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Observable comet count is 1199
Current exoplanet count is 5893
Current longitude II of the GRS is 72°
Impact Probablity of 2024 YR4: Insignificant
Asteroid | Size | Probability | Date |
2024 YR4 | 40—90 m | Insignificant | 22 December 2032 |
Please do not let this worry you. The asteroid has been detected just recently meaning that the orbital elements are not yet accurately determined, while they can alter any time due to gravitational pulls.
Today Monitor
Mars: January 16, 2025
Jupiter: January 10, 2026
Saturn: September 21, 2025
Uranus: November 21, 2025
Neptune: September 23, 2025
Evening: January 10, 2025 at 47.2°E
Morning: June 1, 2025 at 45.9°W
Morning: December 25, 2024 at 22.0°W
Evening: March 8, 2025 at 18.2°E
Morning: April 21, 2025 at 27.4°W
Evening: July 4, 2025 at 25.9°E
Morning: August 19, 2025 at 18.6°W
Evening: October 29, 2025 at 23.9°E
Morning: December 7, 2025 at 20.7°W
Evening: Febrary 19, 2026 at 18.1°E
Wednesday, 5 November
Friday, 5 December
given for 00:00 UT
Date | Size | Age | Angle | Phase |
---|---|---|---|---|
23 Feb 2025 | 30.61' | 24.48 | -6.502° | ![]() |
24 Feb 2025 | 31.06' | 25.48 | -6.683° | ![]() |
25 Feb 2025 | 31.54' | 26.48 | -6.463° | ![]() |
22 Mar 2025 | 30.16' | 21.97 | -6.602° | ![]() |
23 Mar 2025 | 30.54' | 22.97 | -7.220° | ![]() |
24 Mar 2025 | 31.00' | 23.97 | -7.497° | ![]() |
25 Mar 2025 | 31.50' | 24.97 | -7.380° | ![]() |
26 Mar 2025 | 32.03' | 25.97 | -6.841° | ![]() |
04 Apr 2025 | 31.86' | 5.54 | 6.674° | ![]() |
05 Apr 2025 | 31.40' | 6.54 | 7.159° | ![]() |
06 Apr 2025 | 30.97' | 7.54 | 7.233° | ![]() |
07 Apr 2025 | 30.58' | 8.54 | 6.935° | ![]() |
19 Apr 2025 | 30.14' | 20.54 | -6.609° | ![]() |
20 Apr 2025 | 30.49' | 21.54 | -7.247° | ![]() |
21 Apr 2025 | 30.91' | 22.54 | -7.602° | ![]() |
22 Apr 2025 | 31.38' | 23.54 | -7.618° | ![]() |
23 Apr 2025 | 31.89' | 24.54 | -7.248° | ![]() |
24 Apr 2025 | 32.39' | 25.54 | -6.459° | ![]() |
02 May 2025 | 32.05' | 4.19 | 6.908° | ![]() |
03 May 2025 | 31.53' | 5.19 | 7.524° | ![]() |
04 May 2025 | 31.04' | 6.19 | 7.652° | ![]() |
05 May 2025 | 30.59' | 7.19 | 7.335° | ![]() |
06 May 2025 | 30.21' | 8.19 | 6.642° | ![]() |
18 May 2025 | 30.56' | 20.19 | -6.624° | ![]() |
19 May 2025 | 30.92' | 21.19 | -6.950° | ![]() |
20 May 2025 | 31.32' | 22.19 | -7.010° | ![]() |
21 May 2025 | 31.75' | 23.19 | -6.758° | ![]() |
30 May 2025 | 32.13' | 2.87 | 6.436° | ![]() |
31 May 2025 | 31.63' | 3.87 | 7.137° | ![]() |
01 Jun 2025 | 31.12' | 4.87 | 7.336° | ![]() |
02 Jun 2025 | 30.65' | 5.87 | 7.064° | ![]() |
29 Jun 2025 | 31.11' | 3.56 | 6.528° | ![]() |
02 Oct 2025 | 30.80' | 10.17 | -6.602° | ![]() |
03 Oct 2025 | 31.28' | 11.17 | -6.712° | ![]() |
04 Oct 2025 | 31.79' | 12.17 | -6.413° | ![]() |
13 Oct 2025 | 32.01' | 21.17 | 6.426° | ![]() |
14 Oct 2025 | 31.60' | 22.17 | 7.017° | ![]() |
15 Oct 2025 | 31.20' | 23.17 | 7.219° | ![]() |
16 Oct 2025 | 30.83' | 24.17 | 7.068° | ![]() |
17 Oct 2025 | 30.51' | 25.17 | 6.617° | ![]() |
29 Oct 2025 | 30.28' | 7.48 | -6.622° | ![]() |
30 Oct 2025 | 30.70' | 8.48 | -7.213° | ![]() |
31 Oct 2025 | 31.18' | 9.48 | -7.461° | ![]() |
01 Nov 2025 | 31.71' | 10.48 | -7.298° | ![]() |
02 Nov 2025 | 32.24' | 11.48 | -6.672° | ![]() |
10 Nov 2025 | 32.23' | 19.48 | 7.097° | ![]() |
11 Nov 2025 | 31.72' | 20.48 | 7.804° | ![]() |
12 Nov 2025 | 31.23' | 21.48 | 8.024° | ![]() |
13 Nov 2025 | 30.78' | 22.48 | 7.808° | ![]() |
14 Nov 2025 | 30.39' | 23.48 | 7.230° | ![]() |
26 Nov 2025 | 30.27' | 5.72 | -6.459° | ![]() |
27 Nov 2025 | 30.63' | 6.72 | -7.095° | ![]() |
28 Nov 2025 | 31.05' | 7.72 | -7.447° | ![]() |
29 Nov 2025 | 31.52' | 8.72 | -7.439° | ![]() |
30 Nov 2025 | 32.02' | 9.72 | -7.008° | ![]() |
08 Dec 2025 | 32.44' | 17.72 | 6.680° | ![]() |
09 Dec 2025 | 31.91' | 18.72 | 7.561° | ![]() |
10 Dec 2025 | 31.38' | 19.72 | 7.916° | ![]() |
11 Dec 2025 | 30.87' | 20.72 | 7.788° | ![]() |
12 Dec 2025 | 30.43' | 21.72 | 7.247° | ![]() |
26 Dec 2025 | 31.06' | 5.93 | -6.615° | ![]() |
27 Dec 2025 | 31.43' | 6.93 | -6.624° | ![]() |
Date | Size | Age | Angle | Phase |
---|---|---|---|---|
12 Jan 2025 | 31.85' | 12.07 | -6.565° | ![]() |
13 Jan 2025 | 31.60' | 13.07 | -6.448° | ![]() |
26 Jan 2025 | 30.57' | 26.07 | 6.621° | ![]() |
27 Jan 2025 | 30.96' | 27.07 | 6.622° | ![]() |
08 Feb 2025 | 31.60' | 9.48 | -6.682° | ![]() |
09 Feb 2025 | 31.36' | 10.48 | -6.624° | ![]() |
22 Feb 2025 | 30.21' | 23.48 | 6.703° | ![]() |
23 Feb 2025 | 30.61' | 24.48 | 6.800° | ![]() |
24 Feb 2025 | 31.06' | 25.48 | 6.559° | ![]() |
07 Mar 2025 | 31.74' | 6.97 | -6.762° | ![]() |
08 Mar 2025 | 31.39' | 7.97 | -6.766° | ![]() |
09 Mar 2025 | 31.05' | 8.97 | -6.404° | ![]() |
21 Mar 2025 | 29.85' | 20.97 | 6.665° | ![]() |
22 Mar 2025 | 30.16' | 21.97 | 6.852° | ![]() |
23 Mar 2025 | 30.54' | 22.97 | 6.721° | ![]() |
03 Apr 2025 | 32.33' | 4.54 | -6.682° | ![]() |
04 Apr 2025 | 31.86' | 5.54 | -6.784° | ![]() |
05 Apr 2025 | 31.40' | 6.54 | -6.493° | ![]() |
17 Apr 2025 | 29.65' | 18.54 | 6.506° | ![]() |
18 Apr 2025 | 29.86' | 19.54 | 6.754° | ![]() |
19 Apr 2025 | 30.14' | 20.54 | 6.698° | ![]() |
30 Apr 2025 | 32.98' | 2.19 | -6.438° | ![]() |
01 May 2025 | 32.55' | 3.19 | -6.675° | ![]() |
02 May 2025 | 32.05' | 4.19 | -6.485° | ![]() |
15 May 2025 | 29.78' | 17.19 | 6.605° | ![]() |
16 May 2025 | 29.99' | 18.19 | 6.587° | ![]() |
28 May 2025 | 32.97' | 0.87 | -6.528° | ![]() |
29 May 2025 | 32.60' | 1.87 | -6.460° | ![]() |
11 Jun 2025 | 29.82' | 14.87 | 6.526° | ![]() |
12 Jun 2025 | 30.02' | 15.87 | 6.530° | ![]() |
24 Jun 2025 | 32.85' | 27.87 | -6.457° | ![]() |
25 Jun 2025 | 32.68' | 28.87 | -6.502° | ![]() |
08 Jul 2025 | 29.84' | 12.56 | 6.561° | ![]() |
09 Jul 2025 | 30.07' | 13.56 | 6.600° | ![]() |
21 Jul 2025 | 32.45' | 25.56 | -6.493° | ![]() |
22 Jul 2025 | 32.38' | 26.56 | -6.624° | ![]() |
04 Aug 2025 | 29.76' | 10.20 | 6.646° | ![]() |
05 Aug 2025 | 29.99' | 11.20 | 6.748° | ![]() |
06 Aug 2025 | 30.28' | 12.20 | 6.541° | ![]() |
17 Aug 2025 | 32.23' | 23.20 | -6.553° | ![]() |
18 Aug 2025 | 32.11' | 24.20 | -6.755° | ![]() |
19 Aug 2025 | 31.94' | 25.20 | -6.550° | ![]() |
31 Aug 2025 | 29.61' | 7.75 | 6.661° | ![]() |
01 Sep 2025 | 29.78' | 8.75 | 6.848° | ![]() |
02 Sep 2025 | 30.05' | 9.75 | 6.733° | ![]() |
13 Sep 2025 | 32.46' | 20.75 | -6.508° | ![]() |
14 Sep 2025 | 32.22' | 21.75 | -6.794° | ![]() |
15 Sep 2025 | 31.95' | 22.75 | -6.665° | ![]() |
27 Sep 2025 | 29.47' | 5.17 | 6.540° | ![]() |
28 Sep 2025 | 29.56' | 6.17 | 6.805° | ![]() |
29 Sep 2025 | 29.74' | 7.17 | 6.779° | ![]() |
30 Sep 2025 | 30.01' | 8.17 | 6.453° | ![]() |
11 Oct 2025 | 32.77' | 19.17 | -6.687° | ![]() |
12 Oct 2025 | 32.41' | 20.17 | -6.652° | ![]() |
25 Oct 2025 | 29.42' | 3.48 | 6.651° | ![]() |
26 Oct 2025 | 29.52' | 4.48 | 6.681° | ![]() |
27 Oct 2025 | 29.69' | 5.48 | 6.423° | ![]() |
07 Nov 2025 | 33.37' | 16.48 | -6.472° | ![]() |
08 Nov 2025 | 33.10' | 17.48 | -6.565° | ![]() |
21 Nov 2025 | 29.39' | 0.72 | 6.513° | ![]() |
22 Nov 2025 | 29.46' | 1.72 | 6.567° | ![]() |
05 Dec 2025 | 33.44' | 14.72 | -6.511° | ![]() |
18 Dec 2025 | 29.42' | 27.72 | 6.502° | ![]() |
19 Dec 2025 | 29.48' | 28.72 | 6.570° | ![]() |
Source: NASA/GSFC
Another First: NASA Webb Identifies Frozen Water in Young Star System
May 14, 2025
An illustration of Sun-like star HD 181327 and its surrounding debris disk. The star is at top right. It is surrounded by a far larger debris disk that forms an incomplete ellpitical path and is cut off at the top and at right. There’s a huge cavity between the star and the disk. The label Artist's Concept appears at lower left.
Source: stsci.edu/news
14 May 2025
A science team has combined data from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope and the Keck II telescope to see evidence of cloud convection on Saturn’s moon Titan in the northern hemisphere for the first time. Most of Titan’s lakes and seas are located in that hemisphere, and are likely replenished by an occasional rain of methane and ethane. Webb also has detected a key carbon-containing molecule that gives insight into the chemical processes in Titan’s complex atmosphere.
Source: esawebb.org
29 April 2025
This new Picture of the Month from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope features an astounding number of galaxies. The objects in this frame span an incredible range of distances, from stars within our own Milky Way, marked by diffraction spikes, to galaxies billions of light-years away. The star of this field is a group of galaxies, the largest concentration of which can be found just below the centre of this image. These galaxies glow with white-gold light. We see this galaxy group as it appeared when the Universe was 6.5 billion years old, a little less than half the Universe’s current age. The image on the left combines infrared data from both Webb and the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, showcasing the galaxy cluster against a backdrop of thousands of other galaxies. The image on the right adds X-ray data from ESA’s XMM-Newton space observatory and NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory …
Source: esawebb.org
The perfectly picturesque spiral galaxy known as Messier 81, or M81, looks sharp in this composite from NASA's Spitzer and Hubble Space Telescopes and NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer.
Click to enlarge or show full screenWed, 14 May 2025 19:51 GMT
Source: www.nasa.gov
Image credit: Grok (modified with red star)
2025-04-18 Exoplanets
Thanks to NASA's JWST, astronomers have detected signatures of life on the exoplanet K2-18b, 124 light-years away in Leo, which is 2.6 times larger and 8.6 times more massive than the Earth. The planet's atmosphere contains dimethyl sulfide (DMS), naturally produced by living organisms. Already in September 2023 NASA reported that the JWST has revealed the presence of carbon-bearing molecules including methane and carbon dioxide. Link to source 🔗
Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, W. Balmer (JHU), L. Pueyo (STScI), M. Perrin (STScI)
2025-03-18 Exoplanets
HR 8799 is a young star with 1.5 solar masses, about 130 light-years away in Pegasus and known to have four giant gas planets rich in carbon dioxide gas. NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope took a spectrum and imaged the four planets while the light of the star has been blocked. Link to source 🔗
Image credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/R. Proctor/J. Pollard
2025-03-14 Exoplanets
Next to the Alpha Centauri system, Barnard's star is the second nearest at 5.96 light-years away in Ophiuchus. As of March 2025, the red dwarf star, only 0.16 as massive as the sun, is home to four known (confirmed) planets each of them less than half the mass of Earth and none of them orbiting inside the habitable zone. Only between 2.8 and 4.1 million kilometers away from the star on 2.34 to 6.74 days orbits, their surfaces are supposed to be heat scorched with no outlook for life. Link to source 🔗
Image credit: European Space Agency
2025-02-07 solar system
2024 YR4 is an extremely faint asteroid with a low albedo of 5% to 25% and is 40 to 90 meters in size which, as of today, has a minute 2.2% probability of impacting Earth at 14:02 UTC on December 22, 2032. The asteroid rotates around its axis every 19.5 minutes and travels around the sun on a highly 0.662 eccentric orbit plane once in about 4 years at a mean distance of 2.5165 AU. Its last perihelion (sun passage) occurred on 2024-Nov-22. The iron-nickel asteroid that created the Barringer Crater in Arizona 50,000 years ago was about 50 meters wide. Link to source 🔗
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (Caltech-IPAC)
2025-02-01 Exoplanets
Gliese 12 (TOI-6251) is a red dwarf star some 40 light-years away in Pisces. Its known planet, b, about the same size as Venus and, because a red dwarf is much cooler than our sun, the planet also receives the same amount of energy from its host star although orbiting much closer and once in about 12.8 days. In astronomical terms, the planet lies nearby and is a potentially terrestrial, temperate exoplanet inviting further investigations, such as atmospheric spectroscopy with the help of the JWST. Link to source 🔗
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
2025-01-31 Universe
Scheduled for launch past February 2025, SPHEREx is NASA's latest orbiting space telescope, designed for a spectral survey of the entire sky for a duration of tentatively two years in order to explore the origins of the universe. Link to source 🔗
Image credit: NASA / CXC / A. Hobart / Josh Barnes, University of Hawaii / John Hibbard, NRAO
2025-01-20 galaxies
Astronomers at the University of Tokyo discovered a rare quasar-like object with a long-term periodic luminosity variation with a cycle of about 190 days. Two black holes moving periodically at high speed may be the cause of the variability, hypothetically a supermassive blackhole binary. The extremely luminous object lies in the constellation of Hydra and is designated J0909+0002 in short. Link to source 🔗
Image credit: NAOJ
2025-01-15 Exoplanets
Using the James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers scanned the atmosphere of the planet GJ1214 b located 48 light-years away in Ophiuchus. Instead of a hydrogen rich super-Earth, or a water world, the new data, in spite of many uncertainties, revealed concentrations of carbon-dioxide (CO2) comparable to the levels found in the dense CO2 atmosphere of Venus. Link to source 🔗
Backlog
No, we are not on Facebook but proudly on AstroBin with Mille Gracie to the author Salvatore Iovene:
If anybody is interested in the night life of bats, here is a funny 1-minute MP4 video (24MB).
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Constellation | Pegasus |
Distance | 1,040.00 parsec |
Spectral type | M V |
Mass | 0.49 xSun |
Temperature | 3680°K |
Known planet(s) | 1 |
Eltanin (33 Gam Dra) in Dra [HIP 87833]
Distance: 148 light-years, Magnitude: 2.24
Eltanin is a 2nd-magnitude star and, in spite of designated Gamma, the brightest in Draco. The name is Arabic for "head of the dragon". It is a class-K evolved giant star which has swollen to nearly 50 sun radii. Cooler but larger, it shines 470 times brighter than the sun. Eltanin probably has a 13th magnitude red dwarf compnanion.
Star Chart | DSS IR Image 🔗GJ 244 A (Sirius A ) in Canis Major
Distance: 9 light-years, Magnitude: -1.4
Dominating the early year sky, Sirius, the 'Dog Star', in Canis Major is the brightest star in the sky. Measuring 2.02 solar masses, 1.7 solar radii and outshining the sun 25 times, Sirius exhibits a metal-rich spectrum. It has a faint white dwarf companion and is 200-300 million years old. The distance separating Sirius A from its companion varies between 8.2 and 31.5 AU. The companion, Sirius B, is the first detected White Dwarf star.
Star Chart | DSS IR Image 🔗
M43 (Diffuse Nebula) in Orion
Magnitude: 9
The diffuse nebula M43 surrounds the variable star NU Orionis (HD 37061), a rather cool, young star cooking in a rich HII region. M43 is often mistaken for part of M42.
Star Chart | DSS IR Image 🔗Piscis Austrinus (southern), area rank: 60
Located south of Aquarius, its constellation picture shows it as drinking down the water flowing from Aquarius. The other name for the 1st-magnitude star Fomalhaut is "Lonely Star of Autumn", since it is the only 1st-magnitude star in the autumn sky.
Star ChartP/2016 BA14 (Panstarrs)
Comet P/2016 BA14 was discovered on Jan. 22, 2016 by PanSTARRS on Hawaii. Initially thought to be an asteroid, follow-up observations showed a faint comet tail. As a possible fragment of comet 252P/LINEAR, and half of the size (110 meters), P/2016 BA14 follows an unusually similar orbit to that of comet 252P/LINEAR. The comet flew by Earth on March 22, 2016 at a distance of about 3.5 million km, the third closest flyby of a comet in recorded history.
2013 MZ5 (NEO)
Semi-major: 1.54841 AU, Size: 0.3 km
As of discovery date June 18, 2013, asteroid 2013 MZ5 is the 10,000th known Near Earth Object. It is about 300 meters wide and does not pose any threat as its orbit lies too far off Earth's, about that of Mars and is not eccentric enough to get too close. The NEO was discovered by the Pan-STARRS-1 telescope, located on the 10,000-foot (convert) summit of the Haleakala crater on Maui.
Styx (moon of Pluto)
Styx, formerly S/2012 P1, is a small natural satellite of Pluto discovered in 2012 as Pluto's fifth and smallest known moon. It is believed that the moon is the result of the collision between Pluto and a large object and likely irregular in shape. Styx is approximately 7 × 5 km across.
TYC 1422-614-1 c (in Leo)
Mass: 10 xJup
SMA: 1.37 AU
Period: 559.3 days
Distance: 672.41 parsec
Category: Hot Jovian
ESI: 0.15