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Mike Lynch’s Skywatch: Mars meets the Planet George with a sheep watching - TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

I admit that my title for this column is a strange one, but there is an explanation. Let’s start with Mars. Since late last summer, Mars has been a part of the evening sky. In early October, Mars and Earth passed within 39 million miles of each other while traveling in their individual orbits around the sun, something astronomers call opposition.

Mars was very bright in October but has faded since then as the red planet is now over 100 million miles away. Despite that, Mars is still easily found high in the southern evening sky. Just look for the brightest star-like object in that part of the sky with a distinctive orange-red hue. If you’re still unsure you’re looking at Mars in the southern sky, the moon will confirm it for you this coming Wednesday evening. The moon will be parked just below the red planet in a very lovely conjunction or, as I like to call it, “celestial hugging.”

Unfortunately Mars is no longer much of a telescope target because it’s just so far away. Even with a larger scope, you’ll only see a reddish dot. However, with a small telescope you can use Mars to find the planet George, currently over 1.8 billion miles from Earth. Planet George will be the next brightest star-like object you come across below and a little left of Mars. You might see that it has a pale green glow to it. That’s George.

Courtesy of Mike Lynch

If you’re wondering why you haven’t heard of the planet George, it’s because that was the original name of the planet we now know as Uranus, the seventh planet out from the sun. It’s so far away that it takes 84 years to orbit our sun. Uranus is a giant planet, a gaseous globe made of mainly hydrogen, over 31,000 miles in diameter. For comparison, Mars is only 4,000 miles in girth.

So why was Uranus originally called George? When the famous English astronomer Sir William Herschel discovered his new planet in 1781, he named it George. The name didn’t sit well with other astronomers worldwide, so George’s official name was changed to Uranus, after the Greek god who was the father of Zeus, the king of the gods. Personally, I kind of like the name George!

Meanwhile, just above and a little to the right of Mars and George is a male sheep, the small but distinctive constellation Aries the Ram. Three moderately bright stars outline what kind of looks like the horn of a ram. The two brightest stars are Hamal and Sheratan. Hamal is a humongous star, more than 14 times the diameter of our own sun and almost 100 times more luminous! Hamal is over 850 trillion miles or 66 light-years away from Earth. It’s so far away that the light you see from Hamal today left that star back in 1956 (when yours truly was born).

Aries is one of the constellations that make up the zodiac, 12 constellations that stretch in a band across the night sky. The zodiac band runs about eight degrees on either side of the sun’s apparent path among the stars as Earth orbits the sun. Since all of the planets in our solar system, including Earth, orbit the sun in nearly the same mathematical plane, give or take a few degrees, the planets in our sky are always found somewhere in the zodiac band at any given time. Such is the case now with Mars and George, or Uranus if you prefer!

Not far away from Mars, Uranus, and Aries is an incredibly bright array of stars. These are the great winter constellations and next week in Starwatch I’ll tell you about a really cool way you can navigate your way around them.

Mike Lynch is an amateur astronomer and retired broadcast meteorologist for WCCO Radio in Minneapolis/St. Paul. He is the author of “Stars: a Month by Month Tour of the Constellations,” published by Adventure Publications and available at bookstores and adventurepublications.net.   Mike is available for private star parties. You can contact him at mikewlynch@comcast.net.

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https://www.twincities.com/2021/01/17/mike-lynchs-skywatch-mars-meets-the-planet-george-with-a-sheep-watching/

2021-01-17 12:00:00Z
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