How many Meisser objects visable from Australian skies?
Hello Folks.
Just got home late,and the phone rang-the 'Weekend Australian' magazine,wanted a phone interview on a feature they are doing on my photography in their insert magazine due out 1/2 March,the reporter was a lot more on the ball ,than the usual 'trailer trash' magazines I do interviews for,and it came up about astronomy,so that will be feature too.I need to give him a figure on the amount of Meisser objects that can be seen from Aussie skies-So can anyone help? I'll email him a figure 2moz-I've had a couple of wines-my mind is frazzeled-thanks.
I know it is 100 in Victoria but that includes M76, M106, M51 and M38 that are all very low. In FNQ it is a different story. The northern most Messiers are M81 and 82 at about +69deg and Townsville is -19deg and Weipa is at -12deg so they would rise to 2deg above the horizon in Townsville and a whopping 9deg above at Weipa.
So all of them are visible theoretically in Oz!
I've been setting up an observing program to run through the Messier and Caldwell lists with my two sons who are getting an interesting at last.
Anyone know and easy way to get Sky Safari Pro to pull up a list of M of C object that are visible at a given time-date? I've been doing the list manually and it seems tedious - I figure there must be some way to automate it...
C14 The a Double Cluster is probably the northern object I miss the most was visible all year round and a beauty in any scope... (small sacrifice for all the southern objects I've gained though )
Btw, the Wikipedia page for the Caldwell Catalogue has a nice chart too.
I've read the double cluster is a beautiful object .. shame I won't see it
Should just be able to bag it a little north of Brisbane with a clear northern horizon...at the right time of year (summer). They're open clusters, so should show up OK at low altitude (not great, but better than nothing!)
Well, I'll be moving from Lat -34 all the way down to Lat -43 later this year (south of Hobart), so I'll lose a chunk more of the northern sky.
The bonus is that all the great far-southern beauties will reach a higher transit. That, and the even better fact that my new 'backyard' will be Bortle 2 skies (vs the current Bortle 6 skies I suffer under in suburban Adelaide!). So... I can't wait!
Should just be able to bag it a little north of Brisbane with a clear northern horizon...at the right time of year (summer). They're open clusters, so should show up OK at low altitude (not great, but better than nothing!)
No chance from down here
I've tried Dunk ... but only with software .. and it will be too low for me. even andromeda is a bad target for me @11° because of surfers' lights. mind you .. I havnt had the scope out for quite some time so I will keep me eye out if it's around when the cloud goes away
matt
ps this is my scenario for C14. it may improve if I hold my promise to my cat which will be put down tomorrow afternoon (by getting my hr fixed and stop drinking and get my license again)
The bonus is that all the great far-southern beauties will reach a higher transit. That, and the even better fact that my new 'backyard' will be Bortle 2 skies (vs the current Bortle 6 skies I suffer under in suburban Adelaide!). So... I can't wait!
Objects 9 degrees lower in the sky at Bortle 2 will show more detail than higher with Bortle 6 as long as the declination is south of -50 decl so the Double Cluster you'll miss anyway also in suburban ADL. But objects as California Neb NGC 1499 (decl -36) will show better in Tasmania @ Bortle 2.
But in Dec/Jan you will miss 30mins of dark sky due to longer daylight.
The difference with the northern circumpolar constellations (at least, those from the UK) is they they're not all that crowded.
Now that I think about it, I kinda miss Cassiopeia too...there are some nice objects hanging around that area of the sky. Still, a trip to Queensland/NT/Hawaii can fix that