Category Archives: CSAS News
CSAS Announcements and News of interest to CSAS members and the public.
Visiting Jupiter and Saturn
From our perspective here on Planet Earth, on December 21st, 2020, Jupiter and Saturn will be pass each other by only 0.1 degrees or 1/5th the diameter of a full moon. This is an extremely rare event so take a moment on a clear night just after Sunset to see this amazing event! A great conjunction, or meeting of the two big planets Jupiter and Saturn in the night sky, occurs every 20 years but this is the closest conjunction since 1623, only 14 years after Galileo pointed the first telescope to the night sky. In 1623, it was also only 13 degrees from the Sun so it is unlikely that many got the chance to observe it. According to Earthsky.org, the closest observable Jupter-Saturn conjunction that was as close was all the way back in 1226! If you miss this event, they will meet in the sky again in 20 years but the two planets won’t appear so close together again until March 15, 2080!
Look for this conjunction in the SouthWestern sky shortly after Sunset, which is around 4:45 PM in December. The graphic below from Earthsky.org, provides a rough view of where to find the Moon, Saturn and Jupiter 45 minutes after Sunset.

Night Sky Notes – NOV 2020
Night Sky Notes – OCT 2020
It’s been a year, but we’re back with monthly content for you!
NightSkyNotes_October2020Find Strange Uranus in Aries
The Summer Triangle
August Night Sky
Chill Out: Spot an Ice Giant in August
The night skies on the day we landed on the Moon
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Navigating the July 2019 Skies
Mercury Transit Observing Program Available for Nov 11, 2019 transit
A new observing challenge program is in place for the November 11, 2019 transit of Mercury. See the web site for details: https://www.astroleague.org/PlanetaryTransit_Venus2012 (I know the page link says “Venus2012” but it is for Mercury transit 2019!).
Navigating the June Skies
Watching the Late Spring Skies
Navigating the April night sky
New NASA Observing Challenge Special Observing Award – Apollo’s 50th
In conjunction with NASA, the Astronomical League Observing Program Division has developed a new NASA Observing Challenge Special Observing Award to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo landing on the Moon. This award will have a certificate, but no pin, and is available to members and non-members of the Astronomical League. For more information, check out the award’s webpage: https://www.astroleague.org/programs/nasa-observing-challenges-special-awards-introduction Note that it has a deadline for submission.

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