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July Has 9 Major Astronomical Events Including Meteor Showers and a Planet Parade—and the First Starts Tonight

July Has 9 Major Astronomical Events Including Meteor Showers and a Planet Parade—and the First Starts Tonight

Yahoo21 hours ago
July 3-4: Mercury at greatest eastern elongationJuly 10: Full buck moonJuly 16: Moon, Saturn, and Neptune trifectaJuly 19-20: Pre-dawn planet paradeJuly 20: Crescent moon covers PleiadesJuly 22: A Venus-moon-Jupiter pyramidJuly 28: Moon joins MarsJuly 29-30: Southern Delta Aquariid meteor shower peaksJuly 30-31: Planet ParadeWith warm weather and relaxed schedules, summer stargazing just hits differently, especially with July's lineup of dazzling space sights. We have planet parades, moon-planet meetups, and meteor showers producing interstellar fireworks. Plus July is one of the best months to admire our home galaxy, the Milky Way. It's visible much of the night from a dark-sky destination, be it a national park or stargazing hotel.
If admiring the heavens is on your summer bucket list, you're in luck. Here's everything to watch for in July's night sky.
Mercury is often difficult to spot since it hangs close to the sun, but its visibility improves a few times each year, including this month. On the evenings of July 3-4, Mercury will reach its eastern elongation—its apparent farthest separation from the sun—in the evening for U.S. sky-watchers. Find it above the western horizon soon after sunset, and don't miss orange-tinged Mars just above it.
Admire July's bright lunar orb, known as the full buck moon, on July 10. The moon hits peak illumination at 4:37 p.m. ET, according to The Old Farmer's Almanac. It won't be visible to U.S. stargazers at this time, but you can catch it at its most luminous and dramatic when it rises the evenings of July 9 and 10.
Watch the waning gibbous moon, Saturn, and Neptune meet in the night sky around midnight on July 16. The trio will travel above the eastern horizon and high into the sky throughout the night, with Venus and Jupiter joining soon before sunrise. While the moon and Saturn will be visible to the naked eye, Neptune requires a telescope.
Stargazers will be treated with an eye-popping planet parade roughly an hour before sunrise on July 19 and 20. Jupiter, Venus, the crescent moon, and Saturn will be visible to the naked eye, with Neptune (adjacent to Saturn) and Uranus (near Venus) visible via telescope. Watch the lineup in the east and southeast sky, and look for clear eastern vistas since Jupiter won't travel far above the horizon.
The crescent moon will appear to gobble up the Pleiades star cluster in the pre-dawn hours of July 20. The moon will cross over several of the cluster's naked-eye-visible stars between around 4 a.m. local time and sunrise. Watch the marvel unfold halfway above the eastern horizon.
The moon-planet magic continues on the morning of July 22, when Venus, Jupiter, and the sliver of a crescent moon form a pyramid above the eastern horizon for roughly an hour before sunrise.
Spot the crescent moon and Mars hanging above the western horizon for roughly two hours after sunset on July 28. The duo will be close enough to share a field of view in stargazing binoculars, according to stargazing app Sky Safari.
The Southern Delta Aquariid meteor shower runs from around July 18 to Aug. 12, according to NASA. Its July 29-30 peak could produce around seven to eight meteors per hour beneath dark skies. This spectacle is best viewed in the southern hemisphere sky-watching spots. That said, northern hemisphere stargazers may catch a few shooting stars above the southern horizon during the shower's peak. Use Saturn, located just above Aquarius, as a navigational guide. And since the Perseids begin this month, too, you could catch a few meteors above the eastern horizon.
The pre-dawn planet parade will get even dreamier as the month rolls on, particularly around July 30 and 31, when Jupiter moves away from the sun. You can see the upward arc of Jupiter, Venus, Uranus, Saturn, and Neptune from the east to the southern sky in the early morning hours of July 30 and 31. If you miss it, don't fret: This is merely an appetizer for what's to come with planetary alignments in August.
Read the original article on Travel & Leisure
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How One Little Girl Sold Enough Lemonade To Fulfill Her Space Camp Dream
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Scientists issue warning after detecting concerning surge in infection in domestic cats: 'Should be closely monitored'
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Scientists issue warning after detecting concerning surge in infection in domestic cats: 'Should be closely monitored'

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‘Cool' people tend to have these six things in common, study finds
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‘Cool' people tend to have these six things in common, study finds

An international team of researchers may have just cracked the code for what makes someone 'cool.' And no matter where you live, the personality traits that make someone 'cool' appear to be consistent across countries, according to the study, published this week in the Journal of Experimental Psychology. The researchers found that, compared with people considered to be 'good' or 'favorable,' those considered 'cool' are perceived to be more extroverted, hedonistic, powerful, adventurous, open and autonomous. 'The most surprising thing was seeing that the same attributes emerge in every country,' said Todd Pezzuti, an associate professor of marketing at Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez in Chile who was a co-lead researcher on the study. 'Regardless of whether it's China or Korea or Chile or the US, people like people who are pushing boundaries and sparking change,' he said. 'So I would say that coolness really represents something more fundamental than the actual label of coolness.' The researchers – from Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, the University of Arizona and the University of Georgia – conducted experiments from 2018 to 2022 with nearly 6,000 people across a dozen countries: Australia, Chile, China, Germany, India, Mexico, Nigeria, Spain, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey and the United States. The participants were asked to think of a person in their lives whom they perceive to be 'cool,' 'uncool,' 'good' or 'not good.' They were then asked to rate that person's personality using two scales: the Big Five Personality scale, a widely used scientific model that helps describe personality traits, and the Portrait Values Questionnaire, intended to measure an individual's basic values. The study participants consistently associated being calm, conscientious, universalistic, agreeable, warm, secure, traditional and conforming with being a good person, more than with being a cool person. Being capable was considered to be both 'cool' and 'good' but not distinctly either. But the formula for being 'cool' was having the six character traits – more extroverted, hedonistic, powerful, adventurous, open and autonomous – no matter the person's age, gender or education level. Pezzuti doesn't think these 'cool' traits are something that can be taught. 'We're born with those attributes,' he said. 'Five of those attributes are personality traits, and personality traits tend to be fairly stable.' The research showed that cool people and good people aren't the same, but there may be some overlapping traits, said co-lead researcher Caleb Warren, an associate professor of marketing at the University of Arizona. 'To be seen as cool, someone usually needs to be somewhat likable or admirable, which makes them similar to good people,' Warren said in a news release. 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The new paper is one of the few empirical studies that examines what exactly makes people 'cool,' said Jonah Berger, an associate professor of marketing at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business. 'While people have long wondered (and theorized) about what makes people cool, there hasn't been a lot of actual empirical research on the topic, so it's great to see work exploring this space,' Berger, who was not involved in the new paper, wrote in an email. 'While coolness might seem like something you are born with, there are certainly steps people can take to try and move in that direction,' he said. 'Given how many people want to be cool, and how much money is spent with that goal in mind, it certainly seems worth studying.' Future research in this space could evaluate coolness in tandem with goodness and badness rather than in isolation from it, said Jon Freeman, an associate professor of psychology at Columbia University. 'In real life, coolness can be a positive quality but can also have a negative connotation in certain social contexts. It may be valuable for future work to examine the differences between good coolness and bad coolness, and this study's approach offers a great foundation,' Freeman, who also was not involved in the new study, wrote in an email. 'From a scientific standpoint, cool would seem far more a product of inference and social construction than genetics, although low-level temperament informed by genetics could feed into ongoing personality construction,' he said. ''Cool' is deeply ingrained in our social vocabulary because it serves as a shorthand for complex inferences. It encapsulates signals of status, affiliation, and identity in ways that are instantaneous yet deeply stereotyped. From a scientific perspective, studying coolness is important precisely because it reveals how rapid, schematic trait inferences influence behavior and social dynamics, especially in the age of social media and influencer culture.'

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