View Full Version here: : Orion's Return!
glend
30-07-2014, 11:23 AM
I have noticed that our old friend M42 (Orion Nebula) is appearing again in the early hours as it rises in the east earlier and earlier each night. This is surely a harbinger of spring not being far away. I had my scope all setup for imaging it last night and got a string of exposures before the dawn's light intruded. It needs to climb much higher for best visual observation, but even at 40 degrees it was a wonderful sight once again.
mental4astro
30-07-2014, 01:16 PM
For me the first winter sighting of Orion heralds a glimmer of hope for the warmer weather, :cold: A deep sigh, and then push on through the cold stuff for a little longer...
Like you Glen, July's Orion apparition is too low for meaningful observation for me. Nice to see the old fella though.
multiweb
30-07-2014, 01:23 PM
Woohoo! M42 season is back.
Talk about desperate to try a new target. :lol:
Looking forward to reshoot the whole lot for the nth time with my new toy. :)
jjjnettie
30-07-2014, 05:42 PM
Aye, I saw him a few weeks ago, glowing faintly in the dawn light. :)
It's always nice to see a friendly face.
Pinwheel
01-08-2014, 10:09 AM
My new 12" dob has not yet had the pleasure of meeting M42. Can't wait! :D
omegacrux
01-08-2014, 10:29 AM
Doug
You will be impressed .
Orion in a dob is one of my favourite targets
David
Monstar
01-08-2014, 11:11 AM
I got up at 4:30am with the aim or trying to see Andromeda. When I first walked into the backyard with a steaming cuppa my eyes were not dark adapted and I couldn't see many stars at all. But the attentions of my eyes was caught by 3 bright stars in a diagonal line at around NEE, and I knew immediately what they were and they stayed there for the next hour or so til it got bright.
I'll have another go at Andromeda tomorrow.
OzStarGazer
02-08-2014, 06:14 AM
Orion was pretty this morning. With my nebula filter I could see M42 clearly, even if it was small. A beauty!
Pinwheel
03-08-2014, 08:32 AM
Minus 3 degrees....Brrrrrr Back to bed..:P
PeterEde
04-08-2014, 10:07 PM
Am I right in assuming summer is the season to be jolly?
Seems the winter months have little ?
Or is that just me and my lack of knowledge of all things celestial?
GrampianStars
05-08-2014, 07:29 AM
:lol: got up early to spot Andromeda on Monday. The Alpaca water trough had 1/2 inch ICE :eyepop:
Later the water heater flat panels split ! :mad2: when I went to have a shower.
The weather station claimed it was -2.5c
glend
05-08-2014, 08:06 AM
Geez harden up guys, there are people in Canada that get the scope out in the winter - I know because I lived there for 30 years. What's a little frost.
mental4astro
05-08-2014, 09:39 AM
That's the way to endear yourself to your fellow man, Glen! Ridicule them... :screwy: :lol:
Bet you kill moose with your bare hands too, er, I mean bandicoots... :rolleyes:
glend
05-08-2014, 10:13 AM
It's all about perspective ALexander, I already knew you would have a comment about anything I said.
mental4astro
05-08-2014, 10:56 AM
:lol:
My brother-in-law is Canadian. Bugger walks around in a tee-shirt and shorts all winter long. I've seen photos of him in Canada digging out the snow from the front door after a night-long snow shower - you couldn't see the front door!
Not for me! Like the good man said "a man's gotta now his limitations". I'd rather have to deal with Browns and Red-belly Blacks...
Now, if the clouds would stay away, then this winter would be more bareable if some observing could be done. Last session I was out I forgot to plug in my secondary's heater and it frosted over. Had to use a little 12V hairdrier to clear it up. But I'm not complaining as I did manage some star time that night, :)
One thing about Orion, once I see its risen in full in the early morning I know I've missed my night's chance to see the Andromeda galaxy, :mad2:
Draco
05-08-2014, 11:35 AM
Stop teasing Alex ;) My North sky has been blocked by a recent 2 storey house. I guess I was lucky to enjoy Andromeda last year in my binoculars .. amazing how I am using the stars to track the seasons and the year nowadays ;)
cometcatcher
05-08-2014, 12:59 PM
Yay for Orion! I want to image the goodies in his belly. ;)
andyc
07-08-2014, 12:51 AM
I'm looking forward to imaging Orion's treats too, after filling my boots with the wonders of the centre of the Galaxy this winter.
Coldest I observed in was -25C in Scotland and you wanted to get in to the fire asap even if the sky was breathtakingly clear. -10C evenings were quite regular in Highland winters ... where Orion was a favourite target! The first task might be to make a flat patch in the snow, then the battle was with frost rather than simply dew. But I'd take -25C over meeting any of the nasty snakes hereabouts :eyepop:
Weird as it is (for me) seeing Orion in summer, it is quite fun to look at it in shorts and T-shirt...
Renato1
07-08-2014, 06:55 PM
Dumb question I suppose - has anybody ever looked at the galaxies in Orion?
I know the nebula is great, but I suspect everything else may get ignored.
I remember using those galaxies to test the focal reducer on my C8. Without the reducer and a 20mm eyepiece I could see them. With the reducer and a 15mm eyepiece, I was having great difficulty seeing them. I haven't used that reducer much since, except on bright objects.
Regards,
Renato
Can't say I've ever looked at the galaxies in Orion, too busy looking at something else, perhaps you could recommend the better galaxies to observe when Orion gets a little higher( 60-70 Degrees), ?:thumbsup::thanx: clear skies everyone.
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