Donate SIGN UP

FAO Wendilla or a Hamateur Astronomer

Avatar Image
DTCwordfan | 19:45 Wed 11th Jan 2012 | Science
20 Answers
Hi Wendilla or whoever can answer this.

What is in the night-sky tonight, roughly WSW to SSW, pretty static, enormously bright, almost as if it was a double light with a hint of red on the lower side?

Beautifully clear down here and it's the brightest planet I have ever seen.....there's one other more central/overhead...slightly west.

(Cornwall being the location here).

Thanks in advance.....
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 20rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by DTCwordfan. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
mars????
Looks like Venus - we can see it here too - it it wasn't still, i'd think it was the ISS! http://www.jodrellban...k/astronomy/nightsky/
www.stellarium.org/ is a good site for finding out what the night sky is showing in your locality. There are other programmes which are as good. The heavens are obscured here.
Question Author
I thought it was the ISS to start with - here it's even brighter than that though.
Question Author
well there we are, Venus and Neptune are making love tonight....

sounds a bit Boticelli fishy to me.
Question Author
thanks all of you.

The mating lasts three nights - wonder if planets can have dwarf offspring.
There are no sightings of the ISS at the moment . The prominent planet at the moment is Jupiter.
At that angle, what I saw is definitely Venus.
Jupiter (magnitude –2.5, at the Aries-Pisces border) shines highest in the south at dusk, moves lower toward the southwest as evening advances, and sets in the west around 1 a.m. In a telescope Jupiter appears 42 arcseconds wide; see our observing guide
Question Author
To the naked eye, would it look like as if it was split in two, with a hint of red, Wendilla? I well know eyes can deceive, like with perspective at times.

How do you explain seadogg's "interpretation"?

Thanks....
Had a look. Unless it is ISS it must be Jupiter. Put your binocs on it and if you can see 4 faint objects in a line near it you have the planet and visible satellites.
Question Author
ta seadogg - that explains the split.....it's a remarkable sighting - almost took the car off the road going into Truro ninety minutes ago!
What is really striking is making a bivouac in the moors on a clear night, when the milky way lives up to its name and there are so many stars out there it feels as if you are lying under a protective roof.
Wow then, I stand corrected!
Venus, SW at sunset, appears as a crescent through a modest telescope.

Jupiter, to the south, is the one with the moons.
Wow - got the Canon 18x50 stabilised bins on it - amazing - can see Jupiter and a line of three of the moons :))))
Jupiter and Venus are visibly approaching each other and will be within a few degrees of each other by mid March. This is, of course, an illusion of perspective since Venus is always closer to the Sun than the Earth and Jupiter is about five times further from the Sun than the Earth.

Venus will remain, as always, the brighter of the two.
Question Author
not much down here tonight or last night owing to the fuzzy stuff over us....

thanks all.....
I hesitate to even contribute if Wendilla is present

but Jupiter is big recently

1 to 20 of 20rss feed

Do you know the answer?

FAO Wendilla or a Hamateur Astronomer

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.