Stargazing

Tuesday, 13 May 2008

Edmonton, Alberta

Current Weather

Current Weather

Clear

17°C
Clear

Updated:Tuesday May 13 2008,12:00 MDT- Edmonton City Centre Arpt
Sunrise 5:35
Sunset 21:26
Ceiling unlimited

Updated:Tuesday May 13 2008,12:00 MDT - Edmonton City Centre Arpt

Clear Sky Forecast

Tuesday Evening
Isolated showers
Temperature 12°C
Isolated showers
P.O.P. 30%
Wind W 15km/h
Tuesday Overnight
Mainly clear
Temperature 5°C
Mainly clear
P.O.P. 0%
Wind NW 15km/h
Updated: Tuesday May 13 2008,11:12MDT

Moon Phases

Full Moon
Full Moon
May 19
Last Quarter
Last Quarter
May 27
New Moon
New Moon
June 3
First Quarter
First Quarter
June 10

This Week in the Sky

The Tale of Three Giants

The Tale of Three Giantsr

Kite-shaped constellation Bootes, greets springtime stargazers high in the southeast evening skies. Making it easy to spot is the lead star of the Herdsman - brilliant orange-coloured Arcturus. An old stellar heavyweight, it is the 4th brightest star in the entire night sky. This giant ball of burning gas is almost 30 times larger than our own Sun and lies 36 light years away.

Meanwhile just to the right of Arcturus is the fainter 37 light year Eta Bootis. Twice the size, and only half the age of our Sun, Eta is burning up its fuel quickly and entering its final years of life. Soon it will swell and become a monster star over a hundred times the size of our Sun.

Further out to the right and fainter still is Tau Bootis. In 1995 Canada's first space telescope MOST, found evidence of a large planet around this 50 light year distant star.

Four times larger than our Jupiter, this world is actually towing its own sun. Astronomers say that the planet's gravity has forced Tau to rotate so it always keeps the same face to the planet.

- Andrew Fazekas

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