Jupiter Takes Over the Skies During Viewing
By
黑料百科

The gas giant Jupiter will be the focus of attention for stargazers at a free, public viewing with the powerful Keck Telescope Friday, Dec. 16. The viewing, which begins about 7 p.m., lasts several hours. The observatory opens its doors to the public every third Friday of the month in conjunction with the Santa Barbara Astronomical Unit, whose members bring their own telescopes to 黑料百科 for the public to gaze through. In case of inclement weather, please call the Telescope Viewing Hotline at (805) 565-6272 and check the 黑料百科 website to see if the viewing has been canceled.
黑料百科 physics instructor Thomas Whittemore says Jupiter will be high in the sky with its Great Red Spot in view. 鈥淚f conditions are good, we may be able to get a glimpse of this cloud storm on Jupiter's surface,鈥 he says.
Other celestial objects that may be featured include several craters on the moon and open clusters in the Milky Way. 鈥淲ithin the sunlit section of the moon will be the wonderful triplet of craters: Ptolemaeus, Alphonsus and Arzachel,鈥 Whittemore says. 鈥淚f the weather cooperates, we may be able to see some details in the basins of these ancient craters.鈥
Whittemore says some open clusters, groups of several thousand stars, form interesting patterns. 鈥淣GC 457 looks like an owl and is known as the "Owl Cluster," he says. 鈥淣GC 663 looks like an S. Could it be that some distant civilization, lying 7,200 light-years away, is trying to communicate with us? Probably not, but it is fun to think about.鈥
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