interactive-sky-watching-tools/ for JavaScript utilities that will illustrate the positions of the five brightest satellites of Uranus and the position of Triton, Neptune’s brightest satellite.
Pluto will not be readily visible again until next year.
For more on the planets and how to locate them, see www.nakedeyeplanets.com/
Comet C/2017 T2 (PanSTARRS) may brighten to ninth magnitude as it heads northwestward along the border of Perseus and Camelopardalis. The comet passes just north of the open cluster NGC 1528 in Perseus on December 15th and through the faint emission nebula Sharpless 2-205. Visit cometchasing.skyhound.com/ and www.aerith.net/comet/future-n.html for information on comets that are visible this month. A list of the closest approaches of comets to Earth is posted at www.cometography.com/nearcomet.html
Asteroid 15 Eunomia shines at tenth magnitude as it travels northeastward through Aquarius this month. It passes 0.8 degree south of the third-magnitude star Alpha Aquarii on December 17th. During the final week of December, Eunomia glides through the Water Jar asterism, which consists of Gamma, Pi, Zeta, and Eta Aquarii. Asteroid 55 Pandora (magnitude +11.1) occults the 6.5-magnitude star 18 Aurigae for up to 7 seconds from Africa, southern United States, and Mexico on the evening of December 6th. Click on www.asteroidoccultation.com/2019_12/1207_55_62270.htm for additional information. Asteroids brighter than magnitude +11.0 reaching opposition this month include 97 Klotho (magnitude +10.1) on December 2nd, 28 Bellona (magnitude +10.5) on December 10th, 132 Aethra (magnitude +10.5) on December 14th, and 69 Hesperia (magnitude +10.5) on December 30th. For information on this year’s bright asteroids and upcoming asteroid occultation events, consult www.curtrenz.com/asteroids.html and asteroidoccultation.com/ respectively.
A wealth of current information on solar system celestial bodies is posted at nineplanets.org/ and www.curtrenz.com/astronomy.html
Various events taking place within our solar system are discussed at cosmicpursuits.com/night-sky-this-month/ and www.bluewaterastronomy.info/styled-4/index.html
Information on the celestial events transpiring each week can be found at astronomy.com/skythisweek and www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/sky-at-a-glance/
The famous eclipsing variable star Algol (Beta Persei) is at a minimum, decreasing in magnitude from +2.1 to +3.4, on December 2nd, 5th, 8th, 10th, 13th, 16th, 19th, 22nd, 25th, 28th, and 30th (UT dates). Algol is at minimum brightness for approximately two hours and is well-placed for observers in N America on the nights of December 4th (centered at 10:18 p.m. EST) and December 25th (centered at 12:02 a.m. EST). Consult page 50 of the December 2019 issue of Sky & Telescope for the times of the eclipses. For more on Algol, see stars.astro.illinois.edu/sow/Algol.html and www.solstation.com/stars2/algol3.htm
Free star charts for the month can be downloaded at www.skymaps.com/downloads.html and www.telescope.com/content.jsp?pageName=Monthly-Star-Chart and whatsouttonight.com/
Data on current supernovae can be found at www.rochesterastronomy.org/snimages/
Finder charts for the Messier objects and other deep-sky objects are posted at freestarcharts.com/messier and freestarcharts.com/ngc-ic and www.cambridge.org/features/turnleft/seasonal_skies_july-september.htm
Telrad finder charts for the Messier Catalog and the SAC’s 110 Best of the NGC are posted at www.astro-tom.com/messier/messier_finder_charts/map1.pdf and sao64.free.fr/observations/catalogues/cataloguesac.pdf respectively.
Information pertaining to observing some of the more prominent Messier galaxies can be found at www.cloudynights.com/topic/358295-how-to-locate-some-of-the-major-messier-galaxies-and-helpful-advice-for-novice-amateur-astronomers/
Author Phil Harrington offers an excellent freeware planetarium program for binocular observers known as TUBA (Touring the Universe through Binoculars Atlas), which also includes information on purchasing binoculars, at www.philharrington.net/tuba.htm
Stellarium and Cartes du Ciel are useful freeware planetarium programs that are available at stellarium.org/ and www.ap-i.net/skychart/en/start
Deep-sky object list generators can be found at www.virtualcolony.com/sac/ and tonightssky.com/MainPage.php and dso-browser.com/
Freeware sky atlases can be downloaded at www.deepskywatch.com/files/deepsky-atlas/Deep-Sky-Hunter-atlas-full.pdf and astro.mxd120.com/free-star-atlases
One hundred and five binary and multiple stars for December: Gamma Andromedae, 59 Andromedae, Struve 245 (Andromeda); Struve 362, Struve 374, Struve 384, Struve 390, Struve 396, Struve 400, Struve 19, Otto Struve 67 (Camelopardalis); Struve 191, Struve Iota Cassiopeiae, Struve 263, Otto Struve 50, Struve 283, Struve 284 (Cassiopeia); 61 Ceti, Struve 218, Omicron Ceti, Struve 274, Nu Ceti, h3511, 84 Ceti, h3524, Lambda Ceti, Struve 330 (Cetus); h3527, h3533, Theta Eridani, Rho Eridani, Struve 341, h3548, h3565, Tau-4 Eridani, Struve 408, Struve 411, h3589, h3601, 30 Eridani, 32 Eridani (Eridanus); h3478, h3504, Omega Fornacis, Eta-2 Fornacis, Alpha Fornacis, See 25, Xi-3 Fornacis, h3596 (Fornax); Struve 268, Struve 270, h1123, Otto Struve 44, h2155, Nu Persei, Struve 297, Struve 301, Struve 304, Eta Persei, Struve 314, Otto Struve 48, Tau Persei, Struve 331, Struve 336, Es588, Struve 352, Struve 360, Struve 369, Struve 382, Struve 388, Struve 392, Struve 410, Struve 413, Struve 425, Otto Struve 59, Struve 426, 40 Persei, Struve 434, Struve 448, Es277, Zeta Persei, Struve 469, Epsilon Persei, Es878 (Perseus); Struve 399, Struve 406, Struve 401, Struve 422, Struve 430, Struve 427, Struve 435, 30 Tauri (Taurus); Epsilon Trianguli, Struve 219, Iota Trianguli, Struve 232, Struve 239, Struve 246, 10 Trianguli, Struve 269, h653, 15 Trianguli, Struve 285, Struve 286, Struve 310 (Triangulum)
Notable carbon star for December: U Camelopardalis
One hundred deep-sky objects for December: NGC 891 (Andromeda); IC 342, K6, St23, Tom 5 (Camelopardalis); Be65, IC 1848, K4, Mel15, NGC 896, NGC 1027, St2, Tr3 (Cassiopeia); M77, NGC 788, NGC 835, NGC 864, NGC 908, NGC 936, NGC 955, NGC 958, NGC 1015, NGC 1016, NGC 1022, NGC 1042, NGC 1052, NGC 1055, NGC 1087, NGC 1094 (Cetus); IC 2006, NGC 1084, NGC 1140, NGC 1187, NGC 1199, NGC 1209, NGC 1232, NGC 1291, NGC 1300, NGC 1309, NGC 1332, NGC 1337, NGC 1353, NGC 1357, NGC 1395, NGC 1400, NGC 1407, NGC 1421, NGC 1426, NGC 1440, NGC 1452, NGC 1453, NGC 1461 (Eridanus); NGC 1079, NGC 1097, NGC 1201, NGC 1292, NGC 1316 (Fornax I Galaxy Cluster), NGC 1317, NGC 1326, NGC 1344, NGC 1350, NGC 1360, NGC 1365, NGC 1371, NGC 1374, NGC 1379, NGC 1380, NGC 1381, NGC 1387, NGC 1398, NGC 1404, NGC 1406, NGC 1425 (Fornax); Bas10, Cz8, IC 351, IC 2003, K5, Mel 20, M34, NGC 869, NGC 884, NGC 957, NGC 1023, NGC 1058, NGC 1161, NGC 1245, NGC 1275 (Perseus I Galaxy Cluster), NGC 1333, NGC 1342, NGC 1444, Tr2 (Perseus); M45 (Taurus); NGC 777, NGC 784, NGC 890, NGC 925, NGC 949, NGC 959, NGC 978A/B (Triangulum)
Top ten binocular deep-sky objects for December: M34, M45, Mel15, Mel20, NGC 869, NGC 884, NGC 1027, NGC 1232, St2, St23
Top ten deep-sky objects for December: M34, M45, M77, NGC 869, NGC 884, NGC 891, NGC 1023, NGC 1232, NGC 1332, NGC 1360
Challenge deep-sky object for December: vdB14 (Camelopardalis)
The objects listed above are located between 2:00 and 4:00 hours of right ascension.