Whats Up – August 2024

In a nutshell…

Moon

Date Time Phase
04/08 13h13 New Moon
12/08 17h18 First Quarter
19/08 20h25 Full Moon
26/08 11h25 Last Quarter

Moon – Earth Relations

Perigee: 360 196 km on 21/08 at 07h02
Apogee: 405 297 km on 09/08 at 03h31

Planet Visibility

Mercury is visible in the west-northwest just after sunset 
Venus
is visible just after sunset in the west-northwest
Mars is visible in the east-northeast in the morning sky
Jupiter is visible in the east-northeast in the morning sky
Saturn is visible from late evening, rising in the east

Some easy to identify bright stars

Rigel: blue supergiant in Orion
Betelgeuse: red supergiant in Orion
Procyon: yellowish white star in Canis Minor
Sirius: brightest star in the night sky, located in Canis Major
Antares: red supergiant in Scorpius
Arcturus: red giant in Boötes
Spica: brightest bluish-white star in Virgo
Canopus: yellowish-white star in Carina
Altair: a white star, brightest in Aquila
Regulus: blue–white star and the brightest star in Leo
The Pointers: Alpha and Beta Centauri

Sun and Moon

The New Moon occurs on the 4th of August at 13h13 and the First Quarter Moon falls on the 12th of August at 17h18. The Full Moon occurs on the 19th of August at 20h25 and the Last Quarter Moon falls on the 26th of August at 11h25.
On the 9th of August at 03h31, the moon will be at apogee (furthest from Earth) at a distance of about 405 297 km. On the 21st of August at 07h02, the moon will be at perigee (closest to Earth) at a distance of 360 196 km.

Planetary and Other Events – Morning and Evening

Venus and (in the first half of the month) Mercury are visible in the West just after sunset. The moon will be near Venus on the 6th of August. Mercury and Venus will be close to each other on the 8th of August. Saturn is visible from late evening throughout the month. Jupiter, Saturn and Mars can be observed in the morning sky throughout this month. Mars and Jupiter can be seen in the northeastern sky and they are very close on the 14th of August.

Four meteor showers are active in August: The Piscis Austrinids, the Southern delta-Aquariids, the alpha-Capricornids and the eta-Eridanids. The Piscis Australids are active from the 15th of July to the 10th of August, peaking on the 28th of July. To view the Piscis Austrinids find a dark spot and look near the constellation of Piscis Austrinus. The best time to view the shower is from around 21h30 until 05h00. The Southern delta-Aquariids meteor shower is active from the 12th of July to the 23rd of August, peaking on the 31st of July. To view the Southern delta-Aquariids, find a dark spot and look near the constellation of Aquarius. The best time to view the shower is from around 22h00 until 05h00. The alpha-Capricornids meteor shower is active from the 3rd of July to the 15th of August, peaking on the 31st of July. To view the shower, look near the constellation of Capricornus. The best time to view the alpha Capricornids is from around 20h00 until 04h00. The eta-Eridanids meteor shower is active from the 31st of July to the 19th of August, peaking on the 8th of August. To view the eta-Eridanids find a dark spot and look near the constellation of Eridanus. The best time to view the shower is from 01h00 to 05h30.

The Evening Sky Stars

In the north, orange Arcturus shines brightly in the evening sky, with the half circle of the Northern Crown to the right, and bright white Vega rising low in the north east. Higher in the ENE, tangled in the northern Milky Way, is Aquila the Eagle with its bright star Altair. Vega and Altair are relatively nearby stars. Like most of the stars visible to the naked eye they would appear much brighter than the Sun if they and the Sun were at the same distance.

To the south of Arcturus, high in the NW, shines blue-white Spica, the brightest star in Virgo. Spica actually consists of two stars 260 light years away from us, orbiting each other once every 4 days. Both are much hotter and brighter than the Sun. The brighter of the pair is 11 times as massive as our Sun and 13 000 times as bright, the other 7 times as massive as our sun and ‘only’ 1 700 times as bright.

Red Antares and the stars of the Scorpion are almost overhead in the early evening, and you should easily be able to see the shape of the Scorpion – this is one of the few constellations which really resembles the creature it’s named after. Antares is about 600 light years away and radiates about 10 000 times as much energy as the Sun at wavelengths perceived by the eye. But Antares has a surface temperature of only 3 300 degrees Celsius (compared to 5 500 for the Sun) and radiates most of its energy as infrared radiation. The total energy output of Antares is about 65 000 times as much as the Sun, and this ‘red supergiant’ is so large that if it were placed at the centre of our own solar system, the orbit of Mars would be less than halfway from the centre of Antares to its swollen surface.

High in the south are the Giraffes of Vha Venda star lore (the Pointers – Alpha and Beta Centauri – and the stars of the Southern Cross). For observers away from city lights, the winter Milky Way is spectacular on August evenings when the moon doesn’t interfere. The centre of our Galaxy is nearly overhead, and it is easy to see the ‘pancake’ shape of our wheel of hundreds of billions of suns, complete with the bulge near the middle. For the Indian tribes of South America, the dark patches in the Milky Way were also constellations. We know today that such dark areas as the Coal Sack (near the Southern Cross) and the Great Rift are dense dust clouds where new stars are forming.

The Morning Sky Stars

Orion is once again prominent in the eastern sky, raising his club to swat the pesky Bull that forever charges at him. Orion’s two dogs are with him as well, with Procyon (brightest star in the Small Dog) lower in the east and Sirius (brightest star in the Large Dog) to the southeast of Orion. It’s unclear, however, whether the dogs are paying attention to Orion’s problems or to the hare which is hopping by between Orion and the Large Dog.

High in the southeast shines Canopus (called uCanzibe in isiXhosa; Naka in Sesotho and Setswana) the second brightest star in the sky and brightest star in the huge ancient constellation of Argo, the great exploring ship that sought the Golden Fleece. Today this constellation is split up into several smaller constellations such as the Sails and the Keel. If the Argo is headed to or from Cape Town, it’s only logical that Table Mountain is in view, and it is just possible (on a dark night far from city lights) to see the dim stars of the Table Mountain (Mons Mensae) constellation in the far south. Thanks to Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille, who added more than a dozen constellations to the southern sky as he observed from Cape Town, Table Mountain is the only geographical feature on Earth to have its own place in the stars. You’ll probably find it easier to see its tablecloth, represented by the Large Magellanic Cloud. The LMC, as astronomers know it, is a satellite galaxy of our own Milky Way, and a mere 180 000 light years away. It’s the closest galaxy to our own which is not actually being ‘digested’. Our Milky Way is cannibalizing two small galaxies at the moment, and neither is fully separate anymore. Part of the LMC (which looks to the eye like a stray patch of the Milky Way) slops over into the nearby constellation of the Swordfish, and the remainder of the southern sky is taken up with an odd collection of birds, water creatures and scientific instruments such as the Peacock, the Crane, the Water Snake, and the Rhomboidal Net. The instruments, like Table Mountain, owe their place in the sky to Lacaille’s mapping of the southern sky in the mid-eighteenth century.

Flowing from the southwest corner of Orion is the long winding constellation of Eridanus the celestial river, with bright Achernar near its ‘mouth’ high in the southwest. Canopus is ‘Naka’ (the ‘Horn’ star) in the Sotho calendar, while Achernar is ‘Senakane’, the ‘little horn’. To the west of Eridanus is a rather watery part of the sky including the Whale, the Fishes, the Water Bearer and the Sea Goat. Fomalhaut (meaning ‘mouth of the southern fish’) is the brightest star in the western sky, but almost all the bright stars in this month’s morning sky are in the east. Fomalhaut is relatively nearby (only 25 light years away), and it is a mere 200 million years old, making it just a baby compared to the Sun. A huge disk of icy dust, four times the diameter of our solar system, surrounds Fomalhaut. There is a clear area around the star itself, which may have been caused by the formation of a system of planets. While the actual planets elude detection so far, it’s quite likely that there are planets

Sivuyile Manxoyi
sivuyile@saao.ac.za
X: @rassivuyile

The evening sky over Cape Town

The evening sky over Johannesburg