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The Celestial Medicine Man

oneandonly wrote on 7/9/2006 12:46:14 PM :

During the evening hours during this week, as the bright Moon moves away to the east, we can look high toward the southern part of the sky and trace out the "celestial medicine man" Ophiuchus, the Serpent Bearer, a star pattern that is teamed with the constellation Serpens. 

King James I of England, who reigned in the 1600s, once referred to Ophiuchus as "a mediciner after made a god," because the Serpent Bearer was often identified with Aesculapius, who in Greek Mythology, was originally a mortal physician who never lost a patient by death.  This alarmed Hades, god of the dead, who prevailed on his brother, Zeus, to liquidate Aesculapius. 

In recognition of his merits, however, Aesculapius was put up into the sky as a constellation. 

In the sky he appears not so much like a man but more like a large upended oblong structure with a peaked roof where a star as bright as the North Star appears to shine.  That star is the brightest of Ophiuchus and is known as Ras Alhague, the "head of the Serpent Holder." [Map]

An oddity about Ophiuchus is that the ecliptic???the apparent path of the Sun, Moon and planets???actually cuts through this constellation.  In fact, the Sun spends more time traversing through Ophiuchus than Scorpius!  It officially resides in Scorpius for less than a week: from November 23 through 29.  It then moves into Ophiuchus on November 30 and remains within its boundaries for more than two weeks???until Dec. 17.  Yet the Serpent Holder is not considered a member of the Zodiac and so must defer to Scorpius!  Perhaps the reason was that in order to include Ophiuchus, there would have been an unlucky thirteen "Houses of the Sun" instead of the currently accepted twelve.  

Serpens the Snake is the only constellation cut in two.  The Serpent's head lies west of Ophiuchus and is known as Serpens Caput; while to the east of Ophiuchus lies smaller Serpens Cauda, the tail.  Four stars mark the head of Serpens.  The three brightest???Beta, Gamma and Kappa Serpentis???are set in a nearly equilateral triangle. 

Off to the south of the Serpent's head is Messier 5, one of the finest globular clusters.  Believed to contain over a half million stars, M5 can just be seen without optical aid as a fuzzy "star" on a dark, clear night. 

Small binoculars show a tiny fuzz ball, while giant binoculars show the cluster rapidly brightening toward the center with a slight hint of a mottled texture.  The late Walter Scott Houston, who for many years edited the Deep Sky Wonders column for Sky & Telescope magazine once wrote of M5: "It is one of the better globular star clusters for small telescopes, because it actually gives the impression of being a cluster rather than an amorphous glow."

In 1916, Edward Emerson Barnard (1857-1923) discovered a star in Ophiuchus that appeared to move against the general star background at a far more rapid pace across our line of sight than most of the other stars. 

Now called Barnard's "Runaway Star," a 9.5 magnitude (binoculars are necessary) red dwarf star.  It is traveling toward the north at 10.3 arc seconds per year, the record for proper motion, which is the apparent motion of a star against the background of fixed stars.  It's only six light years from Earth, and ranks as the second-nearest star to the solar system.  Its actual velocity through space is about 103 miles per second.

The association with a serpent may have come from the belief that, by shedding its own skin, it is rejuvenated.  And to this day, the symbol of the medical profession is the caduceus, which is a winged staff with serpents twined around it.    

 

oneandonly wrote on 7/9/2006 12:46:49 PM :
Moncton101 wrote on 7/9/2006 6:08:52 PM :

 

 

I was planing to do a search for this stuff for my own use.

YOU have saved me a lot of time..THX.

oneandonly wrote on 7/9/2006 12:47:51 PM :

1 AU, or astronomical unit, is the distance from the Sun to Earth, or about 93 million miles.

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.

Degrees measure apparent sizes of objects or distances in the sky, as seen from our vantage point. The Moon is one-half degree in width. The width of your fist held at arm's length is about 10 degrees. The distance from the horizon to the overhead point (called the zenith) is equal to 90 degrees.

Declination is the angular distance measured in degrees, of a celestial body north or south of the celestial equator. If, for an example, a certain star is said to have a declination of +20 degrees, it is located 20 degrees north of the celestial equator. Declination is to a celestial globe as latitude is to a terrestrial globe.

Arc seconds are sometimes used to define the measurement of a sky object's angular diameter. One degree is equal to 60 arc minutes. One arc minute is equal to 60 arc seconds. The Moon appears (on average), one half-degree across, or 30 arc minutes, or 1800 arc seconds. If the disk of Mars is 20 arc seconds across, we can also say that it is 1/90 the apparent width of the Moon (since 1800 divided by 20 equals 90).

 

oneandonly wrote on 7/9/2006 12:48:41 PM :
oneandonly wrote on 7/9/2006 12:51:10 PM :
Sky Calendar

Monday, 7/3
First Quarter Moon, 12:37 p.m.

The First Quarter Moon can be seen in the southeast sky in the afternoon, and is well up in the South at sunset.

Monday, 7/3
Earth at Aphelion, 7:00 p.m.

The Sun is farthest from the Earth for the year, at about 1.01669AU, or about 94,507,900 miles ( 152,095,700 km). An ???AU??? is an ???Astronomical Unit, or the average distance between the Sun and Earth. It seems odd, but the Earth is farthest from the Sun in July, closest in January!

Wednesday, 7/5
Moon/Jupiter, 10:00 p.m.

The moon passes about 5 degrees South of bright Jupiter.

Friday, 7/7
Moon/Antares, late evening

The Moon passes very near bright star Antares in Scorpius (in the southwest), getting closer and closer until moonset. The closest approach is after moonset in many locations. From parts of Australia and New Zealand, this is seen as an occultation (eclipse).

Monday, 7/10
Full Moon, 11:02 p.m.

While Full Moons are pretty, they stay up all night and are so bright that they drown out many fainter objects.

Monday, 7/17
Last Quarter Moon, 3:12 p.m.

For the late night observer or the sharp-eyed morning sky watcher, Last Quarter Moons can be observed from roughly midnight until roughly noon the following day.

Thursday, 7/20
Moon/Pleiades, 5:00 a.m.

The Waning Crescent Moon passes less than a half-degree from the star cluster, the Pleiades. Approaching sunrise may hamper observations in some eastern locations.

Friday, 7/21
Mars/Regulus, dusk

Mars passes close to the star Regulus, quite low in the western sky after sunset. The closest approach occurs at about 4 a.m. on Saturday morning, long after the two have sat in most locations.

Tuesday, 7/25
New Moon, 12:31 a.m.

New Moons cannot be seen, but they mark the end of one lunar cycle and the beginning of the next. Look for a thin Crescent Moon in the West after sunset on Thursday evening.

Thursday, 7/27
Moon/Mars, dusk

Very sharp-eyed observers may be able to catch Mars near the western horizon, slightly below and the right of a thin Crescent Moon just as it gets dark this evening. The closest approach of about 1 degree (two lunar diameters) is at 1 p.m. EDT, but the two are separated by only a few degrees as night approaches.

Friday, 7/28
South Delta Aquarid Meteors, 3:00 a.m.

This is not a major shower, and is spread out over about a two-week period. It typically it does not have a sharp peak (meaning that rates don't vary dramatically from day to day). At maximum, a single observer in a dark location may see about 20 meteors from this shower in an hour. Aquarius, the constellation from whence the meteors seem to radiate, is in the southeast at 3 a.m.

Monday, 7/31
Moon/Spica, 9:00 p.m.

The nearly First Quarter Moon passes less than a half-degree from the star Spica in Virgo. Look to the southern or southwestern sky. Bright Jupiter is a few degrees to the East (more or less left, depending on your geographic location). The Moon occults or eclipses the star as viewed from parts of the Southern Hemisphere.

oneandonly wrote on 7/9/2006 12:51:42 PM :

Planets Visible Now
For July 2006

Mercury
Mercury passes between the Sun and Earth in what is known as an ???inferior conjunction??? on July 18, and is lost in the glare of the Sun all month.

Venus
Venus is in the morning sky, rising about two hours before the Sun in the East-northeast. It is bright, but most of the time it is very low to the horizon or awash in the glow of the rising Sun.

Mars
Mars starts the month in Cancer but quickly slips across the border to Leo. You might catch a glimpse early in the month, but it is too deep in the Sun???s glow to be seen easily. By perhaps the 15th it is gone altogether.

Jupiter
Jupiter still dominates the evening sky, in Libra, but is not terribly well placed, low in the southwestern sky and nightfall. It sets before midnight. Due to the geometry of the orbits of Earth and Jupiter, and their motion, Jupiter has been moving in a retrograde (backward) motion since March. However, on July 6 it returns to normal (prograde) motion.

Saturn
Saturn is in Cancer, and rapidly becoming overcome by the glare of the Sun. It is gone altogether well before the end of the month.