Orwell Astronomical Society (Ipswich)

Home Events

Summary of Lunar Occultations for 2005

More about occultations.

Introduction

During 2005, potentially observable from East Anglia are approximately 560 lunar occultations, although many involve faint stars, and one grazing occultation. No planetary occultations are visible from the region during the year.

This article summarises the circumstances of the best occultations during the year. It provides details for the location of Orwell Park Observatory; differences will in general be negligible for locations throughout East Anglia.

Occultations of Bright Stars

Table 1 lists occultation events during the year, of stars down to magnitude 5.5, where the circumstances are favourable. These events should be readily visible in small telescopes or binoculars.

The first two columns of the table list the date and time (UT) of the occultation. Column three specifies the phenomenon: "D" denotes a disappearance and "R" a reappearance. The table lists circumstances of D and/or R as dictated by the visibility of each phenomenon (determined by altitude, lunar phase, etc). Column four details the lunar phase (positive waxing and negative waning). Columns five and six give the altitude of the Sun and the star, both in degrees. (A negative solar altitude means that the Sun is below the horizon.) Columns seven and eight provide the star's magnitude and catalogue number.
 

Date
2005
Time
(UT)
D
R
Lunar
Phase
Sun
Alt (°)
Star
Alt (°)
Mag Star
14 Mar21:30:55
22:16:47
D
R
0.22+-31
-35
16
9
4.357 Ari, δ Ari, Botein
17 Mar22:27:45
23:31:25
D
R
0.51+-35
-39
36
27
4.6136 Tau
20 Mar00:27:53D0.70+-38325.376 Gem, c Gem
23 Apr23:54:46D1.00+-25255.586 Vir
19 Jun22:27:19D0.93+-12145.042 Lib
02 Jul01:53:24
02:48:22
D
R
0.18--11
-6
11
19
4.357 Ari, δ Ari, Botein
15 Sep20:07:43D0.93+-18154.743 Cap, κ Cap
24 Sep22:01:20
22:40:06
D
R
0.53--34
-37
9
14
4.6136 Tau
12 Oct20:43:00D0.73+-33165.433 Cap
14 Oct22:56:59D0.91+-46284.992 Aqr, χ Aqr
15 Nov21:24:49D1.00+-48514.958 Ari, ζ Ari
13 Dec19:19:23D0.96+-32465.4ZC 556
14 Dec04:12:28D0.97+-33215.536 Tau

Table 1. Occultations of stars of magnitude 5.5 or brighter.
 

Occultation Seasons

The Moon’s orbit is defined by a range of periodicities, both short and long term. The short term periodicities mean that the Moon’s path through the sky follows a pattern whereby it almost repeats itself every month. The longer term periodicities gradually shift the orbit so that no particular pattern of approximate repetition can last more than a few years. This results in so called "occultation seasons", lasting for months or years, during which particular stars are repeatedly occulted, or repeatedly not occulted. The effect is most pronounced for the four first magnitude stars that the Moon can occult, namely Aldebaran, Spica, Antares and Regulus. We are currently in an occultation season lasting until 2007 when none of these stars are occulted. However, note the two occultations each of 57 Ari and 136 Tau during the year.

Nights With Many Occultation Events

During the year, the Moon traverses some rich star fields. When this happens, a large number of occultations can occur during a single evening. Table 2 lists all evenings throughout the year when the Moon occults 12 or more stars. Many of the nights listed in table 2 are associated with the passage of the Moon through rich star fields from east Taurus to central Gemini.
 

Date, No occs Date, No occs Date, No occs Date, No occs
14 Jan, 16 12 Feb, 13 13 Feb, 20 13 Mar, 12
14 Mar, 19 13 Apr, 39 14 Apr, 15 15 Apr, 18
11 May, 35 12 May, 39 13 May, 21 05 Dec, 17

Table 2. Nights with 12 or more occultations.
 

Grazing Occultation

The track of one grazing occultation crosses East Anglia during the year. Table 3 summarises the circumstances. Columns one and two give the date and time of the graze and column three specifies the lunar limb involved. Column four indicates the distance between Orwell Park Observatory and point X on the track, on land, where the distance between the two is least; column five links to a plot of the lunar limb profile visible from X. Column six specifies a north or south displacement of the observer's position, relative to the track, based upon inspection of the limb profile, to maximise the chances of witnessing multiple disappearance and reappearance events. Column seven links to an on-line Google Earth plot of the track and column eight links to an off-line image of it. (The plot and image illustrate the nominal track, with no displacement applied.) Column nine details the lunar phase (positive for waxing, negative for waning) and column 10 the altitude of the Sun (a negative solar altitude means that the Sun is below the horizon). Columns 11 and 12 provide the horizontal co-ordinates of the star (azimuth in the order N→E→S→W). Columns 13 and 14 specify the star and its magnitude.
 

Date
2005
Time
(UT)
Limb Dist
OPO
(km)
Limb
Profile
Track
Shift
(km)
Google
Earth
Track
Google
Earth
Image
Lunar
Phase
Sun
Alt
(°)
Star
Alt
(°)
Star
Azi
(°)
Mag Star
23 Oct 03:27 N 40 Profile 0.6 N Track Track 0.68- -29 63 148 6.0 54 Aur

Table 3. Grazing lunar occultation.
 


James Appleton