September will be a wonderful month to spot the two largest planets of our solar system. Back at the Winter Solstice Great Conjunction, so many of us were wowed to see Jupiter and Saturn just a tenth of a degree apart (only a quarter of the width of the moon). Jupiter orbits the sun at more than twice the speed of Saturn, so the distance between them has now grown to 17 degrees. If you hold out your arm and flash the “rock on” sign, that’s the distance between your pinkie and pointer. And they are easy to spot. They will be the first lights you see in the southeast as the sky darkens. Jupiter is about fifteen times brighter, so you’ll see it first. Then Saturn will emerge, just one “rock on” to the right of Jupiter. Both will be about a third of the way between horizon and zenith in the evening sky.
The two gas giants were at their closest to Earth during their oppositions last month, so they are still at their brightest and visible for most of the night. But close is relative for planet watchers. Jupiter is 375 million miles away, and it takes the sunlight reflected by its clouds 33 minutes to reach us. Saturn is over twice as far at 842 million miles or 75 light-minutes. If you are able to view through a small telescope, you can be amazed by the four largest moons of Jupiter and the rings of Saturn. As you watch them throughout the month, be sure how to notice that they are rising two hours earlier and appear more in the south as the sky darkens. The Waxing Gibbous Moon makes it even easier to spot both worlds. It will be below Saturn on September 16th and below Jupiter on September 17th. If you’re looking up on a moonless night, watch for our Milky Way in the south to the right of Jupiter and Saturn and then streaming high overhead in the dark skies of the Driftless.
You may want to include Jupiter and Saturn in your Autumnal Equinox celebration. We pass from summer into fall the afternoon of September 22nd at 2:21pm. The first sunset of the new season will be due west at 7pm. The Full Harvest Moon was two days earlier, so the Waning Gibbous Moon will rise that evening a little after 8pm. Don’t miss brilliant Venus in the southwest before it sets at 8:30. Then look southeast to spot Jupiter and Saturn. And enjoy the view of other worlds as ours heads into autumn.
John Heasley is an astronomy educator and stargazer who enjoys connecting people with the cosmos. He volunteers with NASA/JPL as a Solar System Ambassador , with the International Dark-Sky Association as an Advocate, and the International Astronomical Union as a Dark Sky Ambassador. For more information about stargazing in southwest WI, like Driftless Stargazing LLC on Facebook and find out whenever there’s something awesome happening in the skies. Driftless Dark Skies appears monthly in the Voice of the River Valley.
Fall’s season-ending show
Out for our evening walk, our dog Riley seems intent on exploring the smells of fall: decaying leaves and animal scents along the trail. I’m focused on the show. A patch of first color hangs above the canopy, lit up like a sunset. A fluorescent glaze coats the trees,...
Many ways to experience Driftless Wisconsin
So we headed up the hill under a twilighted sky, summiting around dusk and descending in the dark. I know this trail well. Each deadfall, tree root, and protruding rock fixed in my mind. But in the dark, things get misplaced. As two weeks ago when I tripped over a...
Driftless Wisconsin: not an ordinary place
The land makes difficult work for city planners and civil engineers. Straight lines and level ground are in short supply. Trying to find a place to build a house or plot a road is rather like trying to set a beer can on the fender of a ‘59 Cadillac; there are no flat...