January 2023 | Elan Valley https://elanvalley.org.uk/month/2023-01-01/ Elan. Yours to Explore Tue, 31 Jan 2023 10:03:11 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 Eyes on the Night Sky – February 2023 https://elanvalley.org.uk/uncategorized/eyes-on-the-night-sky-february-2023/ Thu, 26 Jan 2023 11:57:45 +0000 https://elanvalley.org.uk/?p=4770 This month’s Eyes on the Night Sky will feature the best night sky objects to discover with binoculars, telescopes, or just the eyes. Make the most of the...

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This month’s Eyes on the Night Sky will feature the best night sky objects to discover with binoculars, telescopes, or just the eyes.

Make the most of the dark, early evenings, wrap up warm, bring a favourite hot drink and get outside.

February Constellations

There are 88 officially recognised constellations in the night sky: 36 are in the northern hemisphere and 52 are in the south. These change over the year like a celestial parade as the Earth travels around the Sun; due to our latitude, constellations higher up in the sky, such as Cassiopeia, Draco and Ursa Major never set, whilst other constellations come and go with the seasons.

This month, the constellations of Leo, Cancer, Boötes rise in the East whilst the winter constellations such as Taurus, Gemini, Orion and Auriga march westwards as the evening progresses. You can download the printable constellation map from here (credit: Dominic Ford, author of the excellent in-the-sky.org) 

The Full Moon falls on 5th February and the New Moon on 20th February.

A Conjunction

On 22nd February, the nearly three-day old Moon will emerge after sun sets with Venus and Jupiter close by. This conjunction will look especially stunning when earthshine appears on the darker face of the moon – the Earth’s light reflected, which can be seen during the twilight. Take this opportunity to study these objects with binoculars and try to spot Jupiter’s Moons that surround the planet.

You should be able to spot Io, Ganymede and Callisto, three of 80 Moons that orbit this mighty gas giant.

Beehive Cluster M44

RA 8h 40m 24s | Dec +19° 59′ 0″

For binocular users, an easy target is the beautiful Beehive Cluster in the constellation of Cancer. Also known as Messier 44, it is 600 light years from us and is visible to the unaided eye.

A decent size binocular will reveal a sharp and pretty swarm of 20 stars but this open cluster contains up to 1,000 stars; most of which are too faint to be seen..

Messier 3 Globular Cluster

RA 13h 42m 11.62s | Dec +28° 22′ 38.2″

For telescopes, Messier 3 is a lovely gem-studded globular cluster to study with telescopes four inches of aperture and above. As always with such distant  objects, a dark sky is a must to study this object. The tight ball of stars begins to resolve fully with larger apertures and looks spectacular through 12-inch telescopes.

No wonder it is a sight to behold as this globular cluster contains up to half a million stars. Located around 34,000 light years from Earth, it is thought to be one of the oldest objects in the Universe. Use averted vision to tease out more stars in its core.

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Eyes on the Night Sky – January 2023 https://elanvalley.org.uk/dark-skies-january/eyes-on-the-night-sky-january-2023/ Sun, 01 Jan 2023 01:00:00 +0000 https://elanvalley.org.uk/?p=4453 A Happy New Year to stargazers! Make the most of the dark nights this month and enjoy using the new telescopes and binoculars you have received for Christmas....

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A Happy New Year to stargazers!

Make the most of the dark nights this month and enjoy using the new telescopes and binoculars you have received for Christmas. If you are stuck for inspiration, this monthly guide will help you find the best celestial objects to study, whether you have a telescope, binoculars or just want to use your eyes.

Here are a couple of suggestions for ways of getting to know the night sky:

Turn Left at Orion is a great beginner’s book to help you get started and teaches you how to find more than just the Moon – there are galaxies, nebulae, star clusters and colourful double stars to discover.

Stellarium Mobile – Star Map is one of the best smartphone/tablet apps to help you get to know the constellations, planets and deep sky objects. If you phone has a magnetometer and an accelerometer/gyroscope, you can hold your phone up to the sky to learn about which star or constellation you are looking at. It is also available for iOS.

If you would like to experience a truly dark sky, the Elan Valley International Dark Sky Park have some easily-accessible locations where you can park your car and look up.

New Year Meteor Shower

The Quadrantids meteor shower will peak on the evening of 3rd January and into the early morning of 4th January. It radiates from an old constellation, called Quadrans Muralis, inspired by the shape of a quadrant, an astronomical tool to observe the position of stars. It was not included in the International Astronomical Union (IAU) officially recognised constellation. The waxing gibbous Moon’s light will interfere with seeing fainter shooting stars but always be a lookout for the brighter ones

NGC 404 – Mirach’s Ghost

RA 01h 9.4 m,
Dec +35° 43′

For those with telescopes and access to dark skies, try to find an intriguing object in the constellation of Andromeda. For those who want to star hop to find NGC 404 (Ghost of Mirach), look for the Square of Pegasus and look for the top left and corner of the square where you will see a line of three stars forming what looks like a pan handle which is the constellation of Andromeda. Count two stars from the corner which will take you to Mirach.

Train your telescope onto the star and look for a faint blob which does indeed resemble a fuzzy copy of Mirach. This object is actually a galaxy designated NGC 404, which lies 10 million light years away.

Ally’s Braid

For those who have binoculars of any size, get outside and look at the star cluster Pleiades (Seven Sisters). In a dark sky, this stunning open cluster almost shimmers.

Try to spot a line of stars which was coined ‘Ally’s Braid” (short for Alcyone, the star where the asterism appears to originate), resembling a braid of hair coming from Alcyone’s head.

Mercury

On January 30th, Mercury will be at Greatest Western Elongation, which means it will be at its highest point in the sky. This planet can be seen low in the pre-dawn eastern sky from 7.10am on 15th January to 6:50am at the end of the month. You should be able to see it with the unaided eye.

A Stunning Planetary Conjunction

There will be a pretty planetary conjunction on 23rd January. It will also be the closest planetary conjunction this year, where Saturn will be 0.5 degrees distant from Venus.  Look to the south-western horizon after sunset, where you will see Venus emerge into the twilight. You should also see a sliver of the Moon and Saturn emerging as a smaller point of light to the south-eastern side of Venus.

The full Moon occurs on 6th January and the new Moon on 24th January.

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Elan Links Artist Residencies – November 2022 https://elanvalley.org.uk/uncategorized/elan-links-artist-residencies-november-2022/ Sat, 19 Nov 2022 12:46:31 +0000 https://elanvalley.org.uk/?p=2942 Elan Links has awarded artist residencies to two artists for their 2023 residency scheme, Gweni Llwyd and Rowena Harris. These residencies are delivered in partnership with Aberystwyth Arts...

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Elan Links has awarded artist residencies to two artists for their 2023 residency scheme, Gweni Llwyd and Rowena Harris.

These residencies are delivered in partnership with Aberystwyth Arts Centre and Midlands Arts Centre respectively.

Elan Links and Aberystwyth Arts Centre have awarded their 2023 artist residency to emerging Welsh artist Gweni Llwyd.  

Gweni is renowned for her playful work which spans tactile and digital realms, exploring the symbiotic relationship between human–made infrastructures and the natural world. She lives between Rotterdam and Wales, and is currently undertaking a Masters in Fine Art at the Piet Zwart Institute in Rotterdam in the Netherlands.

Gweni will spend four weeks in Elan Valley and four weeks in Aberystwyth building links between both locations. She will receive support from Aberystwyth Art Centre’s Curator Ffion Rhys and Artist and Project Manager Richard Powell. The residency is offering an opportunity to create a discourse between these very different locations framed through the lens of water as resource, land use and the climate emergency.

Gweni Llwyd said “In my recent projects, I’ve been examining the symbiotic relationships between human-made infrastructures and the natural world, exploring industrial pasts, and imagining their futures. What might they look, sound, and feel like? Who might live there? I frequently use sites – such as rivers, quarries, and experiences with land and people as starting points, so I’m looking forward to seeing where Cwm Elan and Aberystwyth take me and my making. I usually work with sound, drawing, video, computer animation and installation, so I’m really excited to strip my making back to basics while on the residency, leave the confines of some of the technologies I work with a lot, and see what happens while immersed in fascinating locations. I hope to develop a body of work in Cwm Elan and Aberystwyth that directly relates to my time getting to know the land, human and more-than-human inhabitants of these places.”

Elan Links and Midlands Arts Centre have awarded their 2023 artist residency to queer Birmingham based artist Rowena Harris(they/she)   

Rowena Harris focuses on how knowledge from disability, sick and crip perspectives, including their own, can inform methods, rhythms, structures and sensibilities for making work. Through moving image and CGI, creative non-fiction writing and discussion, sculpture and installation, they explore bio-cultural and socio-medical dynamics that flow through and affect human bodies differently. Often explored with feminist, queer and crip theory, their work is increasingly concerned with invisible disability and structures of ableism, as well as vectors of power within societal factors that shape how we feel, understand and make sense of our own bodies.

Elan Links is partnering with Midlands Arts Centre on this residency. In late 19th century the wider area of Elan Valley was purchased by Birmingham and a series of dams and reservoirs constructed to collect and transport water to Birmingham. Several farms and buildings were relocated and the landscape was flooded, at great cost to the local community. The reservoirs continue to supply water to the city to this day. This residency is an opportunity to develop a dialogue between these locations, which are so profound linked by water supply.

Elan Links is partnering with Midlands Arts Centre on this residency. In late 19th century the wider area of Elan Valley was purchased by Birmingham and a series of dams and reservoirs constructed to collect and transport water to Birmingham. Several farms and buildings were relocated and the landscape was flooded, at great cost to the local community. The reservoirs continue to supply water to the city to this day. This residency is an opportunity to develop a dialogue between these locations, which are so profound linked by water supply.

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