Daylight Savings Time | November Sky Happenings


November 1, 2024
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Editor’s Note: HMNS Astronomer James Wooten reminds us to adjust our clocks as Daylight Savings Time ends this month.

Saturn is an evening object.  Look in the southeast at dusk on Nov. 1, closer to the south by Thanksgiving.   

Venus is also in the evening sky.  Look low in the west-southwest at dusk, near the point of sunset.

Jupiter is now a late-evening object.  It rises in the east by 8:00 as soon as we fall back to Standard time, and during evening twilight by Thanksgiving. 

Mars also rises in the late evening, by 10:45 as Standard Time begins and before 9:30 by Thanksgiving.  

Constellations in the November southern sky are almost entirely devoid of bright stars.  They represent beasts and gods related to water, indicating that they are part of the ‘Celestial Sea’.  Examples are Aquarius, the Water Bearer and Pisces, the Fish.  Even Capricornus, the Goat, has a fishtail because he’s originally Ea, Babylonian god of the waters.  Below Aquarius is the one bright star in this area, Fomalhaut, marking the mouth of the Southern Fish.  Ancient Mesopotamians imagined that the Persian Gulf extended upwards into the sky, joining this ‘sea’ of dim stars. 

As the autumn ‘intermission’ in between the bright stars of summer and winter continues, Houstonians with a clear southern horizon can try to find a star that few Americans get to see.  Due south and very low to the horizon at about 10:00 pm in mid-November is Achernar, the 9th brightest star in the sky.  It marks the end of the river Eridanus, another of the dim watery patterns that fill the southern autumn sky. If you can find it, Achernar will seem to be of average brightness because it is shining through so much air.  Still, it is a good way to remind yourself that the stars we see depend on our latitude and that the sky near the Gulf Coast is similar to, but not the same as, what most Americans see. 

Daylight Savings Time | November Sky Happenings. Constellations over the city of Houston.
This star map shows the Houston sky at 9 pm CDT on November 1, 7 pm CST on November 15, and dusk on November 30.  To use the map, put the direction you are facing at the bottom.
 
The Summer Triangle is high in the west.  The ‘teapot’ of Sagittarius sets in the southwest.  Saturn is almost due south in the evening.  Jupiter, rising in the east, outshines all the stars in the night sky.  The Great Square of Pegasus is high in the east at dusk. To the south and east, we see a vast dim area of stars known as the ‘Celestial Sea’, where only Fomalhaut stands out.

Moon Phases in November 2024

New Nov. 1, 7:47 a.m.

1st Quarter Nov. 8, 11:55 p.m.

Full Nov. 15, 3:28 p.m.

Last Quarter Nov. 22, 7:27 p.m.

Sunday, November 3, is the first Sunday of November. Accordingly, Daylight Saving Time ends at 2:00 am that morning. Officially, the time goes from 1:59 am back to 1:00, such that the 1:00 am hour happens twice. Don’t forget to set clocks back one hour on Saturday night, November 2!

Our George Observatory is now open every Saturday night for observing!  Purchase tickets in advance on our website.

Clear Skies!


Take a look at October’s sky happenings!

Authored By James Wooten

James is the Planetarium Astronomer at the Houston Museum of Natural Science. He teaches students every school morning in the planetarium, and also answers astronomy questions from the public.


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