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Old October 17th 03, 09:17 PM
Tim Longwell
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Chin Up GRW the Andromeda galaxy IS viewable nicely in your scope. The
Andromeda Galaxy is a faint fuzzy in the 114 however.
The way we help new ones at our club find the Andromeda Galaxy may help you:

Locate the Great square of Pegasus, then viewing the Great square as if you
were looking down on a baseball diamond, locate 3rd base. Now Follow the
line towards the north star from 3rd base to the 2nd bright star from 3rd
base. Now move up towards zenith 2 stars from that star and the Andromeda
galaxy will be at about the 2 o'clock position.

Learning to find deep sky objects takes a bit longer than finding stars,
planets and the moon. You will find it very helpful to locate the nearest
Astronomy club in your area. The members of any Astronomy club will be more
than glad to assist you in enjoying your new telescope more.

--
Clear and Dark Skies for all!

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Tim Longwell

Black River Astronomical Society
http://junior.apk.net/~arstar50/BlackRiver.index.html
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"GRW" wrote in message
om...
I am new to astronomy and have been enjoying myself a great deal.

I started by just trying to learn the constellations, and then
identifying some of the more prominent objects (i.e., planets).

Recently purchased a Celestron 114GT telescope, and have set it up and
aligned it per instructions. This has yielded my son and I some
excellent views of the moon, mars, saturn, etc. and I like the way it
will track objects.

Here's my problem - I see in the astronomy magazines numerous and
incredible photos of deep sky objects, generally taken by folks with
telescopes much larger and more powerful than mine.

Many things I read indicate that aperture may be more important than
magnification. However, I don't know what to expect when looking for
certain objects because nobody has given me any help with the scope
and I have no point of reference except the magazines.

For instance, I have been trying to locate M31 in Andromeda. I
certainly know where to look, but don't know what to look for. How
big should it look? Is it just star-sized, or should it be larger?
Am I just not in a dark enough location (we actually don't have much
light pollution where I live, but there are neighboring houses with
external lights)?

I know this sounds like a stupid question. However, expectation
levels were set pretty high by the scope mfr's literature, and I'm
afraid that I may be reaching the practical limitations of this scope.
If so, this may be very disappointing.