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Post Info TOPIC: April 2007


L

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RE: April 2007
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Tonight, Venus passes by the Pleiades.
Look to the West, just after sunset,  and look for the brightest `star`.  The conjunction  should make for a good photographic opportunity.

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L

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Abrams Planetarium Sky Calendar for April has been made available for free this month

APRIL07_CAL
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Credit Abrams Planetarium

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L

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Two of the most famous objects in the night sky are teaming up the next few evenings: the planet Venus and the Pleiades star cluster. Theyre well up in the west at nightfall. Venus is the brilliant evening star. The Pleiades, which is also known as the Seven Sisters, looks like a tiny dipper. Its just to the upper right of Venus this evening. The planet and cluster will be even closer to each other over the next few nights.

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SKYLIGHTS
April 18, 19: International Astronomy Week. Local amateur astronomers Pat Kelly will speak on Comets, Meteors, while Blair MacDonald will present Black Holes, Structure and Theory. Talks will be held at 7 p.m. at the Cole Harbour Public Library on April 18 and at the Keshen Goodman Public Library on April 19.

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The month of April holds the key to some exciting sky events that will add great satisfaction to the lives of observers. Make note of the fact that the first decent meteor shower of the year will take place on the night of April 22. This is the annual Lyrid meteor shower. Activity starts to build for observers looking to the northeast around midnight. By finding the bright star Vega in Lyra, you are looking at the region in the sky where the Lyrids are born.

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L

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Astronomy Day
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Astronomy Day is Saturday, April 21, and in addition to its regular slate of Saturday planetarium programs the Lafayette Natural History Museum and Planetarium is planning its annual Astronomy Day Star Party.

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L

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RE: April 2007
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RU Virginis
The Mira variables undergo some of the most dramatic behaviour among all of the variable stars. For just that reason, they were among the earliest variable stars discovered and followed by astronomers trying to understand how our universe works. Four centuries after their discovery, the Mira variables remain one of the most challenging variable star classes to understand. All Miras are "dying stars", soon to shed most of their mass, leaving only a white dwarf behind. To fully understand these objects, we have to understand late stellar evolution, the physics of high-amplitude pulsations and convection, mass loss and stellar winds, and all of the microphysics and chemistry that ties them all together. Individual Mira stars are themselves in transition, but they also represent another cosmic transition in progress. Because the Mira stars are in the stage of their evolution during which most of their mass is returned to the galaxy through stellar winds and mass loss, they are a key mechanism for cosmic chemical enrichment for new generations of stars. Our understanding of how our galaxy and the larger universe are evolving depends in part upon the study of Mira variables.

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The April full moon comes today at 5:15 p.m. Universal Time (12:15 p.m. Central Daylight Time), presenting us with the farthest, smallest full moon of 2007.
Seven full moons after todays full moon, the closest and largest full moon of the year will light up the night on October 26. And seven full moons after that, the cycle will come full circle, with the smallest full moon recurring on May 20, 2008.

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The moon
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P3040002 P3040003
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Jupiter's satellite positions
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JupSatApr07

Jupiter's satellite positions

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