Oct
13
Sun
Monthly Meeting @ George Mason University
Oct 13 @ 11:00 pm – Oct 14 @ 1:00 am

Details about NOVAC meetings can be found at http://www.novac.com/meetings/ – including information about the club’s informal pre-meeting dinners at Red Hot & Blue.

 

 

 

 

Oct
18
Fri
⚪ Full Moon
Oct 18 @ 5:38 pm – 6:38 pm

October’s Full Moon is the “Harvest Moon” (English), “Hunter’s Moon” (Native American), “Travel Moon”, “Dying Grass Moon”, “Blood Moon”, or “Sharad Poornima”.

Oct
20
Sun
Orionid Meteor Shower
Oct 20 all-day

The Orionid meteor shower will reach its maximum rate of activity. Some meteors will be visible each night from 16 Oct to 30 Oct, but the best show will be on this evening. The maximum number of meteors expected to be visible from a dark location is around 25 per hour (ZHR). The Moon will be 16 days old at the time of peak activity, and being so close to Full Moon, will severely limit the observations that will be possible. Shucks! That’s three showers in a row the moon has washed out…

Oct
21
Mon
Mercury Retrograde Begins
Oct 21 all-day

see http://cantonbecker.com/retrograde for details…

Nov
2
Sat
Great Meadow Public Night @ Great Meadow
Nov 2 @ 10:00 pm – Nov 3 @ 3:00 am

See front page of NOVAC Site for changes to event. More information about Great Meadow including directions and parking visit the Great Meadow Site page.

Nov
3
Sun
âš« New Moon
Nov 3 @ 5:51 am – 6:51 am
Nov
9
Sat
C.M. Crockett Public Night @ C.M. Crockett Park
Nov 9 @ 11:00 pm – Nov 10 @ 4:00 am
Nov
10
Sun
Mercury Retrograde Ends
Nov 10 all-day

see http://cantonbecker.com/retrograde for details…

Nov
11
Mon
Monthly Meeting @ George Mason University
Nov 11 @ 12:00 am – 2:00 am

Details about NOVAC meetings can be found at http://www.novac.com/meetings/ – including information about the club’s informal pre-meeting dinners.

 

Sunday November 10th, 2013 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

 

Guest Speaker: Daniel Reichart

Topic: Outreach growth for Skynet

Location: Meeting Room at the base of the Observatory in Research Hall

 

 

 

 

Nov
17
Sun
Leonids Meteor Shower
Nov 17 all-day

The Leonid meteor shower will reach its maximum rate of activity. Some meteors will be visible each night from 15 Nov to 20 Nov, but the best show will be on this evening. The maximum number of meteors expected to be visible from a dark location is around 20 per hour (ZHR). The Moon will be 15 days old at the time of peak activity, and being so close to Full Moon, will severely limit the observations that will be possible. Man, the moon won’t give us a break for meteor showers in 2013…

Radiating from the constellation Leo the Lion, the Leonid meteor shower is famous. Historically, this shower has produced some of the greatest meteor storms in history – at least one in living memory, 1966 – with rates as high as many thousands of meteors per hour. Indeed, on that beautiful night in 1966, the meteors did fall like rain. Some who watched the shower said they felt as if they needed to grip the ground, so strong was the impression of Earth plowing along through space, fording the meteoroid stream. The meteors, after all, were all streaming from a single point in the sky – the radiant point – in this case in the constellation Leo the Lion. Leonid meteor storms sometimes recur in cycles of 33 to 34 years, but the Leonids around the turn of the century – while wonderful for many observers – did not match the shower of 1966. And, in most years, the Lion whimpers rather than roars, producing a maximum of perhaps 10-15 meteors per hour. Like most meteor showers, the Leonids ordinarily pick up steam after midnight and display the greatest meteor numbers just before dawn.