Astrophiz180: October SkyGuide

Published: Sept. 30, 2023, 2:04 a.m.

b"Show Notes:\\nMorning Sky\\nTwo beautiful bright planets will reward those who get up early in the mornings this month.\\nJupiter is is rising before midnight but is still best in the morning sky, it is close to the Moon on October 1 and on the 29th.\\nVenus is moving from crescent to half moon phase and climbs higher the morning twilight coming very close to the bright star Regulus by weeks end. \\n\\nPartial penumbral lunar eclipse on October 28 is difficult to observe in central Australia and impossible in eastern states, but is fully visible from WA where the maximum eclipse is at 5:13am.\\n\\nThe Moon occultation of the Pleiades (the 7 Sisters, not far from the bright star Aldabaran between about midnight and 01:24 am on 31 October depending on your location.\\n\\nStars & Constellations\\nScorpius is setting in the west.\\nSagittarius is still a feature\\nThe globular cluster M22 is always worth catching\\nSouthern Cross is also a great feature to view.\\n\\nThe LMC is reasonably high in the sky, and there is a move to have the Magellanic Clouds renamed because of Ferdinand Magellan\\u2019s treatment of indiginous peoples during his voyages.\\nFor astrophotographers, the Southern pole star Sigma Octantis is a nice magnitude 5 star challenge for those wanting a perfect circle of star trails.\\n\\nIan's Tangent\\nThe Russian probe crashed on the moon on August 19, which is a reminder that there may be future problems with spacecraft and landers contaminating the moon\\u2019s water deposits with dust, regolith, hydrazine and other rocket exhaust products."