StarDate

Billy Henry
StarDate
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345 episodes

  • StarDate

    Crow and Cup

    04/26/2026 | 2 mins.
    A pair of ancient but faint constellations flows across the southern evening sky at this time of year. The two of them share a common story, which also involves a third constellation.

    Corvus and Crater have been around for more than two millennia. Their story, in fact, comes from ancient Greece.

    According to the myth, the god Apollo sent Corvus, the crow, to fill a cup – known as a crater – with water from a nearby spring. On the way, the crow saw a tree filled with unripe figs. Instead of fetching the water and coming straight back, he waited for the figs to ripen. When they did, he gorged on them.

    Corvus knew that Apollo wouldn’t be happy with him. So he filled the cup with water, then grabbed a water snake in his talons. He brought both back to Apollo, and blamed the snake for blocking his way. But Apollo wasn’t fooled. Instead, he was angry and vengeful. He cast crow, cup, and snake into the heavens, forming three constellations. As extra punishment, he decreed that the crow would suffer from thirst – with the water-filled cup forever just out of reach.

    The constellations are in the southeast at nightfall now. Corvus contains four moderately bright stars that outline the shape of a sail. Crater, to the upper right, looks like a goblet – but you need really dark skies to see it.

    Both of them sit on the back of poor Hydra, the water snake – an innocent victim of the wrath of the gods.

    Script by Damond Benningfield
  • StarDate

    Moon and Regulus

    04/25/2026 | 2 mins.
    As seen from the eastern United States, there’s a “now-you-see-it, now-you-don’t” event in the early evening sky. The Moon will occult Regulus – passing in front of Leo’s brightest star and blocking it from view. The star will remain hidden for a few minutes. But its disappearance is almost instantaneous:

    Regulus is there one second, then gone the next.

    It does take a tiny fraction of a second for the Moon to cover the star. Astronomers make precise measurements of that timing. The length of time it takes a star to vanish reveals its apparent diameter – how big it looks in our sky. And that’s how the first good measurement of the size of Regulus came about.

    In 1933, a French astronomer recorded an occultation of the star on a rapidly spinning photographic plate. That told him how long it took Regulus to disappear. From that, he calculated the star’s apparent diameter. And he was close to the modern value.

    When astronomers combine that number with a star’s distance, they can calculate its true diameter. Regulus is 79 light-years away – and about four times the diameter of the Sun.

    Tonight’s occultation is best seen from the eastern U.S. The Moon and Regulus will be in the sky as seen from the rest of the country as well. But at least part of the event will take place during daylight, when Regulus is too faint to see without help. The star will shine close to the Moon after the occultation ends.

    Script by Damond Benningfield
  • StarDate

    Pointing the Way

    04/24/2026 | 2 mins.
    It’s hard to ask for a better signpost for finding things in the night sky than the planet Venus. Right now it’s the brilliant “evening star,” low in the west as twilight fades. And it points the way to two other wonders: the planet Uranus and the Pleiades star cluster.

    The Pleiades is fairly easy to find on its own. Its brightest stars form a tiny dipper shape. In fact, the Pleiades is often mistaken for the Little Dipper. But that dipper is in the north, anchored by the North Star.

    Despite its prominence, the Pleiades is best appreciated with a technique known as averted vision – seeing it from the corner of your eye. And Venus offers a good chance to try it. Look at Venus, then see if you can see the sparkly cluster to its right. They’re separated by the width of a couple of fingers held at arm’s length.

    Uranus is about one finger width below Venus. It’s the third-largest planet in the solar system. But it’s so far away that it looks tiny and faint. It’s an easy target for binoculars or a small telescope, though. It looks like a faint star.

    A telescope reveals something interesting about Venus – it doesn’t look quite complete. That’s because it’s in a gibbous phase. If you watch the planet for months, you’ll see it get thinner and thinner. That’s because Venus will cross between Earth and the Sun in late October. Like the new Moon, it’ll be lost in the Sun’s glare no matter how you look at it.

    Script by Damond Benningfield
  • StarDate

    Thick Ice

    04/23/2026 | 2 mins.
    Jupiter’s big moon Europa is one of the most likely bodies in the solar system to host life. The moon has a global ocean that holds more water than all of Earth’s oceans combined. The ocean might have sources of energy and chemical compounds that are needed to support microscopic life.

    But getting to that ocean won’t be easy. It’s covered by a crust of ice. And a recent study says the ice is pretty thick.

    The Juno spacecraft scanned part of Europa with an instrument that can probe conditions below the surface. It found that the average thickness of the ice is about 18 miles. That’s thicker than suggested by some earlier studies. Juno found many cracks in the ice. But they don’t penetrate anywhere close to the water. So there doesn’t appear to be a good way to get through the ice to study the ocean.

    That also could be a problem for any organisms in the ocean. Jupiter’s radiation zaps material on the surface, transforming it into possible nutrients.

    Without any holes or thin spots in the ice, there’s no direct way to flush the nutrients into the water. But another study found that large concentrations of nutrients could make blocks of ice denser than the surrounding ice. Over time, the heavier blocks could sink all the way through the ice – perhaps helping to sustain any life in Europa’s hidden ocean.

    Jupiter is high in the west at nightfall, and looks like a brilliant star. The twins of Gemini stand above it.

    Script by Damond Benningfield
  • StarDate

    Moon and Jupiter

    04/22/2026 | 2 mins.
    In December of 2024, a region on Jupiter’s moon Io blew its top. Several huge volcanoes were erupting at the same time – the most powerful volcanic event ever seen anywhere in the solar system. The outburst covered an area the size of West Virginia. During the hour that a spacecraft was watching, it produced enough energy to power the entire United States for days.

    Io is by far the most active body in the solar system. It has hundreds of cones, lava pools, and other volcanic features. They’re powered by a constant tug-of-war between Jupiter and some of its other big moons. They pull and stretch Io’s interior, heating it up.

    The 2024 eruptions were observed by Juno, a spacecraft that’s orbiting through the Jovian system. The region on Io had been quiet when Juno last looked at it, about two months earlier. So the eruptions must all have started at about the same time.

    That suggests they were powered by the same source of magma below the surface. The magma must have traveled through a network of underground plumbing, allowing it to power several eruptions at once. So Io’s interior might be like a sponge, with lots of open spaces – that are sometimes filled with molten rock.

    Jupiter appears just above our moon tonight. It looks like a brilliant star. Through binoculars, Io and Jupiter’s other big moons look like tiny stars quite close to the planet.

    We’ll talk about one of Jupiter’s icy moons tomorrow.

    Script by Damond Benningfield

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StarDate, the longest-running national radio science feature in the U.S., tells listeners what to look for in the night sky.
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