The Great Conjuncture of Jupiter and Saturn
On December 21 2020, we were fortunate to watch the great conjuncture of Jupiter and Saturn as the the planets appeared closest to each other in the night sky. It was a treat to watch it right from our backyard soon after sunset without a telescope ! The conjuncture happens once every 20 years when Jupiter overtakes Saturn in its orbit. This one was the great conjuncture because it is the rarest of the conjunctures between naked eye planets -separations of less than 10 arcminutes have only happened four times since 1200- this being the most recent. According to NASA website : What makes this year’s spectacle so rare, then? It’s been nearly 400 years since the planets passed this close to each other in the sky, and nearly 800 years since the alignment of Saturn and Jupiter occurred at night, as it will for 2020, allowing nearly everyone around the world to witness this “great conjunction.” We, at first could not really believe what we were able to see with the naked eye - double checking it on NASA and other astronomy websites, and watching live streams from astronomy centers. We went in and out of the house admiring the universe’s wonders !
Sketching the Pandemic Year 2020 week 52 December 20-26
Grandma Moses Out for Christmas Tree 1946 (oil on pressed wood) graces this week in the Smithsonian Engagement Calendar 2020. ‘This winter landscape includes a number of charming vignettes as people pick out Christmas trees, pull sleds up a snowy slope, and chop firewood.’ As sweet as the scene in the painting is, my cherished Christmas memory for years to come will be the great conjuncture !!!
This is week 52 - but there is one more page and one last sketch to share to complete my ‘Sketching the Pandemic Year 2020’ !