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Hi MMohammad,
Thank you for your gracious welcome via email, though I fear we are ‘light years’ away from each other (as my comment shows, if it stays and is not censored) when it comes to this Earth and the Universe in which we live. I am no expert but each to their own beliefs.
Regards,
Malcolm




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Find out what's up in your night sky during September 2022 and how to see it in this Space.com stargazing guide.
Looking for a telescope for the next night sky event? We recommend the Celestron Astro Fi 102 (opens in new tab) as the top pick in our best beginner's telescope guide . 
The night sky tonight and on any clear night offers an ever-changing display of fascinating objects you can see, from stars and constellations to bright planets, often the moon , and sometimes special events like meteor showers.
Observing the night sky can be done with no special equipment, although a sky map can be very useful, and a good telescope or binoculars will enhance some experiences and bring some otherwise invisible objects into view. You can also use astronomy accessories to make your observing easier, and use our Satellite Tracker page powered by N2YO.com (opens in new tab) to find out when to see the I n ternational Space Station and other satellites. You can also capture the night sky by using any of the best cameras for astrophotography , along with a selection of the best lenses for astrophotography .
Read on to find out what's up in the night sky tonight (planets visible now, moon phases , observing highlights this month) plus other resources (skywatching terms, night sky observing tips and further reading).
Monthly skywatching information is provided to Space.com by Chris Vaughan of Starry Night Education, the leader in space science curriculum solutions. Follow Starry Night on Twitter @StarryNightEdu and Chris at @Astrogeoguy.
Editor's note: If you have an amazing skywatching photo you'd like to share for a possible story or image gallery, please contact managing editor Tariq Malik at spacephotos@space.com .
With the crescent moon setting shortly after dusk, the extra-dark evening sky tonight will be ideal to explore the countless knots and clumps of stars distributed along the Milky Way, which rises from the southern horizon on September evenings. Charles Messier’s famous list of “not comets” contains some of the sky’s best deep sky objects. Particularly good clusters include Messier 39 and the Cooling Tower Cluster (Messier 29) in Cygnus, the Wild Duck cluster (Messier 11) and Messier 26 in Scutum, the Sagittarius Star Cloud (Messier 24), and Ptolemy’s Cluster (Messier 7) and the Butterfly Cluster (Messier 6) in Scorpius. Locate them first with binoculars, and then follow up with a backyard telescope at low magnification.
In the southwestern sky after dusk on Friday, September 2, the nearly half-illuminated moon will shine in western Scorpius near the up-down row of small white stars that form the scorpion’s claws. From top to bottom, they are Jabbah or Nu Scorpii, Graffias or Acrab, Dschubba, Pi Scorpii, and Rho Scorpii. A backyard telescope at high magnification will reveal that Nu Scorpii, Graffias, and Dschubba are close-together double stars.
When the moon completes the first quarter of its journey around Earth on Saturday, September 3 at 2:08 p.m. EDT or 11:08 a.m. PDT and 18:08 GMT, its 90 degree angle away from the sun will cause us to see the moon half-illuminated - on its eastern side, and shining near the brightest star of Scorpius, red Antares. At first quarter, the moon always rises around mid-day and sets around midnight, so it is also visible in the afternoon daytime sky, too. The evenings surrounding first quarter are the best ones for seeing the lunar terrain when it is dramatically lit by low-angled sunlight, especially along the terminator, the pole-to-pole boundary that separates the lit and dark hemispheres.
Sunday, September 4 will offer a fine opportunity to view the spectacular, mountain chains, actually segments of the old basin’s rim, that encircle the rim of Mare Imbrium. The most northerly arc of mountains is the Lunar Alps, or Montes Alpes. Binoculars or a telescope will reveal a slash cutting through them called the Alpine Valley, or Vallis Alpes, where the moon’s crust has dropped between parallel faults. To the lower right (lunar southeast) of the Alps are the Caucasus Mountains, or Montes Caucasus. That mountain range disappears under a lava-flooded zone connecting Mare Imbrium with Mare Serenitatis to the southeast. The southeastern edge of Mare Imbrium is bordered by the lengthy Apennine Mountains, or Montes Apenninus. They sink out of sight near the prominent crater Eratosthenes. The Montes Carpatus ring the south, near crater Copernicus. On the opposite side of the mare is the distinctive, round Sinus Iridum, the Bay of Rainbows.
On the mornings surrounding Monday, September 5, the sunward descent of the very bright planet Venus will carry it closely past Leo’s brightest star, Regulus. They’ll appear just above the east-northeastern horizon before sunrise. The pair will be visible in binoculars (large green circle), and even close enough to share the view in a backyard telescope from Sunday to Tuesday (small green circle). At their closest approach on Monday, 120 times brighter Venus will shine only a finger’s width to the left (or 0.75 degrees to the celestial northeast) of the star. The conjunction will be somewhat easier to see from the tropics. Be sure to turn all optics away from the eastern horizon before the sun rises.
On Tuesday, September 6, the lunar terminator will reach the western rim of Mare Imbrium, the Sea of Rains. That dark, circular feature dominates the northwestern quadrant of the moon’s Earth-facing hemisphere. The mare is the moon’s largest impact basin, measuring more than 715 miles (1145 km) in diameter. It was formed during the late heavy bombardment period approximately 3.94 billion years ago. Telescope views of Mare Imbrium at this phase will reveal ejecta blankets around its major craters (Aristillus and Archimedes), several nearly-submerged ghost craters (Cassini and Wallace), and numerous subtle wrinkle ridges (Heim, Stille).
On Wednesday, September 7, the major main belt asteroid designated (3) Juno will reach opposition. At that time, Earth will be passing between Juno and the sun, minimizing our distance from Juno and causing it to appear at its brightest and largest for this year. The magnitude 7.86 asteroid will be visible as a speck in binoculars (green circle) and backyard telescopes all night long. On opposition night, Juno will be traversing the stars of eastern Aquarius, and positioned above and between the medium-bright stars Lambda Aqr or Hydor and Phi Aqr.
After dusk on Wednesday evening, September 7, look to the southeast to see the bright, waxing gibbous moon shining a fist’s diameter to the lower right (or celestial southwest) of the bright, yellowish dot of Saturn. As the pair crosses the sky together all night long, the moon will swing below Saturn. On Thursday night, the moon will hop east to shine to Saturn’s lower left.
The September full moon, traditionally known as the “Corn Moon” and “Barley Moon”, always shines in or near the stars of Aquarius and Pisces. The indigenous Anishinaabe people of the Great Lakes region call this moon Waatebagaa-giizis or Waabaagbagaa-giizis, the Leaves Turning or Leaves Falling Moon. Full moons always rise around sunset and set around sunrise. Because this is the closest full moon to the autumnal equinox in 2022, it is also the Harvest Moon. On the evenings around its full phase, the moon normally rises about 50 minutes later than the previous night. But the shallow slope of the evening ecliptic (and the moon’s orbit) around the equinox causes Harvest Moons to rise at almost the same time each night – only delayed by as little as 10 minutes, depending on your latitude. This phenomenon traditionally allowed farmers to work into the evening under bright moonlight - hence the name.
On Saturday night, September 10, the recently full moon will shine a fist’s diameter to the right of Jupiter and several finger widths below (or 4.5 degrees to the celestial southeast of) the faint, magnitude 7.8 speck of Neptune. While a bright moon nearby makes viewing Neptune much harder, you can use the opportunity to see where Neptune is and try viewing the blue planet a few nights later when the moon has moved away. Binoculars will show you the medium-bright star 20 Piscium. Neptune is only two finger widths west of that star.
When the bright, waning gibbous moon clears the rooftops in the eastern sky after about 9 p.m. local time on Sunday, September 11, it will be shining less than a palm’s width to the lower left (or 6 degrees to the celestial east) of the very bright planet Jupiter - close enough for them to share the view in binoculars (green circle). As the moon chases Jupiter across the sky together overnight, the moon will swing above Jupiter. Skywatchers viewing the duo later, or in more westerly time zones, will see the moon a little farther from the planet due to the moon’s continuous easterly orbital motion.
Starting late on Wednesday evening, September 14 in the Americas, the blue-green, magnitude 5.7 speck of Uranus will be positioned several finger widths to the upper right (or 3.9 degrees to the celestial west) of the waning gibbous moon – close enough for them to share the view in binoculars (green circle). Messier 45, commonly known as the Pleiades cluster will shine off to the moon’s left. The moon and Uranus will rise in the east-northeast after 9:30 p.m. local time, and then climb high into the southern sky before dawn. By then the easterly orbital motion of the moon will shift it farther from Uranus. Hours earlier, observers in much of Northern Africa, Europe, parts of the Middle East, and western Russia can see the moon occult Uranus around 21:30 GMT - the ninth in a series of consecutive lunar occultations of that planet.
On Friday, September 16, Neptune will reach opposition. At that time the distant planet will be closest to Earth for this year – a distance of 2.68 billion miles, 4.32 billion km, 4 light-hours, or 28.91 Astronomical Units. Blue Neptune will shine with a slightly brighter magnitude 7.8. Since it’s directly opposite the sun in the sky, Neptune will be visible all night long in backyard telescopes. Good binoculars (green circle) will show it, too, if your sky is very dark. Your best views will come after 9 p.m. local time, when the blue planet has risen higher. Around opposition, Neptune’s apparent disk size will peak at 2.4 arc-seconds and its large moon Triton will be the most visible (inset). Throughout September, Neptune will be located among the stars of northeastern Aquarius, about a fist’s diameter to the upper right (or 10.5 degrees to the celestial west-southwest) of Jupiter. 
When the pretty, half-illuminated moon rises in the eastern sky just before 11 p.m. local time on Friday, September 16, it will be positioned a few finger widths to the left (or 3.5 degrees to the celestial north-northeast) of bright, reddish Mars. They’ll remain cosy enough to share the view in binoculars (green circle) through most of the night while the moon’s easterly motion pulls it farther from the planet.
The moon will complete three quarters of its orbit around Earth, measured from the previous new moon, on Saturday, September 17 at 5:52 p.m. EDT and 2:52 p.m. PDT or 21:52 GMT. At the third (or last) quarter phase the moon appears half-illuminated, on its western, sunward side. It will rise around midnight local time, and then remain visible until it sets in the western daytime sky in early afternoon. Third quarter moons are positioned ahead of the Earth in our trip around the Sun. About 3½ hours later, Earth will occupy that same location in space. The week of dark, moonless evening skies that follow this phase are the best ones for observing fainter deep sky targets.
Four very small constellations sit high the southern evening sky, near the southeastern edge of the Summer Triangle, on September evenings. The easiest one to see is Delphinus, the Dolphin. It is composed of four medium-bright stars forming a small elongated diamond connecting to a straight tail star that extends to the lower right (or celestial southwest). Equuleus, the Little Horse sits about a fist’s diameter below Delphinus. Diminutive Equuleus is the second to last constellation, by size after Crux, the Southern Cross. Sitting a generous fist’s width to Delphinus’ upper right is the next smallest constellation Sagitta, the Arrow. And sweeping a palm’s width farther in the same direction will bring you to the bent-stick stars of Vulpecula, the Fox. Except for the slightly larger fox, each of these small constellations will fit within the field of view of binoculars (green circle). The Milky Way passes through Sagitta and Vulpecula, populating them with a variety of deep sky objects. Look between those two constellations for a dark dust lane.
Early risers on Tuesday morning, September 20 can look in the eastern sky for the pretty, slim crescent of the old moon shining just below the bright star Pollux in Gemini between about 2 a.m. local time and dawn. Pollux’ twin, the star Castor, will be positioned several finger widths above them. The scene will make a lovely photo opportunity when composed with some interesting landscape.
Between 8:10 and 11 p.m. EDT on Tuesday, September 20, observers in the Americas with telescopes can watch the large, black shadow of the Galilean moon Ganymede cross Jupiter’s disk. That start time corresponds to 7:10 p.m. in the Central Time zone, or 00:10 GMT on September 21. For observers in western USA and Canada, only the later stages of the event will be visible while Jupiter climbs the eastern sky after dusk.
Between about 3 a.m. local time and dawn on Wednesday morning, September 21, look in the eastern sky for the very slim crescent of the waning moon shining several finger widths to the upper left (or 4 degrees to the celestial north) of the big open star cluster known as the Beehive, Praesepe, and Messier 44. The moon and cluster will be close enough to share the field of binoculars (green circle), but you’ll see more of the “bees” if you tuck the moon just out of sight on the upper left.
On Thursday, September 22 at 9:04 p.m. EDT and 6:04 p.m. PDT, or 01:04 GMT on September 23, the sun’s apparent motion along the ecliptic (green line) will carry it across the celestial equator traveling southward, marking the autumnal equinox in the Northern Hemisphere and the beginning of autumn there. On the equinoxes in March and September, day and night are of equal length and the sun rises due east and sets due west (yellow arc).
During autumn at mid-northern latitudes every year, the ecliptic extends nearly vertically upward from the eastern horizon before dawn. That geometry favors the appearance of the faint zodiacal light in the eastern sky for about half an hour before dawn on moonless mornings. Zodiacal light is sunlight scattered by interplanetary particles that are concentrated in the plane of the solar system - the same material that produces meteor showers. It is more readily seen in areas free of urban light pollution. Between now until the full moon on October 9, look for a broad wedge of faint light extending upwards from the eastern horizon and centered on the ecliptic (the green line). It will be strongest in the lower third of the sky, below the twin stars Castor and Pollux. Try taking a long exposure photograph to capture it. Don’t confuse the zodiacal light with the Milky Way, which is positioned nearby in the southeastern sky.
For several nights centered on Saturday, September 24, the orbital motion of the red planet Mars (labelled path) will carry it telescope-close (small green circle) to a prominent open star cluster designated NGC 1746. The magnitude 6.1 cluster is wider than the full moon. Viewed through binoculars (large green circle) during their closest approach, the cluster’s stars will be sprinkled in a loose clump a thumb’s width to the upper left of Mars. As the days pass, Mars will migrate below the cluster and to the left. Your telescope will likely invert and/or mirror image the scene shown here. 
On Sunday, September 25 at 5:54 p.m. EDT or 2:54 p.m. PDT and 21:54 GMT, the moon will officially reach its new moon phase. At that time our natural satellite will be located in Virgo, 2.5 degrees north of the sun. While new, the moon is travelling between Earth and the sun. Since sunlight can only illuminate the far side of the moon, and the moon is in the same region of the sky as the sun, it becomes completely hidden from view from anywhere on Earth for about a day. After the new moon phase, Earth’s celestial night-light will return to shine as a young crescent in the western evening sky. 
On Monday, September 26, Jupiter will reach opposition among the stars of western Pisces. Since Earth will be positioned between the sun and the gas giant on that date, Jupiter wil
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