West Jersey Astronomical Society www.wasociety.us
Welcome to the Official Home Page of the West Jersey Astronomical Society (additionally known as the Willingboro Astronomical Society). Our club is in its 58th year of serving both the public and the amateur astronomers of the Delaware Valley. We have a long history of public education, star parties, interesting meetings, in-depth training and experienced leadership. We are a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization. Click here for membership information. Members in good standing have access to the gated Barnegat Road Observing Site in the dark New Jersey Pines.
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President: Vice President: Secretary: Treasurer: Starwatch Director: |
Bob Lill Frank Grupico Karen Hagerman Wade Evans Suzanne Leap |
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Announcements Last Update: Friday, September 26, 2025
Oct 3 | Formal Meeting at the Virtua Health and Wellness Center, Conference Ctr, Room 155A, Moorestown, NJ, 7:30 pm. Guests are welcome. |
Oct 6 | Titan Shadow Transit on Saturn, starting at 1:09 am EDT, the final transit in this series with the shadow just grazing the northern limb of Saturn. This will be the last Titan shadow transit until July 2038. |
Oct 6 | Full Moon at 11:40 pm EDT in Pisces. |
Oct 15 | Public Star Watch at Historic Smithville Park in Easthampton, NJ (near Mt Holly), beginning at 6:30 pm with a weather backup date of Oct 16. A no-fee registration is required. Check back here on the day of the event for the go/no-go weather call. |
Oct 17 | Informal Meeting at the Virtua Health and Wellness Center, Conference Ctr, Room 155A, Moorestown, NJ, 7:30 pm. Guests are welcome. |
Oct 21 | New Moon at 3:54 pm EDT in Virgo. |
Oct 25 | Public Star Watch at Batsto, beginning at 7:30 pm, no registration required. Check back here on the day of the event for the go/no-go weather call. |
Photo Spotlight Image posted 9.05.2025
Club member John McDaniel captured this splendid image including both the North America (left) and Pelican (right) Nebulae in the constellation Cygnus the Swan. John was able to do this from his suburban backyard in Voorhees, NJ, which is certainly not a dark site. He used an ASKAR FRA500 90 mm, f/5.6 telescope with a 0.7x focal reducer for an effective 350 mm focal length at f/3.9, plus a Triband light pollution filter. It represents 123 frames, 120 seconds each, for a total of 246 minutes (4.1 hr) exposure. Click the picture for a larger version.
Click here for the
previous home page image.
Sky & Telescope's
This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 26 to October 5, 2025.
Get the monthly
Evening Sky Map.
Click to contact the
. Members are encouraged to submit their astronomical images to the
webmaster for inclusion on the WAS Home Page. Be sure to include a description,
date and time, as well as equipment and photo data.
Astrospheric Forecast for the Barnegat Road Observing Site...
Star & Constellation
Pronunciation Guides
United States Naval Observatory, Astronomical Applications
Solar and Lunar Eclipses in 2025
Titan Shadow
Transits in 2025 (EDT), based on this
Bob King S&T article (UT)