Astronomical Calendar November 2022 - All Events and Phenomena!
Astronomical Calendar November 2022 | Meet the Astronomical Events of November 2022
Lunar Calendar for November 2022 | Will a Meteor Shower be in November 2022? | What are the Lunar Conjunctions for November 2022? | How many eclipses will there be in 2022?
All the Astronomical Phenomena are in Dorian’s Secrets: The Eternal Youth Magazine.
- Dorian, November 1, 2022
- Definition source: Wiki
- Prediction: Dorian
Astronomical Calendar November 2022
November 1, 2022:
The conjunction of the Moon and Saturn, visible beginning at sunset in a southerly direction. Maximum approach at 00:00 (day 2). Saturn’s magnitude of +0.7.
November 3, 2022:
Moon reaches the Crescent Quarter phase at 06:38 UTC.
November 4, 2022:
The conjunction of the Moon and Jupiter will be visible beginning at sunset in a southeasterly direction. Maximum approach at 23:00 UTC. Jupiter’s magnitude of -2.8.
November 8, 2022:
Total Lunar Eclipse. The total phase begins at 10:17 UTC and concludes at 11:41 UTC. Maximum phase at 10:59 UTC. The partial phase begins at 09:09 UTC and ends at 12:49 UTC. During the total phase, the Moon will take on a reddish-orange color. The eclipse will be visible from Asia, Australia, the Pacific, and the Americas.
November 8, 2022:
The Moon reaches full Moon at 11:02 UTC.
November 8, 2022:
The conjunction of the Moon and Uranus will be visible beginning at sunset in an easterly direction. Maximum approach at 13:00 UTC. The Uranus magnitude of +5.6. The occultation of Uranus by the Moon will be visible from East Asia and Alaska.
November 8, 2022:
Mercury in superior conjunction with the Sun at 16:00 UTC. The elusive planet leaves the morning sky and enters the evening sky.
November 9, 2022:
Uranus is in opposition with the Sun at 08:00 UTC. The magnitude of +5.6.
November 9, 2022:
The conjunction of the Moon, Pleiades, and Aldebaran. Visible beginning at sunset in an easterly direction. The maximum approach between the Moon and the Pleiades will be at 15:00 UTC and between the Moon and Aldebaran at 09:00 UTC (day 10)—the Aldebaran magnitude of +1.0.
November 11, 2022:
The conjunction of the Moon and Mars. Visible during the night of the 11th and early morning of the 12th. Maximum approach at 14:00 UTC. Mars’s magnitude of-1.5.
November 13, 2022:
The conjunction of the Moon and the stars Castor and Pollux. Visible during the last minutes of the 13th and the early morning of the 14th. The maximum approach between the Moon and Castor at 19:00 UTC; between the Moon and Pollux at 01:00 UTC (day 14). Magnitudes: Pollux +1.2; Castor +1.6.
November 14, 2022:
Moon reaches Perigee (farthest point from Earth) at 07:00 UTC. Distance of 404,921 kilometers; the angular size of 29.5′.
November 16, 2022:
Moon reaches the Waning Quarter phase at 13:28 UTC.
November 17, 2022:
The conjunction of the Moon and the star Regulus. Visible during the early morning of the 17th. Maximum approach at 02:00 UTC. The magnitude of Regulus of +1.4.
November 18, 2022:
The Leonid meteor shower reaches its maximum activity at 06:00 UTC. This event occurs by debris ejected by Comet 55P/Tempel Tuttle. It delivers fast meteors (70 km/h). Up to 15 meteors per hour will be expected during maximum.
November 21, 2022:
The conjunction of the Moon and the star Spica. Visible before dawn in a southeasterly direction. Maximum approach at 08:00 UTC. The magnitude of Spica of +1.0.
November 23, 2022:
New Moon at 22:56 UTC.
November 26, 2022:
Moon reaches Perigee (closest point to Earth) at 01:37 UTC—a distance of 362,826 kilometers; the angular size of 32,’9.
November 29, 2022:
The conjunction of the Moon and Saturn; will be visible at sunset in a southeasterly direction. Maximum approach at 08:00 UTC. Saturn’s magnitude of +0.8.
November 30, 2022:
Moon reaches the Crescent Quarter phase at 14:37 UTC.
Astronomical Calendar November 2022
Definition of UTC (Coordinated Universal Time):
Coordinated Universal Time or UTC.. (an intermediate between the English version Coordinated Universal Time CUT and the French version Temps universe coordonné TUC).. is the primary time standard by which the world regulates clocks and time.
It is one of several closely related successors to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). For most everyday purposes, UTC is synonymous with GMT, as GMT is no longer the defined standard for the scientific community.
Definition of Conjunction in Astronomy:
Two stars are in conjunction when observed from a third (generally the Earth) at the exact celestial longitude. As the celestial latitude may differ, the stars are very close in the sky, although they do not coincide, passing one above another. The conjunction is one of the main aspects of the planets. It also applies to any celestial object visually located next to another.
Definition of Perigee in Astronomy:
It is called perigee (from the Greek adjective περίγειος) to the point of the elliptical orbit that a natural or artificial body travels around the Earth, in which said body is closer to its center. In perigee, the orbital speed is the maximum of the entire orbit.
Definition of Apogee in Astronomy:
Apogee (from the Greek ἀπό ‘apart, away from’ and γεω- ‘terrestrial, relative to planet Earth’). It is the point in an elliptical orbit around the Earth at which a body is farthest from the center of the Earth. The opposite orbital point, the closest one, is called perigee.
Definition of Equinox:
The equinoxes (from the Latin aequinoctium (aequus nocte), “equal night”). These are the times of the year when the Sun is located in the plane of the celestial equator. On that day and for an observer on the Earth’s equator. Sun reaches its zenith (the highest point in the sky concerning the observer, just above his head, at 90 °). The declination parallel of the Sun and the celestial equator then coincide.
It occurs twice a year: between March 19 and 21 and September 21 and 24.
As its name indicates, on the dates when the equinoxes occur, the day lasts approximately equal to that of the night at the equator and in the latitudes close to it.
The equinoxes set the onset of spring and fall in each earth’s hemisphere.
What is a Meteor Shower?
A meteor shower is a celestial event in which the irradiation of various meteors is observed from one point in the night sky. These meteors are caused by streams of cosmic debris called meteoroids that enter Earth’s atmosphere at extremely high speeds in parallel paths.
Most meteors are smaller than a grain of sand, so almost all disintegrate and never reach the Earth’s surface. Very intense or unusual meteor showers are known as meteor bursts and meteor storms, which produce at least 1,000 meteors per hour, mainly from the Leonids. The Meteor Data Center lists more than 900 possible meteor showers, of which about 100 are well-established. Several organizations point to Internet viewing opportunities. NASA maintains a daily map of active meteor showers.
What are the Moon Phases?
The lunar phases (also phases of the Moon). Are the apparent changes of the satellite’s visible illuminated portion due to its position change concerning the Earth and the Sun. The complete cycle, called lunation, is 29.53 days, during which the moon passes the new moon. Its visible illuminated portion gradually increases again. Two weeks later, the full moon occurs, and around the following two weeks, it decreases again, and the satellite enters the new phase again.
Finally, a perfect alignment between the Sun, the Earth, and the Moon occurs, which results in eclipses. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes before the solar disk. This can only happen on a new Moon, while a lunar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes through the Earth’s shadow, which can only happen on a full Moon. This transition between phases has been used to measure time, so many lunar calendars were created based on the lunar cycle (moon phase). The Moon takes eighteen days, and it happens because the Sun and the Earth align; having said that, the Moon is forming.
How does each Astronomical Phenomenon influence the life of the Zodiac Signs?
See Prediction by Dorian:
Astronomical Calendar of the Previous / Next Month:
Astronomical Calendar November 2022
Astronomical Calendar November 2022 | Meet the Astronomical Events of November 2022
Lunar Calendar for November 2022 | Will a Meteor Shower be in November 2022? | What are the Lunar Conjunctions for November 2022? | How many eclipses will there be in 2022?
All the Astronomical Phenomena are in Dorian’s Secrets: The Eternal Youth Magazine.