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This is KI0AR, Net Control for the Colorado Astronomy Net continuing. Meteor showers, no major meteor showers are active in September. So we enter a bit of a lull after the excitement. Meteoric dust from thousands of comets passing over the eons is visible before dawn as the zodiacal light as sunlight reflecting off the dust creates a faint glow. You'll need a very dark eastern horizon with net street. Nearby higher elevations get a better view too. The zodiacal light appears as a faint cone-shaped glow aligned with the ecliptic. On September mornings, well before dawn, the high angle of the sun of the ecliptic benefits views of it. The broad base of the glow is in Leo as that constellation rises and narrows higher in the sky through Cancer and Gemini. Catch it on moonless nights in the third and fourth week of September for the darkest skies. My excerpt is from Astronomy Magazine September 2025, page 29. So get out there early in the morning and see if you can see that zodiacal light in the east. For comets, we have Comet C2024E1 Wurchaus is passing through the constellation of Corona Borealis high to the west in the evening. Mid-month will be easiest time this month. Around 12 to 10th magnitude and 8 inches scope or greater and dark skies will be needed. So it will be kind of below, right now it's going to be kind of just below the Corona Borealis for the rest of the month. Take a look at that. Corona Borealis is just, oh let's see which way, just to the right or to the east of, or is that to the west, of Hercules. And let's see, we had a couple of eclipses. We had a partial solar eclipse on the 21st, New Zealand, Australia's eastern coast and Antarctica and some Pacificas got to see that. We had the longest total lunar eclipse since 2022 occurred back on the 7th that was visible in Australia, Asia, Africa and Europe.
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