My God... It's Full of Stars!
It was rather cold last night --low forties Fahrenheit-- but the skies were largely clear so it was time to break out the telescope, it's first use since
cuyahogarvr gave it to me for my birthday back in January.
The first snag is that I didn't have a compass so lining it up north-south was problematic. Instead, I aligned it to Polaris for a best-guess, then used a built-in alignment function to get a fix on Vega. Some minor additional alignment tuning was required but I was able to focus easily on Mars and Saturn last night.
The other newly-learned quirk is that while our trailer deck is very level, it shakes excessively under high magnification. If the skies are clear again tonight, I'll try setting up elsewhere on a cement platform.
Oh, and my orbital elements for the satellite viewing are out of date. I'll have to refresh everything before I head out here again.
Still, it was all very fun and I didn't even notice the cold or how late it was getting. Even without the telescope, I saw several meteors, a dozen different satellites (including an interesting trio moving in a triangular formation north to south) and a few bats. Life is good.
The first snag is that I didn't have a compass so lining it up north-south was problematic. Instead, I aligned it to Polaris for a best-guess, then used a built-in alignment function to get a fix on Vega. Some minor additional alignment tuning was required but I was able to focus easily on Mars and Saturn last night.
The other newly-learned quirk is that while our trailer deck is very level, it shakes excessively under high magnification. If the skies are clear again tonight, I'll try setting up elsewhere on a cement platform.
Oh, and my orbital elements for the satellite viewing are out of date. I'll have to refresh everything before I head out here again.
Still, it was all very fun and I didn't even notice the cold or how late it was getting. Even without the telescope, I saw several meteors, a dozen different satellites (including an interesting trio moving in a triangular formation north to south) and a few bats. Life is good.
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I'm glad you had fun.
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It's too bad that we can't see the further planets. I've always wondered if Neptune would have a blue-ish cast to it. And of course, I've always wanted to see Uranus.
all these worlds are yours, except Europa
Dave -- what are you doing?
my orbital elements for the satellite viewing are out of date.
This sort of thing has cropped up before, and it has always been due to human error.
If the skies are clear again tonight, I'll try setting up elsewhere on a cement platform.
I'm sorry, Dave, I can't let you do that
Bats
*ducks*
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I love astronomy, but I also love living in big cities... a combination doomed to failure and disappointment. Still, I remember how thrilled I was to see three of Jupiter's moons for the first time, to resolve a binary star, and to see a faint comet that was too dim for the unaided eye.
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