Oh MY God My no my Wow, demi apa event2 ini tertata di depan muka gue? shit!!!Sumpah ini bakal jadi nightmare deh. why? iyaaaaa gw kan pengen banget hadir disetiap tuh event2 nya tanpa terkecualiiii... dan itu kayaknya gak akan tercapai dan cuman mimpi belaka dan sama aja kayak NIGHTMARE kaaaaan aaaaaaaaaah menyebalkan.. kesel kesel kesel
Skywatchers will get a glimpse of some truly amazing night
sky events in 2014, from an asteroid zooming past one of the night sky’s
brightest stars to amazing full moons and Martian meteor showers.
Here are some of the highlights we’ll be watching out for during the year’s most promising night sky celestial events:
March 20: A Bright Star Winks Out
An exceedingly rare celestial event is predicted for early this morning when
an asteroid will briefly hide one of the brightest stars in the sky from view. The asteroid in question is 163 Erigone, and the star that it will obscure is Regulus, in the constellation of Leo, the Lion.
April 14-15: Lunar Eclipse and Mars Close Approach
Mars will come to within 57.4 million miles (92.4 million km)
of our planet, making its closest approach to Earth since January 2008. All through the night,
Mars will
resemble a dazzling star shining with a steady fiery-colored tint; its
brightness will match Sirius, the most luminous of all the stars.
As a bonus, later that very same night (actually the early hours of April 15),
North
America will have a ringside seat to a total lunar eclipse when the
full moon becomes transformed into a mottled reddish ball for 78 minutes
as it is completely immersed in the shadow of the Earth. This total lunar eclipse will be the first one widely visible from North America in nearly 3.5 years.
April 28-29: A “Ring of Fire” Eclipse that Nobody Will See?
It is quite
possible that only penguins will witness the annular (ring) phase of this eclipse,
as it will occur within the uninhabited region of Wilkes Land in
Antarctica. A partial solar eclipse will be visible from Australia.
May 24: A Possible Outburst of Bright Meteors
Perhaps the most dramatic sky event in 2014 could come at the start
of Memorial Day weekend. In the predawn hours of Saturday, May 24,
our planet is expected to sweep through a great number of dusty trails left behind in space by a small comet (known as P/209 LINEAR).
Aug. 10: Biggest Full Moon of 2014
On Aug. 10, the moon turns full at 2:09 p.m. EDT, and just nine minutes earlier
it will arrive at its closest point to the Earth in 2014
at a distance of 221,765 miles (356,896 km), making this a so-called
“supermoon.” Expect a large range in ocean tides (exceptionally low to
exceptionally high) for the next few days.
Aug. 12: The Perseid Meteor Shower
This one is more of a lowlight than a highlight, unfortunately.
The annual summer performance of the brilliant Perseid meteor shower will be severely hindered by the light of a nearly full moon.
Aug. 18: A Brilliant Double Planet
An hour before sunrise, low in the east-northeast sky,
the two brightest planets, Venus and Jupiter, will be strikingly close together.
The two worlds will be separated by less than two-thirds of the
apparent width of the moon in our sky, making for a very eye-catching
sight.
Oct. 8: Another Total Lunar Eclipse!
This eclipse favors the western half of North America, the Hawaiian
Islands, eastern Asia, Indonesia, New Zealand and the eastern half of
Australia. Across central and eastern North America,
the moon will set while still completely immersed in Earth’s shadow.
Oct. 19: Near Collision of a Comet with Mars
All eyes will be on the Red Planet in October as Comet C/2013
A1(Siding Spring), discovered by Robert H. McNaught at Australia’s
Siding Spring Observatory, will
pass extremely close to Mars.
The
comet will come so close, in fact, that its coma may envelop Mars, as
well as create a stupendous shower of meteors as seen from the Martian
surface.
Oct. 23: A Partial Eclipse of the Sun
The moon’s penumbral shadow will fall over much of North America as
well as extreme eastern Siberia, producing a partial solar eclipse.
Greatest eclipse, with more than four-fifths of the sun’s diameter covered by the moon, will occur in M’Clintock Channel, an arm of the Arctic Ocean which divides Victoria Island from Prince of Wales Island in the Territory of Nunavut, Canada.
Dec. 13: The Geminid Meteor Shower
This is another lowlight. The Geminids, regarded by many observers as the best of the annual meteor showers,
has the misfortune of occurring during the time of a last-quarter moon, which will pretty much squelch all but the brightest meteors.
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