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ZeroID
30-06-2011, 06:09 AM
Auckland had a cold clear night last night. Absolute stunner. Rain disappeared after washing all the sky clean and the southerly came in and cleared the clouds. Didn't have time to get the big scope out due to earlier committments but about 9 pm decided to assemble the grab & go little 80mm Achro. Wrapped up warm, went outside. Temp about 4>5 C.

20 & 15mm SV EP's, scanned my way up and down the Milky Way picking up little globs and groups. Sky was clear enough to easily see dust around Eta Carina and later on Lagoon and Trifid,.. and they were still quite low on my eastern side over the CBD !!
Saturn, small but perfectly formed, mid high in NW sky. No moon, Excellent !! The 20 and 15 Super Views were just excellent for a lovely wideview scan, you get a much better picture and feel for the sky this way. Out there for agood hour and a half, cold but happy.

Getting pretty cold now so took it all inside to pack up but had a quick look at Stellarium and saw that Sombrero was west of and below Saturn. Formed a nice triangle with Arcturus and I'd found Sombrero a few weeks before finally.
What the heck, give it a go. :P

Neighbours lights are all off, 10:30 ish. middle of the lawn. Pick my spot in the sky and start scanning, check Stellarium again, find my little 3 star ( actually 4 but too close to seperate one pair in the little 80mm) 'pointer' asterism. and carefully slide up to wee dot of a star and wait. Suddenly it pops out, M104, exceedingly faint and If I hadn't known what to look for and where I would have missed it but averted vision and patience gets it's reward. A real Galaxy in a CBD location with 80mm !! No definition of features, just a wee smudge in the FOV, but enough for one night.

Just so pleased with my little scope, it's a heck of a lot of fun and as a grab and go it is just perfect. Takes me about 2 minutes to be out there from packed in it's case. :thumbsup:



Ok, I'll stop raving on about it now .. :D

mental4astro
30-06-2011, 08:45 AM
Magnificent, Brent!

I am always surprised now by just how much guts small scopes have in the big smoke.

Point it at Omega Centauri next chance you get, and kick up some magnification with it. Then, either really early in the morning, or a little later on in the year, have a shot at NGC 253 too. I'm sure you'll be impressed with your grad-n-go'er even more.

Suzy
30-06-2011, 09:13 AM
Nice going Brent! :thumbsup:
I'm very pleased you are so happy with your new grab'n'go scope. :D

SkyViking
30-06-2011, 09:44 AM
That sounds great Brent, those small scopes can detect quite a bit. I started out with a 60mm in suburban skies, albeit in the northern hemisphere, and it was great fun.
And the actual hunt for these faint smudges is awesome, I enjoy it very much each time. Goto is not for me I think, I appreciate the effort and reward that comes with hunting one's prey :)

I was out imaging yesterday too. No time for processing yet as we seem to head into yet another brilliant night. Can't complain about that :D

ZeroID
30-06-2011, 11:10 AM
Hi Alex, Already potted Omega in my sweeps around Cru region, add Butterfly, M7, 47 Tuc down low sth in the soup and some of the open clusters in Cru, Wishing Well, Sthn Pleiades. Heaps more. I need to get more organised to catalog what I see but this was grab & go night. I'll note NGC253 for future. I don't sleep all that well and can often be up at weird times.

Rolf: I'll be looking for some updates to the galleries then. As you say looks good for the next few nights from what I see on MetService. I have to set something up permanent in my backyard. I've got the space, I've got the will, just need the plan. Selling stuff on TradeMe to raise funds now.

Paddy
30-06-2011, 04:00 PM
Quite an impressive observation Brent!

Brian W
30-06-2011, 08:22 PM
rave on!
Brian

madbadgalaxyman
02-07-2011, 04:43 PM
It is humbling and thought provoking even to see a galaxy as a small smudge when we view it with small apertures.
When one of these "incalculably vast Star Cities of infinity" is reduced to a small smudge, we start to get some sense of the colossal distances involved and of the colossal scale of the universe.

Who needs further miracles?
It seems a miracle that a small amount of light eventually makes it to your telescope, light which millions of years ago started its slow (300,000 km/s) journey through space from this 29 million Light Years distant galaxy of hundreds of billions of stars