Dennis
24-07-2011, 12:07 PM
Hello,
Well, on my 3rd attempt, I finally succeeded in recording the globular cluster Tonantzintla 2 in Scorpius!:)
Thursday night saw me collecting photons from the incorrect region of Scorpius due to using The SkyX and SAC Ton 2 as the “GoTo” coordinates, with Friday night delivering cloud cover and showers. Saturday night found me pointing at the correct region, thanks to SkyTools 3 Pro, although intermittent clouds compelled me to collect the Luminance data E of the meridian and the RGB data on the West. The location of Ton 2 in The SkyX was awry by approx. 20 arcmin. :rolleyes:
The globular cluster Tonantzintla 2 (Pismis 26) was discovered by Paris Pismis in 1959 on Schmidt plates taken at the Tonantzintla Observatory, Mexico. The cluster is also designated GCL B1732-3831, BH 236 and ESO 333-SC16. A relatively lesser known globular, its color magnitude diagram was finally taken in 1996 by Ortolani, et al. They found a red horizontal branch in a moderately loose cluster. It’s location at 2 Kpc from the galactic center makes it is a member of the bulge population of globulars, but is only moderately metal rich. It lies 6.4 kpc from the Sun.
The first image file is the full frame 1600x1200 resampled down to 800x600.
The second image file is an 800x600 full resolution crop from the centre of the frame.
A summary from SkyTools 3 Pro:
Ton 2
Globular Cluster
R.A.: 17h36m11.0s Dec.: -38°33'12" (2000) in Scorpius
Magnitude: 12.20
Size: unknown
Apparent Data for 2011 Jul 23 GMT+10 at Brisbane, Australia:
Apparent RA: 17h37m01.7s, Apparent Dec: -38°33'39"
http://spider.seds.org/spider/MWGC/ton2.html
http://home.ix.netcom.com/~bwilson2/barbarasweb/ListofGClusters.htm
Thanks for looking!
Dennis
Well, on my 3rd attempt, I finally succeeded in recording the globular cluster Tonantzintla 2 in Scorpius!:)
Thursday night saw me collecting photons from the incorrect region of Scorpius due to using The SkyX and SAC Ton 2 as the “GoTo” coordinates, with Friday night delivering cloud cover and showers. Saturday night found me pointing at the correct region, thanks to SkyTools 3 Pro, although intermittent clouds compelled me to collect the Luminance data E of the meridian and the RGB data on the West. The location of Ton 2 in The SkyX was awry by approx. 20 arcmin. :rolleyes:
The globular cluster Tonantzintla 2 (Pismis 26) was discovered by Paris Pismis in 1959 on Schmidt plates taken at the Tonantzintla Observatory, Mexico. The cluster is also designated GCL B1732-3831, BH 236 and ESO 333-SC16. A relatively lesser known globular, its color magnitude diagram was finally taken in 1996 by Ortolani, et al. They found a red horizontal branch in a moderately loose cluster. It’s location at 2 Kpc from the galactic center makes it is a member of the bulge population of globulars, but is only moderately metal rich. It lies 6.4 kpc from the Sun.
The first image file is the full frame 1600x1200 resampled down to 800x600.
The second image file is an 800x600 full resolution crop from the centre of the frame.
A summary from SkyTools 3 Pro:
Ton 2
Globular Cluster
R.A.: 17h36m11.0s Dec.: -38°33'12" (2000) in Scorpius
Magnitude: 12.20
Size: unknown
Apparent Data for 2011 Jul 23 GMT+10 at Brisbane, Australia:
Apparent RA: 17h37m01.7s, Apparent Dec: -38°33'39"
http://spider.seds.org/spider/MWGC/ton2.html
http://home.ix.netcom.com/~bwilson2/barbarasweb/ListofGClusters.htm
Thanks for looking!
Dennis