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Hosted by Chris Beckett & Shane Ludtke, two amateur astronomers in Saskatchewan. actualastronomy@gmail.com

This month in episode 516 we talk about the many things to see in the night sky including, carbon stars, double stars, 24P Schaumasse is a Comet that just cracks 8th magnitude making it visible in binoculars. We also detail how people can explore Jupiter through a telescope followed by many NGC and Messier Objects you can see in the winter sky.

 

Jan 1 - Struve 627 in Orion Colorful Double Star 

Jan 2 - 40 Harmonia at opposition

a large S-type (silicate) asteroid located in the inner region of the Main Asteroid Belt between Mars and Jupiter. 

Jan 3 - Full Moon

 - Quadrantid Meteors ZHR = 120 in Evening for NA observers

- Moon interferes

They are named after Quadrans Muralis, a 19th-century constellation that is no longer officially recognized. Constellation Origin: Lalande created the constellation to honor the mural quadrant, a large wall-mounted scientific instrument he and his nephew used at the observatory of l'École Militaire in Paris to measure star positions.

Jan 6 - Regulus 0.5-degrees South of Moon

Jan 8 - 24P Schaumasse Comet just cracks 8th magnitude, at Mag. 7.9 it is firmly a Bino comet

Jan 10 - Last Quarter

- Jupiter at Opposition - mag. -2.5, 46 arc seconds in Gemini

- NGC 1851 well placed but I'd need to dig a trench to see it

- Carbon Star RV Monoceros 

Jan 11 -Follow Arcturus into daylight this week

- M79, M42, M43, M78 well placed

Jan 12 - Lunar Curtis X visible

Jan 14 - Antares 0.6-degrees N of Moon - not for us

- NGC's 1807 and 1817 well placed

Jan 15 - NGC 1514 well placed

Jan 17 - NGC 2169 well placed

Jan 18 - New Moon

Jan 23 Saturn, Neptune 4-degrees S of Moon

- 44 Nysa at Opposition M=8.8

- M3, M5 well placed

Jan 26 - First quarter

- Lunar Straight Wall

- Eyes of Clavius

Jan 28 - Jeweled Handle on Moon

Jan 31 - Jupiter 4-degrees S of Moon

- Crater Baily

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