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| Right click on this and open in a new window and try to find the Earth! |
The rings of Saturn are open for business. As we head into May, the plane, its 170,000 mile-diameter ring system, and multitude of moons are back in prime-time for you to see this month.
You don’t need a telescope to find Saturn. It shines like a steady, yellow “star” in the southeast near a blue star called Spica. Here's how you find it:
First find the Big Dipper high in the northeastern sky. Connect an arc through the handle stars of the Big Dipper and continue that arc to a really bright star called Arcturus ("Follow the Arc to Arcturus!"). Then keep going in a straighter line along the horizon and bingo you'll find Saturn and Spica ("Speed on to Saturn").
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| A Saturnian Storm |
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This week try to find the Gemini twins in the sky. After it gets dark, look high in the southwestern sky - almost straight overhead. There you will find two stars of nearly equal brightness. If you look a little closer you will see that one is orange-yellow and the other is blue-white. Those are the heads of the twins named Pollux and Castor. Their bodies and feet are tougher to see (just look down and to the left for more stars). 
