Moon, Venus and Jupiter Dazzle on December 1

by Tammy Plotner on December 1, 2008

Venus, Jupiter and Moon - Shevill Mathers

Venus, Jupiter and Moon - Shevill Mathers

Are you ready for some spectacular sky scenery tonight? Then keep your fingers crossed for clear weather as the slender crescent Moon, Venus and Jupiter provide one of the finest sky shows we’ve seen all year – a conjunction in the west to dazzle the eye and boggle the brain! But just exactly why does seeing bright planets draw together command our attention? Step inside and let’s find out…

“Your eye is like a digital camera,” explains Dr. Stuart Hiroyasu, O.D., of Bishop, California. “There’s a lens in front to focus the light, and a photo-array behind the lens to capture the image. The photo-array in your eye is called the retina. It’s made of rods and cones, the fleshy organic equivalent of electronic pixels.” Near the center of the retina lies the fovea, a patch of tissue 1.5 millimeters wide where cones are extra-densely packed. “Whatever you see with the fovea, you see in high-definition,” he says. The fovea is critical to reading, driving, watching television. The fovea has the brain’s attention. The field of view of the fovea is only about five degrees wide.” Tonight, Venus, Jupiter and the crescent Moon will all fit together inside that narrow angle, signaling to the brain, “this is worth watching!”

When it comes to our eyes, almost every photoreceptor has one ganglion cell receiving data in the fovea. That means there’s almost no data loss and the absence of blood vessels in the area means almost no loss of light either. There is direct passage to our receptors – an amazing 50% of the visual cortex in the brain! Since the fovea doesn’t have rods, it isn’t sensitive to dim lights. That’s another reason why the conjunctions are more attractive than the surrounding starfields. Astronomers know a lot about the fovea for a good reason: it’s is why we learn to use averted vision. We avoid the fovea when observing very dim objects in the eyepiece.

Let’s pretend we’re a photoreceptor. If a light were to strike us, we’d be “on” – recording away. If we were a ganglion cell, the light really wouldn’t do much of anything. However, the biological recorder would have responded to a pinpoint of light, a ring of light, or a light with a dark edge to it. Why? Light in general just simply doesn’t excite the ganglion, but it does wake up the neighbor cells. A small spot of light makes the ganglion go crazy, but the neighbors don’t pay much attention. However, a ring of light makes the neighbors go nuts and the ganglion turns off. It’s all a very complicated response to a simple scene, but still fun to understand why we are compelled to look!

Many of us have been watching the spectacle draw closer over the last several days. How many of you have seen the Venus and Jupiter pair appear one over the top of each other – looking almost like a distant tower with bright lights? What we’ve been observing is Kepler’s Laws of Planetary Motion in action – and it’s a great way to familiarize yourself with celestial mechanics. What’s happening tonight is called a conjunction. This is a term used in positional astronomy which means two (or more) celestial bodies appear near one another in the sky. Sometimes the event is also called an appulse.

No matter what you call it, what you’ll see tonight is a worldwide happening and will look hauntingly like a “happy face” painted on the early evening sky. Don’t miss it!

Our deepest appreciation goes to Shevill Mathers for his dedication in getting this shot to share with us, and all the rest of the great astrophotographers at Northern Galactic and Southern Galactic who have also gave it their best shot! There can be only one…

  • heather

    bethlehem, pa its cloudy and raining here! I hate that i had to miss out on this wonderful event. look forward to seeing photos.

  • David Madison

    Two moons of Jupiter are visible in that image.

  • ~ Lisa

    I went out with my kids tonight and showed them. They thought it was awesome, as did I.

    How often does this happen where we can see these two planets so close to the moon?

  • Shaun

    Was able to see it quite nicley in Edmonton Alberta Canada, but it was not a smily face as the moons cresent was the other way around so it looked like a frowning face!

  • john

    I missed it as I was indoors. I do appreciate the photo. God gave us a sense of humor, this is a good example of God’s sense of humor. Let’s enjoy the beauty and the joke too.

  • http://junepatrick.multiply.com patrick

    I was able to see it here in Manila Philippines and it was an amazing sky scenery the moon, jupiter and venus form a smiley face it was really amzing!!! =D

  • Jesper

    I’m in Europe, and Venus was behind the moon here in the evening.

    Unfortunately we didn’t see anything here, because the sky was fully covered with clouds. :-(

  • http://theastronomer.tripod.com Tammy Plotner

    I am so glad everyone enjoyed the spectacle! Unfortunately, I got clouded out… But knowing that others got to see is reward enough.

    For a couple of quick astronomy lessons, the eclipitc plane in Australia isn’t reversed – it’s simply further north. It would seem “backwards” to those of us from the northern hemisphere because we normally stand with our backs to the north and view the ecliptic as passing from left to right – or basically east -south/east to west -south/west. There, you would stand with your back to the south and the ecliptic would pass from your right to left… or east – north/east to west north/west. If the position of the planets looks slightly different in Shevill’s photo than what you saw, remember the time difference! Celestial mechanics slow for no man… There’s at least 14 hours between Queensland and the east coast of the US!

    As for the Moon appearing upside down? I’m sorry. I don’t buy that. No matter where you are on Earth, the lighted side of the crescent Moon will always face towards the setting (or rising) Sun. It’s not my law – it’s Kepler’s. Shevill’s photograph doesn’t show an eclipse, just some very outstanding work to help reveal a phenomena known as “earthshine” – a rarity captured on film! And yes… if you look very carefully, he also captured some of Jupiter’s moons, too. (nice catch, to our eagle-eyed audience member!)

    While the Moon will have moved higher tonight, Jupiter and Venus will still be quite close this evening and well worth another look. For those of you with kids, try using your hands to measure how far the Moon has moved in just a day and guess how far it will move in another day… Do the same with the planets! While it’s not extremely scientific, it will instill a love of astronomy in your children that will last a lifetime.

    Wishing you clear skies!

  • Cheri D

    I love in Central NY. This site was truly amazing. I didn’t know about it prior, so was unprepared on my ride home from work at 7 pm. Maybe I’ll see it again in 2052!

  • http://twitter.com/frank_einstien jesvin

    http://scorpfromhell.blogspot.com/2008/12/celestial-smiley-or-thanksgiving-sky.html This is from one of my twitter friends. In Cochin, India it was an exact smiley!

  • mugambi agostino satlite

    I was at a coastal town,mombasa in kenya and enjoyed the view from 6pm to around 11pm when the three amazingly “dissapeared into the ocean.
    The view even looked more interesting as these bodies found new partners;two telecom boosters red lights positioned the three in between them at 10pm making a pentagonal shape.
    I had though contacted people from across the country as early as 6pm.
    As we chewed ngomba at the coastl line viewing sun set,i alarmed some frends in a car but never took the issue serious and dismissed only to recieve sms in there phones much laters when this GOD DONE EXPERIMENT was almost over.They could not believe it when they had that the experiment will be repeated after 680 years!!! but it was over,over,over.GOD IS GREAT TO PERFORM TO US THIS FOR FREEEEEEEE.NO RAW MATERIALS

  • edwin mutwiri

    This was an amazing show of my life, God appears and presents himself to us in very different and spectacular way, i said a little prayer to thank God for the worders he’s created for mankind. it was great at the ocean side cosatal city of mombasa -kenya.

  • http://www.germanschool.co.ke Stephanie Jaeger

    Last Night at 19:30 – 20:00hrs East African Time the moon was amazing in Nairobi:
    The sickle was lying low and Venus & Jupiter sat above it like the eyes of a smily! I had never seent he moon smiling at me quite as nicely before!!!!!
    Unfortunately clouds came up and we could no longer watch it

  • Larry

    Somebody flipped this image on the Horizontal axis. The waxing Moon is pointing the wrong direction.

  • Dankwa

    Unbelievable. I saw this yesterday evening in Accra, Ghana, and I thought to myself, that is a spectacular view, need to view it through a telescope. Unfortunately, by the time I got home, it was too low on the horizon for me. But now that I know it was Venus and Jupiter, I will be ready tonight. hopefully I can get a picture to remind me.

  • Shaun

    Sorry for the shakey photo, it was gusting winds on 60km! out there lats night!
    but this phot does indeed show you that on this side of earth, Edmonton, Alberta Canada that it was a frown, not a smile!

    http://cid-8dfccdaa0d97193a.skydrive.live.com/self.aspx/Public/DSC00987.JPG

  • Abigail

    it’s really pretty. i just saw it tonight. i thought that it was just 2 bright stars yesturday and thought nothing off it. until my teacher told us in class today, so I recorded it. it was a wonderful sight

  • Sarah

    I live in Oman….I didnt get da news about it……It was by luck dat i went to da terrace to hang my clothes dat i actually did see da scene. It was just a smiley face….popping from behind da mountains. It was da most beautiful scenes ever witnessed. SubhanAllah. It was very damn clear….very bright. It was in da night dat i came to know wat dey actually were. this sight will again be seen after 52 years…(from da newspapers)!!

  • http://theastronomer.tripod.com Tammy Plotner

    LOL! Well, I will admit the planets have gone below the smile for your time zone! The eyes have slipped to the chin in Edmonton…

    It’s really wonderful to see the different reactions of everyone from around the world and how each one of you got to view the planets in a slightly different position from each of your respective time zones. It has been such a pleasure to view each of your photos and to read and share in your experiences!!

    “May we all shine on… Like the Moon and stars and the Sun…”

  • Franch

    I saw it. I am from the Philippines and saw it while I was at my 5th floor terrace. It looked exactly like a smiling face from my view. Didn’t even know it was going to happen. I guess I should count myself lucky to have chanced upon it.

Previous post:

Next post: