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Tonight - Mar. 28: What is that bright 'star' by the Moon?
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Good day.
On Wed. night, 28-29 Mar. the Moon and Saturn will again come in close proximity as they did on 01 Mar. In NA they will be separated by less than 1° and in the northeast they will be separated by less than 0.5°. This is *very* close. There will be an actual occultation of Saturn at this time but only visible in the far North-Atlantic.
If you happen to be outside Wednesday night/Thursday morning, 28/29 March, and see the Moon with a bright planet very close-by this is what you are seeing. Those who are interested can see the two throughout the night with the closest separation approximately at the local times listed below:
Closest - EDT (UT - 4) Boston: ~1:55 AM Thursday, 29 Mar. NYC: ~2:00 AM Thursday, 29 Mar. Miami: ~2:20 AM Thursday, 29 Mar.
CDT (UT - 5) Chicago: ~12:45 AM Thursday, 29 Mar. Houston: ~01:10 AM Thursday, 29 Mar.
MDT (UT - 6) Edmonton: ~11:00 PM Wednesday, 28 Mar. Denver: ~11:30 PM Wednesday, 28 Mar.
PDT (UT - 7) LA: ~10:30 PM Wednesday, 28 Mar. Seattle: ~09:50 PM Wednesday, 28 Mar.
And especially for Nancy and her Moon Moving Mental Munchkins: North Freedom, Wi.: ~12:42 AM Thursday, 29 Mar., 2007. Moon-Saturn separation ~0.5° Moon Azim. @ 245° (that's WSW since we know the Zetas aren't capable of measuring things in degrees, almost as if they were a crazed little old lady.) Moon Elev. @ 47° (nicely high for good Zeta-viewing)
I'm sure the rest of you lowly humans can find the Moon on your own.
Clear skies and have fun.
R.
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