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  • What's Up for December?

  • Mars and Neptune above the crescent moon

  • and a New Year's Eve comet!

  • Hello and welcome.

  • I'm Jane Houston Jones

  • from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory

  • in Pasadena, California.

  • 2016 ends with fireworks

  • as three planets line up as if ejected from a Roman candle.

  • Mercury, Venus and Mars are visible

  • above the sunset horizon all month long.

  • As Venus climbs higher in the sky,

  • it looks brighter and larger

  • than it appeared last month.

  • On New Year's Eve, Mars and Neptune appear

  • very close to each other.

  • Through telescopes, rusty red Mars

  • and blue-green Neptune's colors contrast beautifully.

  • [Whoosh]

  • There are two meteor showers this month

  • the Geminds and the Ursids.

  • The best time to see the reliable Geminids will be

  • next year, when the full moon

  • won't be so bright and interfering.

  • This year, however, we may luck out and see

  • some of the brighter meteors on the evening of the 13th

  • and the morning of the 14th.

  • The best time to view the Ursids,

  • radiating from Ursa Minor, or the little Dipper,

  • will be from midnight on the 21st

  • until about 1 a.m. on the 22nd,

  • before the moon rises.

  • They may be active on the 23rd and 24th, too.

  • [Whoosh]

  • We haven't had a good easy-to-see comet

  • in quite a while,

  • but beginning in December and through most of 2017

  • we will have several binocular and telescopic comets to view.

  • The first we'll be able to see is

  • Comet 45P/Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusáková,

  • which will appear low on the western horizon

  • on December 15th.

  • On that date, the comet will pass

  • the pretty globular cluster M75.

  • By the 21st, it will appear edge-on,

  • sporting a bluish-green head and a thin, sharp view

  • of the fan-shaped tail.

  • On New Year's Eve, the comet and the crescent moon

  • will rendezvous to say farewell to 2016.

  • A "periodic" comet is a previously-identified comet

  • that's on a return visit.

  • Periodic comet 45P returns to the inner solar system

  • every 5.25 years,

  • and that's the one that will help us ring in the new year.

  • You can catch up on solar system missions and

  • all of NASA's missions at

  • www.nasa.gov

  • That's all for this month, I'm Jane Houston Jones.

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