This is topic Moon, Venus and Jupiter in forum Open Discussions About Writing at Hatrack River Writers Workshop.


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Posted by TaleSpinner (Member # 5638) on :
 
These last couple of nights, here in England in the dark blue sky of dusk, we've been able to see the crescent Moon, Venus and Jupiter in close proximity. It's a rare event, according to the astronomer on the radio.

My celestial mechanics is weak--was anyone else able to see this magnificent event, or was it a UK thing?

I've never before knowingly seen three celestial objects in the sky so close to Earth and to each other. They have a singular beauty and made Earth somehow feel less alone in space.

Pat
 


Posted by steffenwolf (Member # 8250) on :
 
I heard about it today here in Minnesota, USA, but have not seen it yet.

I think I'll go out and peek tonight to see it for myself.
 


Posted by MartinV (Member # 5512) on :
 
Cloudy for a week now so I won't catch it from Slovenia.
 
Posted by Crank (Member # 7354) on :
 

Saw the incredible sight facing me on the majority of my drive home last night...northern Virginia, USA.

S!
S!...C!



 


Posted by skadder (Member # 6757) on :
 
Yeah I saw it. It was very nice.
 
Posted by philocinemas (Member # 8108) on :
 
Yeah it's pretty cool. I've been watching Jupiter and Venus move across the sky since Halloween, but I thought Venus was Saturn. I stand corrected. I wish I had a descent telescope right now.
 
Posted by Cheyne (Member # 7710) on :
 
It was very visible in the northern Canadian skies last night, and it was a very dark sky as we still have no snow. (?)
 
Posted by Robert Nowall (Member # 2764) on :
 
It was cloudy here. I saw some pictures, though. The writeups called it a "Smiley Face"...
 
Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
One of the writeups I read said you might even be able to make out jupiter's moons - three clustered on one side, one on the other. Maybe you'd need a telescope, I can't recall what the article said about that, but nifty concept.


 


Posted by DebbieKW (Member # 5058) on :
 
Yes, I'm in Arkansas, USA, and I've been watching them move through the sky for several nights now.
 
Posted by skadder (Member # 6757) on :
 
You should be able to make out Jupiter's moons with a half decent pair of binoculars, although you would probably need to stabilize them on a fence so the image doesn't bounce around to much.

For good info: www.cloudynights.com
 


Posted by tchernabyelo (Member # 2651) on :
 
I got a few picures on the evening of the 1st, but the moon was past Venus by that time - the UK got the occultation, which I have seen once before.

There's a picture of the crescent moon on my blog, which I'm quite pleased with (click on it for a larger version). I may post up one with Venus and Jupiter; I'd hoped to get them all three descending over downtown LA, but the fog intervened.
 


Posted by TaleSpinner (Member # 5638) on :
 
Smiling sky indeed--the BBC have compiled a few pics from around the globe:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_pictures/7759643.stm

And, tchernabyelo, I like your pic of the moon--amazing what you can do with a modern digital camera--and hope you can get the planets too ...

Cheers, and still in awe,
Pat
 


Posted by extrinsic (Member # 8019) on :
 
Planetary occultations are uncommon events, but not necessarily rare. That's why they're a notable phenonema in astronomy and astrology, occultations involving the moon, too. Eclipses are occultations, but in the case of moon-earth eclipses, they're viewed from a different perspective. One of the rarest celestial events is when all the planets align somewhat closely, not necessarily on a straight line but on the same side of the sun--nine-body occultations, or syzgy if more than three bodies within the same gravitional system align--which last occurred imperfectly on March 10th, 1982.
 
Posted by Cheyne (Member # 7710) on :
 
I remember well the syzygy of 1982. There were all kinds of predictions about the coming apocolypse. Even some (pseudo)scientists got in on the fun predicting that all of the planets' gravities on one side of the sun would tear it apart.
We're still here. Whew!
 
Posted by KayTi (Member # 5137) on :
 
That 1982 event happened on my birthday and all my grade-school friends were convinced the world was going to end on my birthday. How wonderful.
 
Posted by Sherpa7 (Member # 8321) on :
 
Yes, I saw it in Illinois.
 
Posted by dreadlord (Member # 2913) on :
 
does that event have any mystical significance?

itd be interesting to find out.


what part of the sky is it in, again?
 


Posted by extrinsic (Member # 8019) on :
 
In astrology, conjunctions typically magnify the influence of the celestial bodies involved and the houses of the Zodiac they fall in. The event was visible worldwide at night with Mercury and Venus visible before setting right after sunset. The planets were all on the same side of the sun as the Earth. What mystical significance, total chaos, with the Earthly influences of Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto--the latter three not naked-eye visible--spread across the late winter Zodiac in disharmony.

Oh, and the recent conjunction of Venus, Selene, and Jupiter is the superior conjunction of the witch's moon. Venus' sparkle crossing the crescent of the moon with Jupiter's glint looking on. It's a common motif in esoteric jewelry. It's a magical moment for witchcraft, powerful mojo, if not a magical sight to behold.

[This message has been edited by extrinsic (edited December 04, 2008).]
 


Posted by Rommel Fenrir Wolf II (Member # 4199) on :
 
I have also been able to see them here in White Sands Missile Range Nm. I wish my telescope was working for I would love to see them closer, but I got drunk one night and broke it. Oh well such is life.

RFW2nd

 




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