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A few impressions I've picked up having been at or heard about various
public viewings... After queuing for half an hour: - "That was so not worth it!" Having seen Mars through a 30 inch: - "I feel all tingly" On a bad seeing night: - "It's jumping around a lot" Through a dob without tracking: - "Gee it's moving fast" Through an unknown 70mm refractor: - "It's just a blob! It's worse than just looking straight at it!" After a private viewing: - "Well, I've done my duty" [re once in 60,000yr opportunity] That's more like it: - "Wow, I'm actually looking at another planet" People having been turning up in droves at local observatories to view Mars. As much as I've enjoyed viewing Mars regularly myself, I can see why the casual observer might be underwhelmed, and a bit disillusioned with amateur astronomy. In retrospect, circumstances permitting, I think people should also be treated to a side-serving a nice globular, open cluster, double, filtered nebula, and optional galaxy or moon view. Part of the problem is that there's quite a knack to planetary observation (I'm told :-) -- eking out detail, pausing for those snapshots of seeing. Bright clusters and the moon, for example, are much more obvious to the untrained eye. Your mileage may well vary -- I'd be interested to hear. Mark |
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