M35_feature

Decembers Observations

M35 (NGC2168) is the first target. This open cluster is conspicuous in the eyepiece. More »

Venus Moon Conjunction December 26 2011

Brilliant Venus and a crescent Moon

Brilliant Venus and a crescent Moon lined up in conjunction on the evening of December 26, 2011. More »

Jupiter's Great Red Spot

The King of the Planets

The target would be Jupiter rising high in the East and well placed for viewing. Using my 27mm Extra Flat Field eyepiece (13x), Jupiter’s four bright moons are easy to see and More »

starfest_2010_ab

Astronomy Outreach – Bringing Astronomy to the People

I always thought doing outreach in the city would be rewarding but I never anticipated the overwhelming response to views of the moon and Jupiter. More »

Comet C/2009 P1 (Garradd)

Looking at a comet

During the past dark window I had the opportunity to image C/2009 P1 Garradd using my DSLR attached to my AR152 refractor. More »

Planetary Nebula IC 2149

I searched for IC 2149, a planetary Nebula in Auriga a couple of nights ago with my 6″ refractor. I thought that it should appear stellar with perhaps an odd color which would tip me off as to what I was looking at. Much to my suprise I was unable to find it. I tried powers as high as 88x but still no joy. Has anyone else seen this planetary nebula in Auriga? It’s located near Beta and Pi Auriga at RA: 05h 56′ 23.94″ DEC: +46 06′ 16.9″, around magnitude 10.5. I may have been looking right at it and just not have known what I was looking at.

I’m interesed in hearing about any observations of this planetary nebula.

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A short run

I got out to observe for a short run a few nights ago. I zeroed in on M34, an open cluster in Perseus, with my 150mm refractor. At 30x M34 is a loose cluster with about 30 stars, at 38x a few additional faint stars are revealed. I always thought M34 looked like someones collection of double stars spread out for me to examine. I noticed in the Pocket Sky Atlas a couple of galaxies nearby, NGC 1023 & IC 239. I couldn’t see IC 239 but NGC 1023 was an easy object to spot. at 38x the object appears elongated east-west with a bright center. Increasing the power to 71x, the oval is somewhat evenly illuminated with just a slight brightness at the galaxy core.

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Yeah, August is over!

A little while back I sent my 6″ refractor out for re-alignment and since it came back the skies have been cloudy here in Southeastern PA. Finally at the end of August we get some clear skies right around the time of full moon. So I wait a few days and at last I get a chance to do a little deep sky observing with it. Seeing was good on the 31st but transparency was a little off.

My first target is M57, the Ring Nebula in constellation Lyra. At 30x M57 looks like an puffy out-of-focus star floating amidst the background stars. Stepping up to 54x I can see the ring structure very well with a well defined dark center. The best view is at 108x. M57 has a green-gray color with well defined edges and a little darkening on the north edge.

The Globular Cluster M56, also in Lyra, is next. M56 is faint and requires averted vision to detect at 30x from my light polluted location. Switching up to 54x, the contrast is better but averted vision is still required. The object appears as an irregular fuzzy ball evenly bright across the surface.

Albireo is next up. Viewed at 30x, the jewel like appearance of this classic double star never fails to blow me away. The contrasting colors of blue and gold on a black velvet background. Wow! I never pass up a chance to look at this amazing spectacle the Medieval Arabic-speaking astronomers called minqar al-dajajah.

Jupiter is the final target for the night. At 142x the image is, well, out of this world (sorry, I couldn’t resist that). The NEB was well defined as were many other feature  on the planets’ surface.

That’s where I wrapped it up. Just about an hours worth of observing then the “Evil Orb”  a.k.a the Moon arose to wash out the sky.

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Tonight’s Sky

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The Summer Triangle

The Summer Triangle

By mid August The Summer Triangle will be well overhead for those of us at mid Northern latitudes (+40°) and perhaps our last opportunity this year to observe some of the more familiar deep sky targets and seek out a few of the more challenging targets for small telescopes.

If you’re not familiar with the Summer Triangle, here’s a little information. Start at the constellation Cygnus the Swan and locate the the first magnitude star Deneb, then draw an line to the bright star Vega (mag. 0.03)  in the constellation Lyra. Next draw a line to the 0.7 magnitude star Altair in the constellation Aqulia the Eagle. Connect Altair with Deneb and you have the Summer Triangle. The Summer Triangle is an asterism popularized by the British astronomer Sir Patrick Moore in the 1950′s, although he didn’t invent it.

The stars that make up the triangle are themselves interesting. Deneb (Alpha Cygni), is the brightest star in the constellation Cygnus and is the 19th brightest star in the night sky. It is 200 times the diameter of our Sun and it’s mass is estimated around 20 solar masses. Deneb is the prototype of a class of variable stars known as Alpha Cygni variables, which undergo non-radial fluctuations which cause its brightness and spectral type to change slightly. A 2008 study puts Deneb at a  distance of approximately 1,550 light-years. Vega (Alpha Lyrae), at magnitude 0.03 is the fifth brightest star and the second brightest in the northern hemisphere. At only 25 light-years from Earth, Vega is one of the most luminous stars in the solar neighborhood. Vega is also a suspected variable star. It is rotating rapidly with a velocity of 274 km/s at the equator. This is causing the equator to bulge outward because of centrifugal effects, and, as a result, there is a variation of temperature across the star’s photosphere that reaches a maximum at the poles. We see Vega from the direction of one of these poles. Altair (Alpha Aquilae), the twelfth brightest star in our night sky is located 16 light-years away and one of the closest stars visible to the naked eye. It’s mass is 1.8 times the mass of our Sun and 11 times as luminous. In 2005 Altair was identified as a Delta Scuti variable star. Altair’s rate of rotation is extremely rapid, around 9 hours. This rapid rotation forces Altair to be oblate; its equatorial diameter is over 20 percent greater than its polar diameter. Owing to this rapid rotation, Altair’s surface gravity and effective temperature are lower at the equator, making the equator less luminous than the poles.

The more familiar deep sky objects within the triangle are the planetary nebula M57 the “Ring Nebula” (actually lies along the line from Vega to Altair), M56, a globular cluster, M71, another globular cluster in the constellation Sagitta (this object may be difficult in some telescopes depending on your observing location), M27, the “Dumbbell nebula”, a planetary nebula in Vulpecula, and M29, an open cluster in Cygnus. Some of the more challenging and perhaps less observed deep sky objects are listed below. All of them are open (sometimes called  “galactic”) clusters.

NGC 6866, around mag. 7.2.
NGC 6819, mag 7.3.
NGC 6791, around mag. 9.
NGC 6910, mag 7.4 (The Rocking Horse Cluster).
IC 4996, mag 7.3.
NGC 6883, mag.8. This object could be a serious challenge.
NGC 6871, mag.5, sparse.
NGC 6834, around mag.8.
NGC 6823, mag.7.1, an emission nebula (NGC 6820) surrounds this cluster.
NGC 6802, mag.8.0.
NGC 6830, mag. 7.9.

Remember that when observing these deep sky objects to pump up the power once you locate them. In Sky & Telescope’s article “In Caroline Herschel’s Footsteps” by Tony Flanders, it mentions that  when observing NGC 6866, Caroline found resolving the cluster into individual stars to be difficult at low magnification but easy at 70X. She was using a 4.2-inch richest-field reflecting telescope.

Clear Skies,

Dan

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