Weather permitting (clear skys), the observatory will be open.
Jupiter
Jupiter reaches the middle of the midnight sky, that is, at opposition (magnitude -2.9). In this part of its orbit Jupiter is nearer than its average distance, because in 2011 it will reach its perihelion on Mar. 17; so in a telescope the great banded globe appears practically as large as it can ever get; nearly 50 arc-minutes wide or 1/36 the apparent width of the full moon. Not too far away is Uranus; this is also the date of the second of the series of three Jupiter/Uranus conjunctions
What to Bring:
Your camera and learn to take pictures of the night sky.
Chairs
Bring binoculars and warm clothing.
Snacks and drinks
Hot dogs
Camping available: red lights only
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