The planet Mercury is often
cited as the most difficult of the five bright planets to see.
Called an "inferior
planet" because its orbit is nearer to the Sun than the Earth's, Mercury
-- scarcely more than half as far from the Sun as Venus is -- always appears
from our vantagepoint to be in the same general direction as the Sun and it's
usually lost in the sunlight.
Yet it's not really hard
to see. You simply must know when and where to look, and find a clear horizon.
Three times a year this
rocky little world emerges into the evening twilight for a few weeks. At three
other times in the year it ventures a little way into the morning sky. Yet,
even at these "greatest elongations" it can't be easily seen unless
other conditions are favorable. It is important, for instance, that Mercury
be positioned as nearly directly above the Sun's place as possible, a condition
that is best fulfilled just after sunset in the late winter or early spring
and before sunrise in late summer or early autumn.
For those living in the
Northern Hemisphere, a great window of opportunity for viewing Mercury in the
evening sky has just opened up. The window will remain open through at least
March 19, providing an ample number of chances to see this so-called elusive
planet with your own eyes.
When and where
Currently, Mercury is visible
about 45 minutes after sunset, very near to the horizon, just to the south (left)
of due west. Yet, if your sky is clear and there are no tall obstructions to
your view (like trees or buildings) you should have no trouble in seeing it
as a very bright "star" shining with just a trace of a yellowish-orange
tinge.
On the evening of March
4, Mercury will be shining at magnitude -1.1, which means
that only one other object in that same evening sky will be brighter: Sirius
(the brightest of all stars).
In the evenings that follow,
Mercury will slowly diminish in brightness, but it will also slowly gain altitude
as it gradually moves away from the vicinity of the Sun.
Be sure to cast a glance
low toward the western horizon just after sunset on Friday evening, March 11.
You will see a lovely, wire-thin crescent Moon, less than 1˝ days after passing
through New Moon phase and only 3-percent illuminated. There, less than four
degrees to the right and slightly below this slender sliver will be a bright
"star" shining in the twilight -- that's Mercury.
It will arrive at its greatest
elongation the very next night, 18-degrees to the east of the Sun. Take note
that the Moon will have moved well away from Mercury; far to its upper left.
Shining this night at magnitude -0.2 (a trifle brighter than the star Arcturus,
in the constellation of Boötes), Mercury sets more than 1˝ hours after
the Sun, making this its best evening apparition of 2005.
Just a phase
Mercury, like Venus, appears
to go through phases like the Moon.
When March began, its disk
was 86 percent illuminated by the Sun, giving it a distinct gibbous appearance
in telescopes, which is also why it started out the month appearing so bright.
By the time it arrives at its greatest elongation, it will appear roughly half-illuminated,
and the amount of its surface illuminated by the Sun will continue to decrease
in the days that follow.
So correspondingly, when
it begins to turn back toward the Sun's vicinity after March 12, it will fade
at a rather rapid pace.
In fact, by the evening
of March 19, Mercury's brightness will have dropped to magnitude +1.5, slightly
dimmer than the star Regulus in Leo; only 1/11 as bright as it was on March
4. (On the astronomers' magnitude scale, larger numbers represent dimmer objects.)
In telescopes Mercury will appear as a narrowing crescent phase. Thus, in all
likelihood, March 19 will be one of your last views of it.
The combination of its lowering
altitude, plus its descent into a much-brighter sunset glow should finally render
Mercury invisible by the final week of March. It will pass through inferior
conjunction - between the Sun and Earth - on March 30.
Legends and fact
In old Roman legends, Mercury
was the swift-footed messenger of the gods. The planet is well named for it
is the closest planet to the Sun and the swiftest of the Sun's family, averaging
about 30 miles per second; making its yearly journey in only 88 Earth days.
Interestingly, the time it takes Mercury to rotate once on its axis is 59 days,
so that all parts of its surface experiences periods of intense heat and extreme
cold.
Although its mean distance
from the Sun is only 36 million miles, Mercury experiences by far the greatest
range of temperatures: nearly 900 degrees Fahrenheit (482 Celsius) on its day
side; minus 300 Fahrenheit (-184 Celsius) on its night side.
In the pre-Christian era,
this planet actually had two names, as it was not realized it could alternately
appear on one side of the Sun and then the other. Mercury was called Mercury
when in the evening sky, but was known as Apollo when it appeared in the morning.
It is said that Pythagoras,
about the fifth century B.C., pointed out that they were one and the same.
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Joe Rao
serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium.
He writes about astronomy for The New York Times and other publications, and
he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News
12 Westchester, New York.
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DEFINITION
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Magnitude is
the standard by which astronomers measure the apparent brightness of objects
that appear in the sky. The lower the number, the brighter the object.
The brightest stars in the sky are categorized as zero or first magnitude.
Negative magnitudes are reserved for the most brilliant objects: the brightest
star is Sirius (-1.4); the full Moon is -12.7; the Sun is -26.7. The faintest
stars visible under dark skies are around +6.
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