





THE NIGHT SKY DURING THE MONTH OF February 2000.


and 
Latitude 53 degs 24 mins North.
Longitude +3.0 degs West.
Jan 31st 5th 10th 15th 20th 25th Mar 1st
SUNRISE 08:00 07:51 07:42 07:32 07:22 07:11 06:59
SUNSET 16:52 17:01 17:11 17:21 17:31 17:41 17:50
| PHASES OF THE MOON DURING February 2000 | ||||
NEW MOON![]() on 5th at 13hr:03m |
FIRST QUARTER![]() on 12th at 23hr:21m |
FULL MOON![]() on 19th at 16hr:26m |
LAST QUARTER![]() on 27th at 03hr:53m |
|

THE PLANETS THIS MONTH.
MERCURY.

VENUS.
MARS.
MARSWATCH - latest observations of the red planet.
For More information on Asteroids Click Here.
Launched in October 1989, the Galileo Jupiter Probe entered orbit around the great planet on December 7th 1995. The Project Galileo Homepage will give you up-to-date information and the very latest images returned.
Plus these pages will give daily and weekly reports of this and other Comets progress.
March 2000 News and Sky Notes.HERE SOON!
These pages are maintained by Gerard Gilligan.
Return to the The Liverpool Astronomical Society Home Page.
ASTEROIDS.
JUPITER.
Jupiter is a little more favourable than Mars, showing a disk well over 35 arcseconds across and transiting just after 17:oohrs at the start of the month and setting at 22:45hrs at the end. On the 11th (at 05:00hrs) Jupiter lies 5° North of the Moon.
SATURN.
Saturn, at only 18 arcseconds across, shows less disk detail than its more illustrious neighbour but its ring system, tilted at 19° to the ecliptic, more than makes up for any blandness. Saturn isn't always quiescent; look carefully at the disk using a high magnification. If the seeing is good i.e. when the air is still enough then at least one pastel-shaded band may be seen and occasionally a `white storm' blows up which is quite evident.
URANUS and
NEPTUNE.
Uranus is at Solar conjunction on the 6th, whilst Neptune is only just starting to recover from its Solar conjunction late last month. It will be May when both planets begin to improve sky locations.
PLUTO.
Pluto will be out of view until after April in morning skies.

METEORS.

COMETS.

OCCULATIONS.

January 2000 News and Sky Notes.

EMail: ggastro@liverpool.ac.uk.
<---- You are Here.!

