Jupiter’s equinox and mutual events of its 4 major moons


Four variously colored and pockmarked round moons.

From left to right – and from innermost to outermost in their orbits – the 4 major moons of Jupiter are Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Earth’s moon is nearly the same size as Io, but larger than Europa. Ganymede, the largest moon in our solar system, is much bigger than our moon; it’s even larger than the planet Mercury. Callisto is the 3rd-largest moon in the solar system – bigger than our moon, but smaller than Ganymede – and also a touch smaller than Saturn’s Titan. Photo via JPL.

The king planet Jupiter will reach an equinox – an event that happens twice in every 12-year orbit of Jupiter – on May 2, 2021. Around Jupiter’s equinoxes, we on Earth always have an opportunity to see a series of mutual events – or you might call them eclipses – of Jupiter’s four major moons. These are the four famous Galilean satellites, Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. The eclipses are already happening. They’ll continue through August 2021. Experienced telescope users will be the ones seeing them; if you get an image, please submit it here. As the four large moons revolve around Jupiter, a moon shadow will sometimes eclipse (fall upon) a different moon. Or the body of one Jovian moon will occult (move directly in front) of another moon. For example, on April 4, Io’s shadow will fall upon Europa. The following day –  April 5 – Io itself will occult the moon Ganymede.

It hasn’t happened (we haven’t had a Jupiter equinox) since February 4, 2015. The next eclipse season for Jupiter’s moons won’t come again until around Jupiter’s next equinox, on December 16, 2026.

We see these mutual events of Jupiter’s moons at or near one of its equinoxes, because that’s when we on Earth view Jupiter’s equator edge-on. The moons orbit in the plane of Jupiter’s equator. At times other than near a Jovian equinox, the moon shadows slant relative to the Jovian equator; they angle north or south of the other moons, and no eclipses take place as seen from our earthly perspective.

See a list of dates in April and May 2021 for mutual events of Jupiter’s moons

Various ways that Jupiter's moons can eclipse or occult one another.

A moon is said to eclipse another moon when a moon’s shadow falls on the face of another moon. A moon is said to occult another when the body of a moon passes in front of another. Illustration via Dave Dickinson/ Universe Today.

Two tiny jovian moons, one nearly eclipsing the other.

This 19-frame animation shows Io (the small, moving object) being partially occulted by Ganymede on January 16, 2003. Hong Kong amateur Yan Chi-keung used a CCD imager attached to his 250-mm, f/20 Maksutov-Cassegrain telescope to capture this 36-minute-long sequence. Image via SkyandTelescope.com.

Jupiter’s four major moons are readily observable through a low-powered telescope anytime Jupiter is visible.

These four moons are called the Galilean moons to honor Galileo Galilei, who famously used one of the first small telescope to observe the four moons revolving around Jupiter in the early 1600s.

Now and again, you might miss seeing a moon or two; they disappear from view when they swing behind Jupiter or in front of Jupiter from our earthly perspective. To find out the positions of Jupiter’s four major moons for right now – or some chosen time – use this handy interactive tool via SkyandTelescope.org.

A disk, Jupiter, with 4 dots, the moons, bisecting it.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Binoculars will let you capture a glimpse of a moon or 2 of Jupiter’s, and a small telescope reveals all 4 of the largest jovian moons, the Galilean satellites, spread out in line across Jupiter’s midsection. This photo comes from Mohamed Mohamed in Tripoli, Libya. He captured it on July 29, 2020.

With a higher-powered telescope, you can watch the moons’ dark shadows transiting (or crossing) the near side of Jupiter’s disk, and the moons themselves sweeping through Jupiter’s dark shadow on Jupiter’s far side. It is more difficult to view a Jovian moon itself transiting Jupiter, however. That’s because both Jupiter and its transiting moon are basking in sunlight, providing no sharp contrast between the moon and Jupiter.

Callisto, the outermost moon, is the only Galilean moon that doesn’t pass in front and behind Jupiter with each revolution. For a few years – roughly centered on Jupiter’s solstice on January 20, 2024 – Callisto will swing to the north and south of Jupiter at each revolution as seen from Earth. This year, however, it’s a totally different story. Callisto’s shadow not only transits Jupiter at each revolution all year long, but eclipses Io, Europa and Ganymede in the month April 2021 alone.

With a low-powered telescope – anytime Jupiter is visible – it’s easy to see Jupiter’s four major moons as pinpricks of light lining up upon the same plane.

It takes a practiced observer with a high-powered telescope to tease out Jupiter’s moons eclipsing and occulting other moons upon the great merry-go-round of Jupiter’s equatorial plane.

Either way, it’s a fine year for enjoying the dance of Jupiter’s moons.

Animation showing three orbits around a black dot with smaller black dots moving along them, all labeled.

The 3 inner moons – Io, Europa and Ganymede – are locked into a 4:2:1 orbital resonance. That is, Io circles Jupiter 4 times for every 2 times that Europa circles Jupiter and every one time that Ganymede does. Image and more explanation via Wikipedia.

Bottom line: Jupiter’s equinox is May 2, 2021, and – around every Jovian equinox – we on Earth can see Jupiter’s moons eclipse each other. These mutual events of Jupiter’s moons are already happening this year; they’ll continue through August 2021.

See a list of dates in April and May 2021 for mutual events of Jupiter’s moons

Read more: Observational campaign of the mutual phenomena of Jupiter’s satellites



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/39tKV4p
Four variously colored and pockmarked round moons.

From left to right – and from innermost to outermost in their orbits – the 4 major moons of Jupiter are Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Earth’s moon is nearly the same size as Io, but larger than Europa. Ganymede, the largest moon in our solar system, is much bigger than our moon; it’s even larger than the planet Mercury. Callisto is the 3rd-largest moon in the solar system – bigger than our moon, but smaller than Ganymede – and also a touch smaller than Saturn’s Titan. Photo via JPL.

The king planet Jupiter will reach an equinox – an event that happens twice in every 12-year orbit of Jupiter – on May 2, 2021. Around Jupiter’s equinoxes, we on Earth always have an opportunity to see a series of mutual events – or you might call them eclipses – of Jupiter’s four major moons. These are the four famous Galilean satellites, Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. The eclipses are already happening. They’ll continue through August 2021. Experienced telescope users will be the ones seeing them; if you get an image, please submit it here. As the four large moons revolve around Jupiter, a moon shadow will sometimes eclipse (fall upon) a different moon. Or the body of one Jovian moon will occult (move directly in front) of another moon. For example, on April 4, Io’s shadow will fall upon Europa. The following day –  April 5 – Io itself will occult the moon Ganymede.

It hasn’t happened (we haven’t had a Jupiter equinox) since February 4, 2015. The next eclipse season for Jupiter’s moons won’t come again until around Jupiter’s next equinox, on December 16, 2026.

We see these mutual events of Jupiter’s moons at or near one of its equinoxes, because that’s when we on Earth view Jupiter’s equator edge-on. The moons orbit in the plane of Jupiter’s equator. At times other than near a Jovian equinox, the moon shadows slant relative to the Jovian equator; they angle north or south of the other moons, and no eclipses take place as seen from our earthly perspective.

See a list of dates in April and May 2021 for mutual events of Jupiter’s moons

Various ways that Jupiter's moons can eclipse or occult one another.

A moon is said to eclipse another moon when a moon’s shadow falls on the face of another moon. A moon is said to occult another when the body of a moon passes in front of another. Illustration via Dave Dickinson/ Universe Today.

Two tiny jovian moons, one nearly eclipsing the other.

This 19-frame animation shows Io (the small, moving object) being partially occulted by Ganymede on January 16, 2003. Hong Kong amateur Yan Chi-keung used a CCD imager attached to his 250-mm, f/20 Maksutov-Cassegrain telescope to capture this 36-minute-long sequence. Image via SkyandTelescope.com.

Jupiter’s four major moons are readily observable through a low-powered telescope anytime Jupiter is visible.

These four moons are called the Galilean moons to honor Galileo Galilei, who famously used one of the first small telescope to observe the four moons revolving around Jupiter in the early 1600s.

Now and again, you might miss seeing a moon or two; they disappear from view when they swing behind Jupiter or in front of Jupiter from our earthly perspective. To find out the positions of Jupiter’s four major moons for right now – or some chosen time – use this handy interactive tool via SkyandTelescope.org.

A disk, Jupiter, with 4 dots, the moons, bisecting it.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Binoculars will let you capture a glimpse of a moon or 2 of Jupiter’s, and a small telescope reveals all 4 of the largest jovian moons, the Galilean satellites, spread out in line across Jupiter’s midsection. This photo comes from Mohamed Mohamed in Tripoli, Libya. He captured it on July 29, 2020.

With a higher-powered telescope, you can watch the moons’ dark shadows transiting (or crossing) the near side of Jupiter’s disk, and the moons themselves sweeping through Jupiter’s dark shadow on Jupiter’s far side. It is more difficult to view a Jovian moon itself transiting Jupiter, however. That’s because both Jupiter and its transiting moon are basking in sunlight, providing no sharp contrast between the moon and Jupiter.

Callisto, the outermost moon, is the only Galilean moon that doesn’t pass in front and behind Jupiter with each revolution. For a few years – roughly centered on Jupiter’s solstice on January 20, 2024 – Callisto will swing to the north and south of Jupiter at each revolution as seen from Earth. This year, however, it’s a totally different story. Callisto’s shadow not only transits Jupiter at each revolution all year long, but eclipses Io, Europa and Ganymede in the month April 2021 alone.

With a low-powered telescope – anytime Jupiter is visible – it’s easy to see Jupiter’s four major moons as pinpricks of light lining up upon the same plane.

It takes a practiced observer with a high-powered telescope to tease out Jupiter’s moons eclipsing and occulting other moons upon the great merry-go-round of Jupiter’s equatorial plane.

Either way, it’s a fine year for enjoying the dance of Jupiter’s moons.

Animation showing three orbits around a black dot with smaller black dots moving along them, all labeled.

The 3 inner moons – Io, Europa and Ganymede – are locked into a 4:2:1 orbital resonance. That is, Io circles Jupiter 4 times for every 2 times that Europa circles Jupiter and every one time that Ganymede does. Image and more explanation via Wikipedia.

Bottom line: Jupiter’s equinox is May 2, 2021, and – around every Jovian equinox – we on Earth can see Jupiter’s moons eclipse each other. These mutual events of Jupiter’s moons are already happening this year; they’ll continue through August 2021.

See a list of dates in April and May 2021 for mutual events of Jupiter’s moons

Read more: Observational campaign of the mutual phenomena of Jupiter’s satellites



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/39tKV4p

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