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Stargazing

Wednesday, 9 July 2008

St. Leonard, New Brunswick

Current Weather

Current Weather

NA

25°C

Updated:Tuesday July 8 2008,23:00 ADT- St. Leonard
Sunrise 5:44
Sunset 21:27
Ceiling m

Updated:Tuesday July 8 2008,23:00 ADT - St. Leonard

Clear Sky Forecast

Tuesday Evening
Cloudy with showers
Temperature 26°C
Cloudy with showers
P.O.P. 70%
Wind S 10km/h
Tuesday Overnight
Cloudy with showers
Temperature 20°C
Cloudy with showers
P.O.P. 60%
Wind SW 5km/h
Updated: Tuesday July 8 2008,15:00ADT

Moon Phases

First Quarter
First Quarter
July 10
Full Moon
Full Moon
July 18
Last Quarter
Last Quarter
July 25
New Moon
New Moon
August 1

This Week in the Sky

The King of Summer Nights

The Little Donut in the Sky

While blue-white Deneb maybe the third brightest member of the Summer Triangle stellar formation and ranked as the 19th brightest star in our sky, don't be fooled by its apparent weakness. Marking the tail of Cygnus-the swan constellation (or head of the cross), this star is one of the most powerful and remote stars visible to the unaided-eye anywhere on Earth.

Located at least 1500 light years away, Deneb is still one of the brightest celestial beacons in our sky. Burning 70,000 times brighter than our sun, this supergiant is ranked as one of the brightest stars in the entire Milky Way galaxy. If Deneb was as close to Earth as Vega (25 light years) it would cast shadows at night and be visible even in daytime. But if it were as close as the wintertime powerhouse Sirius (8 light years), Deneb would shine brighter than the full moon. With over 25 times the mass of our Sun, astronomers estimate that in the next million years or so Deneb might blow itself up in a supernova explosion.

- Andrew Fazekas

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