- On 13 March, 1781, while William Herschel was surveying the sky for probable double stars (which orbit each other), with his 40 foot telescope, then the largest in the world, he noted an object he could resolve to a disc, and, after some inquiry, it was established to be a planet, now known as Uranus. Interestingly, it had likely been *seen* before, over the centuries, but because it orbits so slowly (84 years) everyone thought it was a star. The scene of the discovery is the subject of this skyscape. The principal scene here is Gemini, where Uranus was that night (a handspan “up and left” from the readily-findable evening constellation Orion (also depicted here, along with the other neighboring constellations, in minature, though in celestial globe view)). Uranus is now in Pisces, and will return to this approximate location in 2033, only its third orbit since discovery.
Tag: uranography
Mars is in my in-progress slice of the sky
https://www.instagram.com/p/BoMVvbdAc7E/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link
“21 Jan, 2014” (2017) (my favorite completed painting, to date)
I have a few bold claims and postures about this painting
- For the past 2000+ years, everyone has misidentified Ursa Major, the Great Bear
- No painting ever completed has as its subject a larger total mass than this one.
- Chicago should adopt Chi Ursa Major as the official City Star.
Continue reading “21 Jan, 2014” (2017) (my favorite completed painting, to date)
Solstice (2017)
Solstice actually occurs over in Gemini, up and to the right (radiating golden light), but Cancer is the subject, here. Praesepe, the Beehive Cluster, is the jewell of Cancer. In dark, dark skies, it is a barely noticeable, but distinct, fuzzy spot. It has been known since antiquity, always just out of sight, unknowable until telescopes brought it closer. Continue reading Solstice (2017)