San Saba News & Star
Weather Mostly Cloudy 78.0°F (69%)
Stargazer
Thursday, February 11, 2010 • Posted February 11, 2010

February 18, 1930, 24-year-old Clyde Thombaugh discovered a faint, remote object on photographic plates he had taken January 23 and 29 from Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. Astronomers credited him with discovering the ninth planet orbiting the Sun, and it was named Pluto.

It was so distant -- further than Neptune -- and so small and faint that for several decades little was learned about Pluto beyond its orbital characteristics.

During the explorations of the 1970s and 1980s, knowledge about our planetary neighbors was greatly expanded when space craft landed on or flew by every other planet, except Pluto. And we've still not visited Pluto, but that's about to change.

In July 2006, NASA's New Horizons spacecraft began its 91/2 year journey to the planet Pluto and beyond. But ironically before the craft even left the inner solar system, planet Pluto ceased to exist.

January 19, 2006, the International Astronomical Union, in a highly publicized and controversial decision, redefined "planet," and Pluto was reclassified as a dwarf planet. It is now seen as one of the largest objects in the Kuiper belt, a swarming cluster of small icy objects orbiting the Sun beyond Neptune -- similar to asteroid belt, the swarming cluster of small rocky objects orbiting between Mars and Jupiter.

In July 2015 New Horizons will fly past Pluto and its three moons making them the most remote objects to be studied up-close. It won't land but after zooming within 6,000 miles of Pluto, it should return images to dazzle our imagination and enough data to keep scientists busy for years.

If funding is available, New Horizons will continue its exploratory journey with fly-by visits to one or more other more distant Kuiper Belt objects between 2016 and 2020. To read more about the New Horizons mission, visit www.pluto.jhuapl.edu.

•SKY CALENDAR

•February 7, Sunday morning: The crescent Moon is to the upper right of Scorpius' brightest star Antares low in the southeast.

•February 11, Thursday morning: The crescent Moon is to the upper right of Mercury very low in the east southeast at dawn, and to the planet's lower left the next morning.

•February 13, Saturday: The Moon is new.

•February 14, Sunday: very early evening: Jupiter is four moonwidths above brighter Venus with an ever-so-thin crescent Moon to their left near the west southwestern horizon; they are visible soon after sunset and set soon thereafter; binoculars will help.

•February 16, Tuesday: early evening: Jupiter is one moonwidth to the right of brighter Venus very low in the west southwest just after sunset.

•February 21, Sunday: The Moon is at 1st quarter.

•February 25, Thursday evening and all night: Mars is to the left of the bright gibbous Moon; the faint Beehive Cluster is below them but will require binoculars to see.

•Naked-eye Planets.

Evening: As twilight ends, Jupiter is setting in the west as Venus begins its stint as the "evening star," Mars is still prominent in the east.

Morning: At dawn Mercury is very low in the southeast, Saturn higher is in the southwest, and Mars is setting in the west northwest.

•February 15:Astro Milestones is the 446th birthday of Galileo Galilei (1564-1642).

•February 19: is the 537th birthday of Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543).

Paul Derrick is an amateur astronomer who lives in Waco. Contact him at 918 N. 30th, Waco, Texas 76707, (254) 753-6920 or paulderrickwaco@aol.com. See the Stargazer Web site at stargazerpaul.com

This article has been read 50 times.
Comments
Readers are solely responsible for the content of the comments they post here. Comments do not necessarily reflect the opinion or approval of San Saba News & Star. Comments are moderated and will not appear immediately.
Comments powered by Disqus