Star gazing

Stargazers, national parks hope to save dark skies

CEDAR CITY -- Gazing skyward from his backyard, longtime southern Utah resident Abe Heck used to marvel at the Milky Way. Now he can't even see it.

"I could see nebulas through the telescope in town," he said. "Now you have to drive to the mountains or the desert to see a decent picture of the night sky."

Under natural moonless conditions, the National Park Service said it is easy in some areas to see one's shadow from the glow of Venus or Jupiter and, in some cases, from the Milky Way.

Orion’s legend awaits discovery in night sky

OGDEN — Find out how to find the constellation Orion in the night sky on Saturday during Weber State University’s Science Saturday.

The monthly program, which runs from noon to 5 p.m., features planetarium shows, hands-on science activities and a visit to the Museum of Natural Science. Admission is free.

“Legends of the Night Sky: Orion” plays at 3:30 p.m. in the Ott Planetarium. Star shows begin at noon and run every half hour, with live presentations at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m.

Mark Boster/Los Angeles Times/MCT
Astronomer Brian Kloppenborg, 27, is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Denver studying the eclipsing phenomenon of the star Epsilon Aurigae. One of the best places to study and view the star is on Mt. Wilson in Los Angeles, California, where Kloppenborg and a small team of scientists are able to observe the eclipse that lasts for 18-months, but only appears every 27 years.

Probing a centuries-old mystery in the stars

LOS ANGELES -- As night settles upon Mount Wilson, stars rise out of the December darkness and the wind begins to howl.

Brian Kloppenborg looks overhead. There's Polaris and in the northeast, the Big Dipper, all bright and twinkling to the naked eye, but to the telescopes on this summit, they are smudges, their light blurred by the blustery streams of air and dust. If this keeps up, observing tonight will be impossible.

"There," he says. "It's just to right of Capella. See it?"

He aims a flashlight high above a horizon of swaying pines and firs in the direction of a flickering star, faint enough to be easily overlooked.

"That's it -- Epsilon Aurigae," he says with an almost paternal air.

If he's disappointed by the conditions tonight, he's not showing it. He'll be up here for another night and he's been lucky so far. Since 2008, he has studied this distant neighbor of Earth with great success.

Lying in the swirls of the Milky Way 2,000 light-years away, Epsilon Aurigae (pronounced EP-si-lon au-RYE-gee) has long puzzled observers with its strange fluctuations of light. After seven visits to this summit, using one of the most sophisticated arrays of telescopes in the world, Kloppenborg, with the help of other astronomers, is slowly unraveling the mystery of this star.

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