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I was reading Greg Crinklaws cool observing essay:
http://www.skyhound.com/sh/Focus/Mars/Hall.html In there Greg quotes The Telescope Handbook and Star Atlas by Neale E. Howard as follows: "Certainly the strangest little objects in the whole solar system, the two moons of Mars will rarely be seen by the amateur unless he possesses a 16-inch telescope, and then only at favorable oppositions." The rest of the essay and the general feel I get from reading miscellaneous sites is that it's not very common to see these two little moons. I observe from about an hour north of Anchorage Alaska, seeing is usually mediocre, cold and fogging problems are common. Mars peaks about 45 degrees elevation here. I had no plans to even go after the moons of Mars, until the other night (Nov-1) watching Sinus Sabaeus transit the planet when Deimos decided to come after me. I was using a TMB 7" refractor with an AP binoviewer and two 6mm TMB supermonocentrics for 396x. Seeing was 5/10 with rare moments when detail would seemingly crystalize over the entire planet disc. (Maybe 2 or 3 times during a couple hours.) I think it was good luck that led me to Deimos. I've heard there are specific directions from your center of vision where averted vision is the strongest. As I would watch the western end of Sinus Sabaeus, I kept noticing an interloper popping in and out of existence what seemed a couple mars-widths off the planet to the East. It was obviously right in a peripheral hot spot in my eye because it would disappear any time I looked at it. I had a suspicion as to what I was seeing! I ran into the house, and messed around with Skytools and confirmed it was Deimos. The house is about 65 degrees F warmer than my observing chair, so I took my time. About 1/2 hour later i went out and it took me about another 15 minutes to re-aquire the moon, Deimos had moved relative to an imaginary line drawn across Mars equator. These moons must be really racking up the mileage fast. I tried shifting Mars out of view and Deimos became quite obvious with averted vision. Still, I could not lock onto the moon with direct vision in this fashion. Now Phobos is what, like 3 times brighter? But I havent managed to see it yet. The Deimos experience has me checking each night to see what times Phobos and Deimos will be at their greatest ?elongation? I have a feeling dimmer Deimos is the easier of the two. It seemed easy to spot once I aquired it. Seeing conditions have not allowed me to see it since. I made a sketch the following day http://www.scopenews.com/tmb175/mars..._deimos_sm.jpg 175mm is a lot smaller then 16 inches. I'm guessing tools like the binoviewer and supermonocentric eyepieces are my trump card over Neale E. Howard. Deimos looked obvious enough that I am sure I could have seen it in a smaller aperture than I was using. Mike Clemens |
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Hi Mike,
tmbMike wrote: I was reading Greg Crinklaws cool observing essay: http://www.skyhound.com/sh/Focus/Mars/Hall.html In there Greg quotes The Telescope Handbook and Star Atlas by Neale E. Howard as follows: "Certainly the strangest little objects in the whole solar system, the two moons of Mars will rarely be seen by the amateur unless he possesses a 16-inch telescope, and then only at favorable oppositions." The rest of the essay and the general feel I get from reading miscellaneous sites is that it's not very common to see these two little moons. No, not common. I believe the biggest factor is to have atmospheric conditions that diminish the scattered light from mars. At the last opposition there were a few lucky observers who saw at least one moon in 6-inch and even 4-inch scopes. Oh, and congrats! Clear skies, Greg -- Greg Crinklaw Astronomical Software Developer Cloudcroft, New Mexico, USA (33N, 106W, 2700m) SkyTools: http://www.skyhound.com/cs.html Observing: http://www.skyhound.com/sh/skyhound.html Comets: http://www.skyhound.com/sh/comets.html To reply have a physician remove your spleen |
#3
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"Greg Crinklaw" wrote in message
... Hi Mike, tmbMike wrote: I was reading Greg Crinklaws cool observing essay: http://www.skyhound.com/sh/Focus/Mars/Hall.html In there Greg quotes The Telescope Handbook and Star Atlas by Neale E. Howard as follows: "Certainly the strangest little objects in the whole solar system, the two moons of Mars will rarely be seen by the amateur unless he possesses a 16-inch telescope, and then only at favorable oppositions." The rest of the essay and the general feel I get from reading miscellaneous sites is that it's not very common to see these two little moons. No, not common. I believe the biggest factor is to have atmospheric conditions that diminish the scattered light from mars. At the last opposition there were a few lucky observers who saw at least one moon in 6-inch and even 4-inch scopes. Oh, and congrats! Clear skies, Greg I've been wondering if what I saw was one of the moons of Mars. I have a 6" mak, but when I got down to 9mm and 6mm eps (222x and 333x respectively), I saw what looked like a moon. I'm in Arkansas if that helps anyone determine what I saw. The moon was on the left side of Mars about 2 diameters of the planet away. Just curious, but did anyone else notice that Mars was not its usual red? It was very white. Is it because of the shorter distance? I've seen it much farther away, and it was very red. Tom |
#4
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I got both in my AP130 and TMB Monos last opposition.
"Greg Crinklaw" wrote in message ... Hi Mike, tmbMike wrote: I was reading Greg Crinklaws cool observing essay: http://www.skyhound.com/sh/Focus/Mars/Hall.html In there Greg quotes The Telescope Handbook and Star Atlas by Neale E. Howard as follows: "Certainly the strangest little objects in the whole solar system, the two moons of Mars will rarely be seen by the amateur unless he possesses a 16-inch telescope, and then only at favorable oppositions." The rest of the essay and the general feel I get from reading miscellaneous sites is that it's not very common to see these two little moons. No, not common. I believe the biggest factor is to have atmospheric conditions that diminish the scattered light from mars. At the last opposition there were a few lucky observers who saw at least one moon in 6-inch and even 4-inch scopes. Oh, and congrats! Clear skies, Greg -- Greg Crinklaw Astronomical Software Developer Cloudcroft, New Mexico, USA (33N, 106W, 2700m) SkyTools: http://www.skyhound.com/cs.html Observing: http://www.skyhound.com/sh/skyhound.html Comets: http://www.skyhound.com/sh/comets.html To reply have a physician remove your spleen |
#5
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![]() "Tom" wrote in message news:i_hbf.5076$Kv.1409@dukeread05... "Greg Crinklaw" wrote in message ... Hi Mike, tmbMike wrote: I was reading Greg Crinklaws cool observing essay: http://www.skyhound.com/sh/Focus/Mars/Hall.html In there Greg quotes The Telescope Handbook and Star Atlas by Neale E. Howard as follows: "Certainly the strangest little objects in the whole solar system, the two moons of Mars will rarely be seen by the amateur unless he possesses a 16-inch telescope, and then only at favorable oppositions." The rest of the essay and the general feel I get from reading miscellaneous sites is that it's not very common to see these two little moons. No, not common. I believe the biggest factor is to have atmospheric conditions that diminish the scattered light from mars. At the last opposition there were a few lucky observers who saw at least one moon in 6-inch and even 4-inch scopes. Oh, and congrats! Clear skies, Greg I've been wondering if what I saw was one of the moons of Mars. I have a 6" mak, but when I got down to 9mm and 6mm eps (222x and 333x respectively), I saw what looked like a moon. I'm in Arkansas if that helps anyone determine what I saw. The moon was on the left side of Mars about 2 diameters of the planet away. Just curious, but did anyone else notice that Mars was not its usual red? It was very white. Is it because of the shorter distance? I've seen it much farther away, and it was very red. The few times I've been able to observe, it has not appeared red in any ep, rather it's appeared white. Curiously, it appears red when viewed naked eye. It has only appeared red under telescopic observation for me when I've put in a filter. |
#6
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Speaking of color shading ONLY !
I'd say it appears these colors in my eyepiece: http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/image/pla...marsglobe2.jpg |
#7
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"tmbMike" wrote in message
oups.com... Speaking of color shading ONLY ! I'd say it appears these colors in my eyepiece: http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/image/pla...marsglobe2.jpg very nice pic!! |
#8
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That's one of those orbiter pictures of Mars, I'm pretty sure it's from
a vantage point totally foreign to Earth bound observers. I'm guessing it's the north pole. |
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