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Astronomy

Astronomical Observing News (12/21 to 12/27)

Dec 21, 2011 07:13 PM

This week's AON is brief, but there's plenty to see. Without adieu, here's the news:

  • Through March 2012—The Garradd comet shines in the sky! Here's how to observe it!

A night sky filled with stars and a comet.

  • December 21, 2011—The moon is at its perigee (364,800 km from Earth).
  • December 22, 2011—Winter solstice.
  • December 23, 2011—There's a Mercury-moon conjunction. This means Mercury is at greatest elongation (22 degrees west of the sun), and the moon is at its most southern declination.
  • December 24, 2011—Mercury and the bright star Antares conjure in the sky. This is interesting because Antares is a binary star system, meaning it had a companion star. Antares' companion star, which is called Antares B, is smaller than Antares, which means it rotates around Antares. If a companion star was the same size, they would rotate around each other.

Nebula with vibrant colors in a starry night sky.

Also, there's a new moon, which is fun to observe! If I missed anything, please post in the comments below.

The next big software update for iPhone is coming sometime in April and will include a Food section in Apple News+, an easy-to-miss new Ambient Music app, Priority Notifications thanks to Apple Intelligence, and updates to apps like Mail, Photos, Podcasts, and Safari. See what else is coming to your iPhone with the iOS 18.4 update.

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