From CJ@21:2/156 to All on Wed Dec 25 11:28:19 2024
Thursday December 26, 2024
Night's Brightest Star (late evening)
Sirius, the brightest star in Canis Major and in the entire night sky, too, is hard to miss once it clears the trees and rooftops in the southeast by 7:30 p.m. local time. Also known as the Dog Star, it will climb to its highest
point in the lower part of the southern sky shortly after midnight local time. If you are walking through your darkened house in the middle of the night, Sirius might catch your eye out a window because it never climbs very high. Sirius is a hot, blue-white, A-class star located only 8.6 light-years from
our sun. Its extreme brightness and its low position in the sky combine to produce spectacular flashes of various colors as it twinkles. A very large telescope may allow you to see Sirius B, a faint white dwarf companion star located just 10 arc-seconds to the east of Sirius.
(Data courtesy of Starry Night
--- SBBSecho 3.23-Linux
* Origin: CJ's Place, Orange City FL > cjsplace.thruhere.net (21:2/156)
Who's Online
Recent Visitors
Ilop
Sat Jan 31 03:58:07 2026
from
Canada
via
Telnet
A L L E O N
Fri Jan 16 23:33:08 2026
from
Loveland, Colorado
via
Telnet
Mr Chats
Sat Dec 27 20:46:15 2025
from
Florence, Alabama
via
Telnet
Mr Chats
Sat Dec 27 20:43:24 2025
from
Florence, Alabama
via
Telnet