Posted on 17 September 2009. Tags: 09/21, 2018, asteroid, constellation, Earth, Juno, jupiter, Mars, NASA, Near Earth Object Program, Pisces, space, Uranus
Asteroid Juno set to brighten your night September 21st 2009

Toward the end of September, the sun will turn a spotlight on the asteroid Juno, giving that bulky lump of rock a rare featured cameo in the night sky. Those who get out to a dark, unpolluted sky will be able to spot the asteroid’s silvery glint near the planet Uranus with a pair of binoculars.
“It can usually be seen by a good amateur telescope, but the guy on the street doesn’t usually get a chance to observe it,” said Don Yeomans, manager of NASA’s Near Earth Object Program Office
at JPL. “This is going to be as bright as it gets until 2018.”
Juno, one of the first asteroids discovered, is thought to be the parent of many of the meteorites that rain on Earth. The asteroid is composed mostly of hardy silicate rock, which is tough enough that fragments broken off by collisions can often survive a trip through Earth’s atmosphere
.
Though pockmarked by bang-ups with other asteroids, Juno is large; in fact, it is the tenth largest asteroid. It measures about 234 kilometers (145 miles) in diameter, or about one-fifteenth the diameter of the moon.
The asteroid, which orbits the sun on a track between Mars and Jupiter, will be at its brightest on Sept. 21, when it is zooming around the sun at about 22 kilometers per second (49,000 miles per hour). At that time, its apparent magnitude will be 7.6, which is about two-and- a-half times brighter than normal. The extra brightness will come from its position in a direct line with the sun and its proximity to Earth. (The asteroid will still be about 180 million kilometers [112 million miles] away, so there is no danger it will fall towards Earth.)
Skywatchers with telescopes can probably see Juno from now until the end of the year, but it is most visible to binoculars in late September. On or before Sept. 21, look for Juno near midnight a few degrees east of the brighter glow of Uranus and in the constellation Pisces. It will look like a gray dot in the sky, and each night at the end of September, it will appear slightly more southwest of its location the night before. By Sept. 25, it will be closer to the constellation Aquarius and best seen before midnight.
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 9.0/10 (1 vote cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Asteroid Juno Set to Brighten your Nights9.0101Related Content
- November 9, 2009 -- Google: Unveils Protocol For An Interplanetary Internet
Vint Cerf, Google's internet evangelist, has unveiled a new protocol intended to power an interplanetary internet. The Delay-Tolerant Networ... - November 8, 2009 -- Heads Up: Leonid Meteor Shower Expected (November 17, 2009)
Learn more about the Leonid meteor shower and when/how you can view it here!... - October 20, 2009 -- Look Up: Orionid Meteor Shower Tonight (October 20, 2009) – Updated
"Tonight until early Wednesday morning, the Orionid meteor shower will dazzle wish makers lucky enough to find cloudless, dark skies. Here's... - August 1, 2009 -- Supernova Remnant: SN 1006
A new star, likely the brightest supernova in recorded human history, lit up planet Earth's sky in the year 1006 AD. The expanding debris cl... - February 3, 2010 -- Finding: Earth’s ‘Twin Planet’ Takes Leap Forward
Professor Michel Mayor, the scientist who led the team that identified the first extrasolar planet in 1995, believes a planet similar in siz... - January 18, 2010 -- Our Solar System May Have Millions of “Twins”
Of the billions of stars in our Milky Way galaxy, 15 percent may host "twins" of our solar system, a new study says.
While that might not... - January 17, 2010 -- Neptune & Uranus: May Have Oceans of Liquid Diamond
Future humans won't have to wait to travel to Pandora for the chance to mine unobtanium, because Neptune and Uranus may have diamond iceberg... - January 12, 2010 -- Cosmic Explosion: Among the Brightest in Recorded History
Scientists have detected a flash of light from across the Galaxy so powerful that it bounced off the Moon and lit up the Earth's upper atmos... - December 6, 2009 -- Astronomers: Find Planet Denser Than Lead
Planets circle the stars that dot the heavens.
Before 1995, we couldn’t have said that with any certainty. Now we know of more than 300 p... - December 3, 2009 -- Adler Planetarium: Unleashes 2.5 Gigapixel Image Of The Galaxy
If you’re in Chicago, then you might want to head over to the Adler planetarium today, when they unveil an enormous 2.5 billion pixel mosaic...