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Almost every published list of good objects to observe at this time
of year includes the lovely yellow and red binary. Some quote the descriptions of various classic observers (Burnham's Celestial Handbook, and James Mullaney's Celestial Harvest are good sources for these earlier characterizations) but hardly anyone says anything new.. This shortcoming is true I think of the descriptions of many objects on many published observing lists, and it is not entirely a bad thing since what has been repeated many times and in many places may yet be new to a particular observer. Sue French's "Small Scope Sampler" column in Sky & Telescope is an exception: Her writing is always characterized by originality. I find that I learn something new from her columns about even the most well known and frequently discussed celestial objects. Her description of Eta Cass is to me an example. I never knew that Eta Cass A was so very like our sun (and that one could therefore show a newcomer to astronomy how our sun would look at say 19 or 20 light years away) And I never knew that Eta Cass B was one of the few red dwarfs easily visible in very small telescopes. (Surely this has been said in other places, but I think not very often.) Because of their originality and sprightly style, I like Sue French's columns a great deal. Bill Meyers |
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