Note: Do not expect to see the Milky Way as you do in photographs that you see online. Seeing the Milky Way requires a special effort for most people, but it’s well worthwhile. The clearest skies appear just after a cold front passes through. Remember that your eyes need about 20 minutes to adjust to the dark.įrom a properly dark, moonless viewing site, you can see the huge, hazy band of the Milky Way and maybe even the Great Rift, a large, dark strip of cosmic dust and gas that hides part of the Milky Way and appears to divide it in two, as shown on this month’s Sky Map below. Look for a night when the Moon is young or it’s a New Moon. Moonlight, security lights, and streetlights are enough to spoil the view. A typical suburban neighborhood won’t be sufficiently dark. You need a dark location to observe the Milky Way in all its glory. Was it dangerous? Not to worry: The city dwellers were merely seeing the Milky Way for the first time in their lives! In 1994, when the Northridge earthquake knocked out power (and therefore light) to Los Angeles, emergency centers received calls from concerned citizens who reported a “giant silvery cloud” hovering over the city. Sadly, the increase in light pollution over the past century has turned the Milky Way from a common sight into one that many folks have never seen. The Milky Way used to be visible on every clear, moonless night, everywhere in the world. Credit: Bill Saxton NRAO, AUI, NSF Robert Hurt NASA. Image showing where Earth resides within the Barred Spiral Milky Way. Within this huge spiral structure, Earth and the Sun and its planets are located in one of the spiral arms of the Milky Way (called the Orion Arm) which lies about two-thirds of the way out from the center of the Galaxy (and one third from the center of the galaxy). Imagine a disk with spiral arms reaching out from the center. The current hypothesis is that the bar structure acts as a type of stellar nursery, fueling star birth at their centers. While the Milky Way appears as an arch to our eyes, it is actually a spiral galaxy-a sprawling pinwheel of starlight and dust containing 100 to 400 billion stars! Specifically, it’s a “barred spiral galaxy” because it has a central bar bar-shaped structure composed of stars. Added together, these myriad stars produced the soft glow that we see as the Milky Way. It glows with the combined light of billions upon billions of faraway stars, each too faint for our eyes to resolve. Late summer is one of the best times of year to view the full splendor of our galaxy, the Milky Way.įrom our vantage point within the galaxy, the Milky Way appears as a huge, shimmering cloud of light arching from the southern horizon to high overhead. Just click here or on the image below to open the printable map-then bring outside! Here’s how to see the Milky Way in the summer night sky. Welcome to the Night Sky Map for August! This month, we look at one of the night sky’s most magnificent sights: the summer Milky Way-the galaxy in which our Sun and all of its planets (including us!) are located.
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