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tsuken
26-12-2007, 10:29 PM
Yeeeeeeeha! I have had the best evening ever [/geek out] :D

After getting my first ever telescope for Christmas, and being foiled by clouds that evening, I got to have a look tonight. I took out my old pair of binoculars (having read repeatedly on this site and many others about the merits of binoculars - though my eyes seem to have trouble with binoculars; I can't seem to get rid of some diplopia :shrug: ) as well as my shiny new 150mm Celestron Newtonian. I wish wish wish I had a "real" camera with which I could have recorded at least something of what I saw (naked eye stuff if nothing else) but that'll come later. I have yet to see how horrible the results with my point-and-click are :P

Anyway, I wasn't expecting Hubble-icious pictures through my eyepiece ;) so thankfully I wasn't disappointed. Hell, I've always loved the naked-eye sky, so it was always going to be at least that good through a telescope.

Being surrounded by bush, and therefore having no visible horizons to use in the methods described in my telescope manual, I was not exactly polar aligned ;) but I was having a blast looking at some of my favourite "sky stuff" as I found it. I started with Orion, which along with Sirius is one of my all-time favourites. It didn't look terribly different through the scope; my eyepiece is a 25mm so total magnification was only 30x. However, I did totally geek out on looking at Orion's belt, then sword, through a telescope.

I then had a peek at Mars. My first pleasure there was that I actually identified it naked eye. :) Again, it was not much different through the scope with my low magnification - just brighter, really - but it was cool nonetheless.

Next was Sirius. Same story: immeasurably cool that I managed to point the telescope accurately at it, and that I was looking at my favourite star through a telescope.

Somewhere in there I noticed something rather bright, moving at a hell of a clip; one end of the sky to the other in maybe half a minute or so. Satellite?? :shrug:

The weirdest thing is that I couldn't find the moon :shrug: I dunno whether it was just rising (which could explain the glow in the East) and I couldn't see it for bush, or whether it hadn't risen (meaning the glow is bloody Penrith or something :mad2: ) or whether I just had some fit of temporary perceptual loss. :P

On the topic of light, if there weren't a dirty great streetlight directly outside our house, I'd have a much better viewing spot. The sky is waaaaaaaay darker ... except for the damnable lights - especially the aforementioned one right outside our house. I might try out front, further up or down the road tomorrow night (maybe I should also try ... ummmm ... "inhibiting" ... the streetlight ;) )

Anyway, mammoth post over. I'm feeling like such a geek, and totally loving it. :D Roll on tomorrow night.


... or if I happen to wake up in the early hours I might just have to have another look :D

Sorry for the essay. Byeeeeeee:hi:

wavelandscott
26-12-2007, 11:08 PM
Glad you had a good first light with your new gear!

I am jealous, between work, clouds and company visiting tomorrow (still cleaning), I've not had a good night under the stars with telescopes for a long while.

I suspect the bright "satelite" you saw was actually the ISS (International Space Station)...it was due for a pass tonight and by other accounts it was quite bright and very visible. Iceman (Mike) posted some raw data that he captured during the pass.

Keep Looking Up!

edwardsdj
26-12-2007, 11:25 PM
Great to hear you had a good time with your new scope!

Just wait until you point it at Saturn :)

tsuken
27-12-2007, 06:04 AM
Saturn is high on my list indeed. Will I not need a higher magnification eyepiece to see more than (again) a somewhat brighter and bigger pinprick?

We're heading to the shops today as it happens, so I'm going to see if I can find another eyepiece or two.

iceman
27-12-2007, 07:01 AM
Great first light report! It's nice to have that initial excitement shared with others on IceInSpace.

For Saturn, use an eyepiece between 5mm and 10mm. If the seeing is not very good though, the 5mm will make Saturn wobble like jelly - but you should still be able to make out the rings.

tsuken
27-12-2007, 01:09 PM
thanks for that, iceman ^_^ I've actually just posted a question about eyepieces in a new thread. I'm soon to do some shopping ;)

Fortunately - I guess, kind of, in a sort of a way - the weather doesn't look like I'd have a chance to 'suffer' my current eyepiece tonight in any case. The rain has hit in a biiiiiiig way, and judging by recent weather, it'll be here for a while.

acropolite
27-12-2007, 01:38 PM
Exciting stuff, you're on the way, its all fun. If you haven't got, one it's worth buying a planisphere and a copy of Astronomy 2008, that will give you an idea of what's visible at any given time of night/month of year. Astronomy 2008 has useful planetary information including rise and setting times. For satellite information go to the heavens above (http://www.heavens-above.com/) site, you can identify the satellite you saw and get predictions for future passes.

tsuken
27-12-2007, 09:37 PM
Thanks for that. I haven't got a planisphere, but one was supposed to come with the telescope, and we're soon to sort that out :)

I've been playing around with the photos I tried to take last night with my crappy little point-and-click digital camera held up (by hand) to the eyepiece :ashamed: Budget doesn't begin to describe it. Despite that, I managed to get a couple of pics that looked somewhat like what I saw.

Here's Orion's sword:

http://www.owen.net.nz/raf/images/sword.jpg

And what I'm rather sure - after looking at some (much much flashier :P ) pictures online - are the Pleiades - or at least 6 of the 7:

http://www.owen.net.nz/raf/images/pleiades.jpg

:D