Here is our October guest blog from renowned astronomer, Dr. David Levy.
Skyward for October 2020
David H. Levy
The long summer of 2020
When Earth
crossed the summer solstice on June 21, 2020, we were all mired in the midst of
the most serious pandemic in more than a century. Summer is the most important season for me
for one reason: it was many years ago,
during the Summer of 1960, that I fell in love with the night sky. This summer just concluded had a start filled
with disappointment.
On June 21,
1960, I was riding my bicycle to school when its front wheel struck a curb and
broke my arm. My cousin, Roy Kaufman,
gave me a book about the planets as a get-well present. I read and reread that book all summer, and
by September I was enjoying my first look through a telescope, at the planet
Jupiter. The view of the planet with its
bands of color, combined with its four big moons, was one I have never
forgotten. To this day Jupiter remains
my favorite planet. As I never tire of
looking at this world, I was able to view Jupiter this summer also.
The summer
of 2020 began with a huge handicap, but something appeared in the sky that quickly
altered my perception. That something
was Comet Neowise. Not since Comet
McNaught in 2007 has such a bright comet graced our sky. I first saw Neowise on the morning of July
5. The full Moon was setting in the
west, and the sky was brightening rapidly in the east. With a pair of good binoculars I found
Capella, then carefully moved them toward the eastern horizon. Suddenly, the beautiful comet made its
appearance with a bright glowing head and a brilliant tail. As the comet faded slightly over the next
few days its tail grew longer.
Comet
Neowise might have been a highlight of this Summer season, but there were other
highpoints. Over the course of the
summer I enjoyed sixteen “AN” or all night observing sessions, nights under the sky that went on from dusk
to dawn. Most of these were interrupted
by lengthy periods of rest during which I would watch some television, but the
final one was not. Session 21755AN2
began when my friend David Rossetter and I observed for several hours at the
dark site run by the Tucson Amateur Astronomers Association. One back home, I enjoyed more hours searching
for comets until dawn spelled an end.
Searching for comets is something I have enjoyed for many
years. It is an activity of which I
never tire, even though I have not found a new comet since October 2006. After all, the search is what is so important
to me. It is refreshing, it is fun,
and it recharges my soul and my spirit.
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