Sunday 3 November 2024

November Skies
A brief overview of what to see in the sky with the unaided eye:

Stars and Constellations
●    The constellations of Cassiopeia and Cepheus are high in the northern sky and nearly overhead during November evenings
●    The “Great Square” of Pegasus is nearly overhead during early evening and Andromeda extends northward from the north-eastern star of the Great Square
●    South of Pegasus, fainter stars comprise the constellations of Aquarius, Pisces and Cetus. While not easy to identify in light-polluted skies, these constellations are easy to pick out from locations away from urban areas during clear moonless nights
●    The Cygnus constellation is bright and high in the western sky while the other stars of the Summer Triangle (Vega and Altair) are lower in the western sky
●    The summer Milky Way is still visible in the western and northwestern sky (in dark skies)

Planets
●    Mercury is visible very low in the southwestern sky following sunset and reaches greatest eastern elongation east of the sun November 16
●    Venus shines brightly low in the southwestern sky following sunset
●    Mars rises during mid-evening and is nearly overhead during early morning in the Cancer constellation
●    Jupiter rises during early evening and shines brightly in the eastern sky
●    Saturn is visible in the southern sky during the evening in the Aquarius constellation and sets near midnight

Moon Phases
●    New Moon November 1, 08:47 EDT
●    First Quarter Moon November 9, 00:55 EST
●    Full Moon November 15, 16:29 EST
●    Last Quarter Moon November 22, 20:28 EST

Noteworthy Sky Events
●    Jupiter dominates the eastern sky with Mars to its east brightening during the month
●    Leonid meteor shower peak during the night of November 17

Sky Resources Online
Some website resources for sky charts, weekly sky events, and more information:
●    astrogeo.ca/skylights
●    www.heavens-above.com
●    In-the-sky.org
●    www.skyandtelescope.org
●    www.skymaps.com

Star Chart for mid-November, mid-evening (courtesy of www.heavens-above.com):