Photos of the moon and the Beehive


Crescent moon with earthshine near star cluster.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Mohd Nazam Anuar in Johor Baharu, Malaysia, captured this photo of the moon and the Beehive star cluster on June 14, 2021. Thanks, Mohd!

On June 13 and 14, 2021, the young moon and the famous Beehive star cluster paired up in the west after sunset. And some EarthSky friends captured them!

The photo below is from June 13, when the 3-day-old crescent moon was above the red planet, Mars, now appearing exceedingly faint, especially in contrast to its brightness half a year ago. Meanwhile, the Beehive cluster – in the constellation Cancer the Crab – floated out to the side.

The photo above is from June 14, when the waxing crescent moon appeared larger in the night sky, and up longer after sunset. On that evening, the moon appeared to have leapfrogged over the Beehive to land on the other side. It had left the contellation Cancer, to appear in front of Leo.

Moon top right, Mars bottom right, Beehive top left.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Steven Sweet in Port Credit, Mississauga, Ontario, captured this photo of the red planet Mars, the moon and Beehive star cluster on June 13, 2021. Thanks, Steven!

The Beehive is what’s called an “open” star cluster. Its stars are siblings of sorts, born from a single cloud of gas and dust in space and still moving together as a family. Our sun was born from a similar cloud, and once had siblings of its own.

By the way, will you see the moon and Beehive together again next month? No. This famous star cluster – which is visible to the eye in a dark-enough sky – is now diving into the sunset glare, as Earth travels in orbit around the sun. It’ll emerge into the eastern sky before sunup – as seen from our northerly latitudes – around late August or September.

Bottom line: Photographers on opposite sides of Earth captured images of the moon and the Beehive Cluster as they paired up in mid-June 2021. Thanks to Mohd Nazam Anuar and Steven Sweet for capturing this week’s moon and Beehive star cluster from Malaysia and Canada. If you’ve got a great photo of the Earth or sky, share it at EarthSky Community Photos!

The post Photos of the moon and the Beehive first appeared on EarthSky.



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Crescent moon with earthshine near star cluster.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Mohd Nazam Anuar in Johor Baharu, Malaysia, captured this photo of the moon and the Beehive star cluster on June 14, 2021. Thanks, Mohd!

On June 13 and 14, 2021, the young moon and the famous Beehive star cluster paired up in the west after sunset. And some EarthSky friends captured them!

The photo below is from June 13, when the 3-day-old crescent moon was above the red planet, Mars, now appearing exceedingly faint, especially in contrast to its brightness half a year ago. Meanwhile, the Beehive cluster – in the constellation Cancer the Crab – floated out to the side.

The photo above is from June 14, when the waxing crescent moon appeared larger in the night sky, and up longer after sunset. On that evening, the moon appeared to have leapfrogged over the Beehive to land on the other side. It had left the contellation Cancer, to appear in front of Leo.

Moon top right, Mars bottom right, Beehive top left.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Steven Sweet in Port Credit, Mississauga, Ontario, captured this photo of the red planet Mars, the moon and Beehive star cluster on June 13, 2021. Thanks, Steven!

The Beehive is what’s called an “open” star cluster. Its stars are siblings of sorts, born from a single cloud of gas and dust in space and still moving together as a family. Our sun was born from a similar cloud, and once had siblings of its own.

By the way, will you see the moon and Beehive together again next month? No. This famous star cluster – which is visible to the eye in a dark-enough sky – is now diving into the sunset glare, as Earth travels in orbit around the sun. It’ll emerge into the eastern sky before sunup – as seen from our northerly latitudes – around late August or September.

Bottom line: Photographers on opposite sides of Earth captured images of the moon and the Beehive Cluster as they paired up in mid-June 2021. Thanks to Mohd Nazam Anuar and Steven Sweet for capturing this week’s moon and Beehive star cluster from Malaysia and Canada. If you’ve got a great photo of the Earth or sky, share it at EarthSky Community Photos!

The post Photos of the moon and the Beehive first appeared on EarthSky.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3xv4CCx

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