It's a busy night sky this July, so make sure you look up
- Written by Tanya Hill, Honorary Fellow of the University of Melbourne and Senior Curator (Astronomy), Museums Victoria
The next fortnight will be a real treat for stargazers - there are five planets to see in the evening sky, Mars is looking the best we’ve seen in 15 years, and on the morning of July 28 there will be a total lunar eclipse.
We are currently in the midst of a five-planet season due to Jupiter and Saturn being on the same side of the Sun.
Read more: Look up! Your guide to some of the best meteor showers for 2018
Look to the sky after sunset, and if you have a good view of both the eastern and western horizons you’ll see the planets stretched out in a line. Mars and Saturn will be rising in the east, Jupiter will sit high overhead, and bright Venus and faint Mercury will be setting in the west.
Museums Victoria/stellariumOver the next few years there will be more moments when all five planets visible to the naked eye can be seen together. But eventually Jupiter and Saturn will drift apart and once that occurs it will be another decade before the five planets come together once more.
The Moon begins its tour of the planets on Sunday, July 15. It’ll be a thin crescent low in the western sky and is a great signpost for Mercury which will be just to the left of the Moon with bright Venus sitting above.
The following night the Moon will be near Venus (as shown in the image above). Then on July 19, the First Quarter Moon will sit below the bright star Spica.
On July 21, the gibbous Moon will have made its way to Jupiter and by July 25 it will meet up with Saturn.
The Full Moon completes the tour on July 27 when it joins Mars shining at its best and brightest.
Red planet, red Moon
Each month when we see the Full Moon, we are seeing the Moon “in opposition”. This means the Moon is directly opposite the Sun, rising as the Sun sets and setting as the Sun rises.
On July 27, not only is the Moon in opposition but Mars is too, and it’s a highly favourable one that brings Mars much closer to Earth than average.
Zolt Levay (STScI)Mars makes its closest approach to Earth on July 31 at a distance of 58 million km and its rapid increase in brightness over the past few weeks has been amazing to see.
Until early September, Mars will outshine Jupiter and become the third-brightest object in the night sky, behind the Moon and Venus (a graph of Mars’ brightness is here).
The reason that Mars can vary in brightness so much is because it’s our neighbour in space and it follows quite an elliptical orbit. Throughout 2017, Mars was fairly dull as it was on the opposite side of the Sun to Earth, and therefore at its most distant.
But even at each opposition the distance between Earth and Mars can vary by almost 50 million km, because of the two planets’ elliptical orbits. 2018 is definitely one of the best.
With Mars a striking red in the night sky, what else could be better than teaming up with a blood-red Moon.
Into the shadow
When we look to the skies during the early hours of July 28, red Mars will be sitting just above and to the left of the eclipsed Moon.
Across Australia everyone will see the Moon enter Earth’s shadow at the exact same moment. In fact, everyone on the night side of Earth will see the eclipse together.
Phil HartWestern Australia will be the only state to catch the entire eclipse. It will begin with the Moon high in the northwest and end with the Moon low to the western horizon.
For the rest of Australia, the eclipse will begin with the Moon in the western sky and the Moon will set as the eclipse progresses. As the Moon sets, the Sun will rise so the later part of the eclipse will occur against the brightening dawn sky.
Read more http://theconversation.com/its-a-busy-night-sky-this-july-so-make-sure-you-look-up-99668