Log in

View Full Version here: : Hi from newbie dob 130 gazer


ClaireBaire
29-03-2014, 05:40 PM
Hello from Adelaide.

I am a complete novice to astronomy. I've had my Heritage 130 dob for a month or so checking & puzzling over all sorts of things. Including spending hours and hours internet and equipment searches. Yeah, it's obsessive :screwy: and my family are beginning to avoid me ;) but mucho FUN for me :D

Modest achievements to date:

Jupiter and moons! Lots of lovely wide views, with no CA like my roof prism binos give.
Saturn with rings. Only two days ago I managed to get my first view of the rings :rofl:
Mars with naked eye abt 5 days ago. A big, bright golden/orange object :D
Astonishing view of Venus with naked eye in mid March about 5am. :eyepop:

Catch you all at the next post ;) when I discuss my bugbears.. Until then happy observing with (hopefully) clear skies.

Claire.

OzStarGazer
29-03-2014, 05:48 PM
Congratulations and welcome!

ClaireBaire
29-03-2014, 10:18 PM
Cheers Oz.:thanx:

Varangian
29-03-2014, 11:34 PM
Welcome Claire, there is nothing quite so rewarding as scanning the sky with the naked eye, the widest view of all! Happy times with your new hobby.

ClaireBaire
30-03-2014, 02:08 AM
Thank you Varangian, I am enjoying it immensely.:thanx:

Regulus
30-03-2014, 11:28 AM
Welcome to the world of the sleep deprived Claire. Your next purchase should probably be a thermos flask :-)

Trev

Amaranthus
30-03-2014, 02:34 PM
If you saw Venus at 5am, did you hang around for another hour and catch elusive Mercury too? It's fun catching that little sun grazer for the first time.

LightningNZ
30-03-2014, 04:27 PM
Welcome aboard Claire and congrats on getting a great little scope. I have plans to buy on for myself in the near future (though I first used one a few years ago and thought they were mint).

Cheers and clear skies,
Cam

OzStarGazer
31-03-2014, 06:41 AM
Can it be seen well with the Skywatcher 130p? It is smaller than Mars...
I can't wait to see it too, but I checked in Starry Night and it is still behind trees right now, and by the time it comes out the sky will be too bright, but I hope to be able to see it in a few weeks....

julianh72
31-03-2014, 08:12 AM
Yes, Venus is easiy observed in a 130 mm scope - even in full daylight, if you know where to look. (Just take care not to accidentally point your scope at the Sun while you're searching!)

OzStarGazer
31-03-2014, 08:21 AM
Thanks, but I meant Mercury... :)

Edit: I tried Starry Night, and this is what it would look like with a telescope like the SW Heritage 130p and a Televue Radian 8mm eyepiece:

julianh72
31-03-2014, 11:09 AM
Mercury can also be viewed in a 130 mm, but you won't see much other than the changing phases, and the windows of opportunity are shorter because it stays so close to the Sun. Maximum elongation is coming up on 25 May, when it will be 22 degrees away from the Sun.

Amaranthus
31-03-2014, 11:17 AM
Yes, you can see it okay - it looks like a tiny gibbous moon at the moment.

OzStarGazer
31-03-2014, 12:41 PM
Thanks, Barry and Julian. I will have a look when it will become visible from my balcony. :)