Anyone know the name of a certain star? [in the sky]

Anyone know the name of a certain star? [in the sky]

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Discussion

E31Shrew

Original Poster:

5,923 posts

193 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
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When looking in to the night sky, if you look at Orion, to the right there are two very distinct stars, at about 90 degrees from Orion. One is incredibly bright. Does anyone know what it's called?
Wifey wants to know, not me!

wolves_wanderer

12,398 posts

238 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
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2 unusually bright "stars" at the moment is probably Jupiter and Venus which are close together and high in the sky at the moment.

JBM78

363 posts

181 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
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wolves_wanderer said:
2 unusually bright "stars" at the moment is probably Jupiter and Venus which are close together and high in the sky at the moment.
Yes, deffo Venus and Jupiter to the right of Orion. Venus is the brighter one.

E31Shrew

Original Poster:

5,923 posts

193 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
quotequote all
Thanks chaps. Never ceases to amaze me the knowledge on PH. Thanks again

Sheets Tabuer

19,087 posts

216 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
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If you turn around to the east just coming up the very orange one will be mars.

jmorgan

36,010 posts

285 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
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FOC and handy to have
http://www.stellarium.org/

wiffmaster

2,604 posts

199 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
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Got an Android phone? Google Sky Map

There's a number of equivalents on the iPhone as well. Great fun and very accurate.

KB_S1

5,967 posts

230 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
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The google sky map is great, can be used on Android and iOS devices or your normal browser.

E31Shrew

Original Poster:

5,923 posts

193 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
quotequote all
Just popped out to have a gander and have seen all three. Actually quite interesting. Thanks again

Puggit

48,526 posts

249 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
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If you look below and left of Orion, there is a bright star. This is Sirius, which is the brightest stellar object in the sky. Actually, it's 2 stars orbiting each other wink

Jasandjules

70,007 posts

230 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
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JBM78 said:
Yes, deffo Venus and Jupiter to the right of Orion. Venus is the brighter one.
Fantastic, I knew it was Venus but was wondering what the other one was too!!

NismoGT

1,634 posts

191 months

Saturday 10th March 2012
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Puggit said:
If you look below and left of Orion, there is a bright star. This is Sirius, which is the brightest stellar object in the sky. Actually, it's 2 stars orbiting each other wink
Yep. One white main sequence star and a dwarf white companion.

Mx5guy

22,250 posts

202 months

Monday 12th March 2012
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Saturn and Mercury are visable at the moment too.

Eric Mc

122,165 posts

266 months

Monday 12th March 2012
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Mercury is REALLY hard to spot. Because it orbits so close to the sun it is almost always lost in the glare of the sun. The best time is to try to spot it just after the sun has set. I had a good look yesterday evening but there was too much haze on the horizon.

The sun was good though - I was able to see at least ten prominent sunspots - including a large cluster in the bottom right hand quadrant of the sun.

vetrof

2,492 posts

174 months

nellyleelephant

2,705 posts

235 months

Monday 12th March 2012
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Eric Mc said:
Mercury is REALLY hard to spot. Because it orbits so close to the sun it is almost always lost in the glare of the sun. The best time is to try to spot it just after the sun has set. I had a good look yesterday evening but there was too much haze on the horizon.

The sun was good though - I was able to see at least ten prominent sunspots - including a large cluster in the bottom right hand quadrant of the sun.
Projection?

Eric Mc

122,165 posts

266 months

Monday 12th March 2012
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nellyleelephant said:
Eric Mc said:
Mercury is REALLY hard to spot. Because it orbits so close to the sun it is almost always lost in the glare of the sun. The best time is to try to spot it just after the sun has set. I had a good look yesterday evening but there was too much haze on the horizon.

The sun was good though - I was able to see at least ten prominent sunspots - including a large cluster in the bottom right hand quadrant of the sun.
Projection?
I actually looked directly at the sun. Naughty I know but the sun was right down on the horizon and coming through quite a deep layer of haze. And I'm blind anyway smile

The spots looked really clear.


nellyleelephant

2,705 posts

235 months

Monday 12th March 2012
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Through binoculars eek

I had a good look through a Coronado Solarscope a few weeks back, if you ver get the chance, try one of those. Obvious sun spots, surface granulation and filaments growing from the edge of the disc were clear.

Eric Mc

122,165 posts

266 months

Monday 12th March 2012
quotequote all
nellyleelephant said:
Through binoculars eek
10 x 40s too smile

With the sun right on the horizon the dangers are very much minimised - but I wouldn't recommend it or do it too frequently.

nellyleelephant

2,705 posts

235 months

Monday 12th March 2012
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Have you ever thought about making some filters up from Baader film? All you would need to do is make up something that holds the film so it covers the objective lenses.