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I was out grilling some hot dogs (38 degrees isn't so cold, is it?), and
glanced up to see how the sky was looking. After a few seconds, having no dark adaption at all, I caught a fuzziness near the zenith. After I turned the outside light off, it was even more prominent. It's an elongated fuzzy patch in my 10x50's, brighter than any galaxy I've seen even through my telescope. In fact, it looks to the naked eye a bit like M31 looks in my 8" telescope. There's solid cloud cover right now, so I can't see it anymore. There wasn't a whole lot of clear sky when I first saw it, so the only location I can come up with is to roughly follow a line from Epsilon Cas through Gamma Cas, for a few tens of degrees. It was near the zenith at around 21:00 EDT at -74:47W and 41:18N. I see nothing in the charts to explain it. I estimate its size to be a couple degrees in length, and maybe half a degree in width. Anyone else see this thing? -- - Mike Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail. |
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