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MINNESOTA STARWATCH
Time to view lesser-known constellations

We’ll be treated to a long, slow approach between the two brightest planets in 2015, a year that gets off to a running start with a full moon.

January’s “wolf” moon reaches fullness at 10:53 p.m. on the 4th. Its name comes from the howling of hungry wolves outside Indian villages in the deep snow and cold. This moon takes a high trajectory across the night sky, a path that contrasts sharply with that of the sun’s daytime path because in winter—especially early winter—the Northern Hemisphere tilts away from the sun and toward the full moon.

Also on the 4th, Earth reaches perihelion, the closest point to the sun in its orbit. On that day we’ll swoop to a mere 91.4 million miles from our parent star.

In the predawn sky, Saturn is climbing in the southeast, close to the claws of Scorpius. As the month goes by, the red star Antares, the scorpion’s heart, comes up below the ringed planet and this pair shines as the two brightest points above the south-southeastern horizon. On the 16th, a waning crescent moon rises next to Saturn.

The middle third of January has several moonless hours each evening, so this is a good time to go out and find some lesser-known constellations, such as Perseus. Start with the bright, multicolored star Capella in Auriga, the charioteer. A five-sided constellation, Auriga is high in the south, above the hourglass form of Orion. Just west of Capella, use a star chart to make out the scraggly form of Perseus.

Perseus’s second brightest star, Algol, the Demon Star, represents the winking eye of Medusa, the snake-haired monster whose head Perseus carries. The winking is caused by the orbit of two stars in the Algol stellar system. In a cycle lasting not quite three days, the dimmer passes in front of the brighter and partially eclipses it from our point of view, causing a 10-hour dip in Algol’s brightness.

Jupiter rises earlier each night, following the knot of bright winter constellations into the sky. Meanwhile, in the west, Venus is coming into its own as an evening star. A young moon joins the brilliant planet on the 21st; if you look about 45 minutes after sunset you may catch Mercury below the moon, all but lost in the sun’s glare.

Venus and Jupiter are drawing closer, heading for a close encounter above the sunset horizon in June. But first, Venus has a rendezvous next month with Mars, which clings stubbornly to its patch of southwestern sky, resisting the inevitable tumble into the sunset that happens after Earth leaves it behind. The Red Planet gets this power from its great speed, which moves it resolutely eastward against the background of stars. It easily outstrips the more distant Jupiter and Saturn, neither of whose staying power can hold a candle to Mars’.

If you’re in the Twin Cities any time from now through May, check out the “Eyes on the Universe” exhibit at the University of Minnesota’s Bell Museum and learn how researchers study the moon, the Andromeda galaxy and beyond. Also, its hands-on, kid-friendly companion exhibit, “A View from Space,” turns the observer’s eye back to Earth through satellite imagery.


Outdoors
Fishing over the limit nets big fine, loss of boat
  • Updated

An Illinois angler faces nearly $2,200 in fines and restitution, plus the loss of his boat and equipment, following an investigation by conservation officers with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.

Charles H. Siegerdt, 54, Keenyville, Illinois, was recently found with a gross over the limit of 21 bass (42 fillets) and 19 northern pike (38 fillets) at an Itasca County resort. The daily possession limit in Minnesota is six bass and three northerns.

“Mr. Siegerdt admitted to possessing an over limit in the initial contact, about 14 bass and northerns combined,” said Conservation Officer Jayson Hansen of Big Fork.

When asked where he kept his fish, Siegerdt pointed to the resort cabin he had been staying at and said the fish were in the cabin freezer.

Siegerdt led the officer into the cabin and opened the freezer.

“The freezer was full of plastic bags with frozen fish in them. I immediately recognized this as over the legal limit,” Hansen said.

When asked if he had skin patches on all the fillets, Siegerdt said, “No.”

Minnesota law requires anglers leave at least a one-square-inch patch of skin with scales so fish species can be identified when transporting them.

Siegerdt said he had been coming to Minnesota to fish for 35 years.

Siegerdt asked if he had to pay the fine and restitution immediately; he was told he could, or he could pay it later, or he could go to court.

“Mr. Siegerdt said he wasn’t going to fight anything,” Hansen said.

Conservation officers also confiscated Siegerdt’s boat, boat motor, and boat trailer. He also surrendered two rods and reels. Those items will be auctioned off at a later date with the proceeds going to the DNR’s Game and Fish Fund.

Siegerdt was cooperative during the investigation.

“After collecting his personal items from the boat he reached out and shook our hands, said he understood, and said it wouldn’t happen again,” Hansen said.

Hansen added, “Basically I want people to understand that if they are caught with a gross over limit they will face large fines, loss of privileges in all Wildlife Violator Compact states, and the loss of their equipment.”

The Wildlife Violator Compact is an agreement between states that recognizes the suspension of hunting, fishing, and trapping licenses in member states. Minnesota is one of 43 states that participate in the compact.

Anyone witnessing a fish or wildlife violation is encouraged to contact the 24-hour, toll-free Turn In Poachers (TIP) hotline at 800-652-9093. Cell phone users can dial #TIP.


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