Need to....
i love how even animals get just as frustrated as we do over things like that.
The Best Meteor Showers in 2019⠀ ⠀ Here are highlights of the major meteor showers for 2019. For the best possible viewing experience, find a dark location free from light pollution, make yourself comfortable in a reclining chair, and wear plenty of warm clothing (as appropriate). ⠀ ⠀ January 4: The Quadrantids⠀ April 23: The Lyrids⠀ May 6: The Eta Aquariids⠀ July 29: The Delta Aquariids⠀ August 12–13: The Perseids⠀ October 22: The Orionids⠀ November 5: The Southern Taurids⠀ November 18: The Leonids⠀ December 14: The Geminids⠀ December 23: The Ursids⠀ ⠀ Don’t miss meteor showers with Star Walk 2 app!⠀ ⠀ Image Credit: jvantland (www.southwestgreetingcards.com)⠀ Text Credit: Sky & Telescope (http://bit.ly/2rUzXyv) via Instagram http://bit.ly/2AlsVrn
Usefull info for 2019
I’ve been doing a lot of stargazing lately so this will come in handy!
What’s Up - July 2018
What’s Up for July?
Mars is closest to Earth since 2003!
July’s night skies feature Mars opposition on the 27th, when Mars, Earth, and the Sun all line up, and Mars’ closest approach to Earth since 2003 on the 31st.
If you’ve been sky watching for 15 years or more, then you’ll remember August 2003, when Mars approached closer to Earth than it had for thousands of years.
It was a very small percentage closer, but not so much that it was as big as the moon as some claimed.
Astronomy clubs everywhere had long lines of people looking through their telescopes at the red planet, and they will again this month!
If you are new to stargazing, this month and next will be a great time to check out Mars.
Through a telescope, you should be able to make out some of the light and dark features, and sometimes polar ice. Right now, though, a huge Martian dust storm is obscuring many features, and less planetary detail is visible.
July 27th is Mars opposition, when Mars, Earth, and the Sun all line up, with Earth directly in the middle.
A few days later on July 31st is Mars’ closest approach. That’s when Mars and Earth are nearest to each other in their orbits around the Sun. Although there will be a lot of news focusing on one or the other of these two dates, Mars will be visible for many months.
By the end of July, Mars will be visible at sunset.
But the best time to view it is several hours after sunset, when Mars will appear higher in the sky.
Mars will still be visible after July and August, but each month it will shrink in apparent size as it travels farther from Earth in its orbit around the Sun.
On July 27th a total lunar eclipse will be visible in Australia, Asia, Africa, Europe and South America.
For those viewers, Mars will be right next to the eclipsing moon!
Next month will feature August’s summer Perseids. It’s not too soon to plan a dark sky getaway for the most popular meteor shower of the year!
Watch the full What’s Up for July Video:
There are so many sights to see in the sky. To stay informed, subscribe to our What’s Up video series on Facebook.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

