Éphéméride Chaque jour a son histoire

Éphéméride astronomique du jour

Données astronomiques

Soleil
Lever
06:01
Coucher
21:51
Durée du jour 15h 50min (-1min 55s) Midi solaire 13:56 Crépuscule civil 05:23 — 22:30 Heure dorée 20:51 — 21:51
Lune
Premier croissant — 15/07/2026
Premier croissant
Illumination : 1%

Ciel à observer

En activité

Delta Aquarides

Pluie d'été discrète mais régulière, aux météores lents. Elle se mêle aux premières Perséides à la fin juillet.

Maximum attendu la nuit du 29 au 30 juillet · jusqu'à 25 météores par heure · radiant dans le Verseau, regarder vers le sud · poussières de la comète 96P/Machholz.

Prochain rendez-vous céleste : Maximum des Perséides, le 12 août (jusqu'à 100 météores par heure) — dans 28 jours

Image astronomique du jour

Double Lobed Asteroid Torifune

Double Lobed Asteroid Torifune

Why is this asteroid a double? Earlier this month the Japanese robotic spacecraft Hayabusa2 shot past asteroid 98943 Torifune and captured pictures. Although previous observations from distant Earth indicated that Torifune was oblong, Hayabusa2 found that Torifune actually has two joined lobes. With a length of about four soccer fields, this space rock frequently comes near the Earth as it orbits the Sun, although it is not a threat. Besides the two lobes, Torifune shows many large boulders, but, surprisingly, no obvious craters, likely because its surface is a pile of rubble. Like asteroid Arrokoth, it appears that each lobe formed separately before colliding and becoming stuck together. Hayabusa2 famously encountered asteroid Ryugu in 2018, and now heads for an encounter in 2031 with 1998 KY26, a smaller asteroid that rotates unusually fast and might have reservoirs of ice.

Crédit : JAXA, U. of Tokyo, Chiba Tech, Tokyo U. of Science, AIST, Paris Obs., IAC