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Actually, it was my first night out with a telescope, period. Location:
north Scottsdale. Suburban skies, and clear. The seeing conditions seemed better in the east for some reason, so I kept my observing in the back patio. This dob, a Hardin, came with two eyepieces. The 2" is pretty nice, and I have no complaints yet. The 1.25 9mm is pretty shoddy. There is some black stuff encroaching over the lens. I wonder if I can flick it off with a needle. This e.p. probably isn't worth shipping back for replacement. This dob has the new crayford focuser, which is supposed to be a good thing:-) I have dreamed of seeing M31. From what I have read, I knew enough to find it. After searching and searching with the 2" in the area to the left of the "Great Square", I finally noticed a smudge of light that was in stark contrast to surrounding collection of stars in my field of view. I put the 9mm in to get a closer look, and the smudge got a bit bigger, but by no means did it give me a detailed view of a galaxy. I strongly assume this is M31 anyways. How can I make the most of this? 7mm Televue Plossl with a good 3x Barlow? The 9mm gave me a 140x mag. and this doesn't seem optimal for M31. People say that M31 is visible with the naked eye, which could suggest that light pollution in north Scottsdale is worse than I think. I never did find it again later that night. Later that night (morning), I noticed an interesting cluster with my naked eyes, and set my bino's on it. Pleiades! I had never seen that formation magnified before. I stayed up the whole night to see Saturn and Venus, but by 5 a.m. clouds had set in:-( I did get a brief break in the clouds to see a bright object with the binos, dead east. It was disky, like a planet, and very bright, but no rings. Venus I assume. -Tom |
#2
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There is no eyepiece for your scope that will let you see all of M31. It
is WAY too large. Don't blame your eyepiece, or the scope. M31 is HUGE! It will fill the field of a pair of BINOCULARS! Right now, you need just to use the eyepieces you have on the objects you want to see, and determine where the shortcomings are. THEN you can decide what eyepieces you need next. But one eyepiece you aren't going to find, is one that will show you all of M31 in your scope... But a 32mm Plossl will still be pretty awesome... -- Jan Owen To reach me directly, remove the Z, if one appears in my e-mail address... Latitude: 33.662 Longitude: -112.3272 "Tom" wrote in message ... Actually, it was my first night out with a telescope, period. Location: north Scottsdale. Suburban skies, and clear. The seeing conditions seemed better in the east for some reason, so I kept my observing in the back patio. This dob, a Hardin, came with two eyepieces. The 2" is pretty nice, and I have no complaints yet. The 1.25 9mm is pretty shoddy. There is some black stuff encroaching over the lens. I wonder if I can flick it off with a needle. This e.p. probably isn't worth shipping back for replacement. This dob has the new crayford focuser, which is supposed to be a good thing:-) I have dreamed of seeing M31. From what I have read, I knew enough to find it. After searching and searching with the 2" in the area to the left of the "Great Square", I finally noticed a smudge of light that was in stark contrast to surrounding collection of stars in my field of view. I put the 9mm in to get a closer look, and the smudge got a bit bigger, but by no means did it give me a detailed view of a galaxy. I strongly assume this is M31 anyways. How can I make the most of this? 7mm Televue Plossl with a good 3x Barlow? The 9mm gave me a 140x mag. and this doesn't seem optimal for M31. People say that M31 is visible with the naked eye, which could suggest that light pollution in north Scottsdale is worse than I think. I never did find it again later that night. Later that night (morning), I noticed an interesting cluster with my naked eyes, and set my bino's on it. Pleiades! I had never seen that formation magnified before. I stayed up the whole night to see Saturn and Venus, but by 5 a.m. clouds had set in:-( I did get a brief break in the clouds to see a bright object with the binos, dead east. It was disky, like a planet, and very bright, but no rings. Venus I assume. -Tom |
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On Sat, 4 Sep 2004 18:42:36 -0700, Tom wrote:
I have dreamed of seeing M31. From what I have read, I knew enough to find it. After searching and searching with the 2" in the area to the left of the "Great Square", I finally noticed a smudge of light that was in stark contrast to surrounding collection of stars in my field of view. I put the 9mm in to get a closer look, and the smudge got a bit bigger, but by no means did it give me a detailed view of a galaxy. I strongly assume this is M31 anyways. How can I make the most of this? 7mm Televue Plossl with a good 3x Barlow? The 9mm gave me a 140x mag. and this doesn't seem optimal for M31. People say that M31 is visible with the naked eye, which could suggest that light pollution in north Scottsdale is worse than I think. I never did find it again later that night. Hi Tom, Congratulations on the new scope and welcome to the sleepless society! Now for a little advice. . .when first viewing most any object, start with a lower power eyepiece and work your way up until you get the most revealing view your As for M31, no eyepiece you can slip into the focuser of a 10" dobsonian is going to reveal something that looks like what many newbies imagine a spiral galaxy should. Expect to see a dark dust lane and a stellar-like nucleus on nights of good seeing when using moderate magnification. For a real treat, slip in that 2" EP and look for two other galaxies in the same field of view. Have fun. -- Martin "Photographs From the Universe of Amateur Astronomy" http://home.earthlink.net/~martinhowell |
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![]() Insert: revealing view your new telescope can deliver. -- Martin |
#5
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![]() "Jan Owen" wrote in message news ![]() There is no eyepiece for your scope that will let you see all of M31. It is WAY too large. Don't blame your eyepiece, or the scope. M31 is HUGE! It will fill the field of a pair of BINOCULARS! Right now, you need just to use the eyepieces you have on the objects you want to see, and determine where the shortcomings are. THEN you can decide what eyepieces you need next. But one eyepiece you aren't going to find, is one that will show you all of M31 in your scope... But a 32mm Plossl will still be pretty awesome... -- Jan Owen Then what was I seeing, M33 (Pinwheel Gal.)?? If M31 is so big how come I can't find it with 10" dob? -Tom |
#6
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![]() -- Jan Owen To reach me directly, remove the Z, if one appears in my e-mail address... Latitude: 33.662 Longitude: -112.3272 "Tom" wrote in message ... "Jan Owen" wrote in message news ![]() There is no eyepiece for your scope that will let you see all of M31. It is WAY too large. Don't blame your eyepiece, or the scope. M31 is HUGE! It will fill the field of a pair of BINOCULARS! Right now, you need just to use the eyepieces you have on the objects you want to see, and determine where the shortcomings are. THEN you can decide what eyepieces you need next. But one eyepiece you aren't going to find, is one that will show you all of M31 in your scope... But a 32mm Plossl will still be pretty awesome... -- Jan Owen Then what was I seeing, M33 (Pinwheel Gal.)?? If M31 is so big how come I can't find it with 10" dob? -Tom You can FIND it easily enough, and it will be plenty bright enough, but it is WAY too large to fit into one eyepiece field. Even with a 32mm Plossl... |
#7
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![]() "Tom" wrote in message ... "Jan Owen" wrote in message news:4Ru_c.204138$sh.202121@fed1read06... -- Jan Owen To reach me directly, remove the Z, if one appears in my e-mail address... Latitude: 33.662 Longitude: -112.3272 "Tom" wrote in message ... "Jan Owen" wrote in message news ![]() There is no eyepiece for your scope that will let you see all of M31. It is WAY too large. Don't blame your eyepiece, or the scope. M31 is HUGE! It will fill the field of a pair of BINOCULARS! Right now, you need just to use the eyepieces you have on the objects you want to see, and determine where the shortcomings are. THEN you can decide what eyepieces you need next. But one eyepiece you aren't going to find, is one that will show you all of M31 in your scope... But a 32mm Plossl will still be pretty awesome... -- Jan Owen Then what was I seeing, M33 (Pinwheel Gal.)?? If M31 is so big how come I can't find it with 10" dob? -Tom You can FIND it easily enough, and it will be plenty bright enough, but it is WAY too large to fit into one eyepiece field. Even with a 32mm Plossl... This is confusing. This is my punishment for not getting a go-to scope. I found a distant galaxy, but heck if I know what it is. Pinwheel Gal. perhaps. Neat discovery. -Tom Congrats on that, I've yet to see a galaxy, but the Orion Nebula was pretty impressive last winter. Saturn was absolutly awesome last winter, better than Jupiter, even though it's smaller and farther away. I like my 25MM better than my 10mm for most planet viewing, you may consider getting one close to that later as well. Enjoy! |
#8
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![]() "Jan Owen" wrote in message news:4Ru_c.204138$sh.202121@fed1read06... -- Jan Owen To reach me directly, remove the Z, if one appears in my e-mail address... Latitude: 33.662 Longitude: -112.3272 "Tom" wrote in message ... "Jan Owen" wrote in message news ![]() There is no eyepiece for your scope that will let you see all of M31. It is WAY too large. Don't blame your eyepiece, or the scope. M31 is HUGE! It will fill the field of a pair of BINOCULARS! Right now, you need just to use the eyepieces you have on the objects you want to see, and determine where the shortcomings are. THEN you can decide what eyepieces you need next. But one eyepiece you aren't going to find, is one that will show you all of M31 in your scope... But a 32mm Plossl will still be pretty awesome... -- Jan Owen Then what was I seeing, M33 (Pinwheel Gal.)?? If M31 is so big how come I can't find it with 10" dob? -Tom You can FIND it easily enough, and it will be plenty bright enough, but it is WAY too large to fit into one eyepiece field. Even with a 32mm Plossl... This is confusing. This is my punishment for not getting a go-to scope. I found a distant galaxy, but heck if I know what it is. Pinwheel Gal. perhaps. Neat discovery. -Tom |
#9
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![]() "Tom" wrote in message ... "Jan Owen" wrote in message news ![]() There is no eyepiece for your scope that will let you see all of M31. It is WAY too large. Don't blame your eyepiece, or the scope. M31 is HUGE! It will fill the field of a pair of BINOCULARS! Right now, you need just to use the eyepieces you have on the objects you want to see, and determine where the shortcomings are. THEN you can decide what eyepieces you need next. But one eyepiece you aren't going to find, is one that will show you all of M31 in your scope... But a 32mm Plossl will still be pretty awesome... -- Jan Owen Then what was I seeing, M33 (Pinwheel Gal.)?? If M31 is so big how come I can't find it with 10" dob? -Tom So that you understand; this galaxy is so huge that it will fill a 4 degree field, if you could see a field that wide with your scope (but you can't). Your telescope will show about a fourth of that, depending on what your widest field eyepiece may deliver... So you simply can't see it all in one eyepiece field at one time with your scope. To see all of this galaxy at one time will require a MUCH lower power, wider field instrument... Or a pair of binoculars... -- Jan Owen To reach me directly, remove the Z, if one appears in my e-mail address... Latitude: 33.662 Longitude: -112.3272 |
#10
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![]() "Tom" wrote in message ... "Jan Owen" wrote in message news:4Ru_c.204138$sh.202121@fed1read06... -- Jan Owen To reach me directly, remove the Z, if one appears in my e-mail address... Latitude: 33.662 Longitude: -112.3272 "Tom" wrote in message ... "Jan Owen" wrote in message news ![]() There is no eyepiece for your scope that will let you see all of M31. It is WAY too large. Don't blame your eyepiece, or the scope. M31 is HUGE! It will fill the field of a pair of BINOCULARS! Right now, you need just to use the eyepieces you have on the objects you want to see, and determine where the shortcomings are. THEN you can decide what eyepieces you need next. But one eyepiece you aren't going to find, is one that will show you all of M31 in your scope... But a 32mm Plossl will still be pretty awesome... -- Jan Owen Then what was I seeing, M33 (Pinwheel Gal.)?? If M31 is so big how come I can't find it with 10" dob? -Tom You can FIND it easily enough, and it will be plenty bright enough, but it is WAY too large to fit into one eyepiece field. Even with a 32mm Plossl... This is confusing. This is my punishment for not getting a go-to scope. I found a distant galaxy, but heck if I know what it is. Pinwheel Gal. perhaps. Neat discovery. -Tom You should easily be able to see M31. Just don't expect it to look like it's photos. It is WAY too large to fit in one eyepiece field, as I have already said... But the central core should be easy to see, and you can move the scope back and forth to pick up the rest. Just not all at once... You DON'T need GOTO... If your scope had GOTO, M31 would look precisely the same... Maybe you should try for a globular cluster or two... Maybe M13 would be a good place to start... Should be a stunner in your scope. And if you are far enough south, like I am here in Arizona, you might want to try M22... Either of those should be real eye openers... Or what about the Double Cluster in Perseus??? A personal favorite... -- Jan Owen To reach me directly, remove the Z, if one appears in my e-mail address... Latitude: 33.662 Longitude: -112.3272 |
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