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Old 21-06-2008, 08:51 PM
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lesbehrens (Les)
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the horse head nebula

hi. i was thinking of buying a 16 .i was wondering if i would be able to see the horse head nebule with this scope?
would i see this nebule like most other nebs through a telescope?
thanks.
les
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  #2  
Old 21-06-2008, 10:38 PM
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No. The Horsehead is difficult even with a 16", a dark sky and the appropriate filter. I've only glimpsed it a couple of times, once in a 16" with the H-beta filter and once in a 17.5" without a filter but a good image of the nebula and surrounding stars on hand as a guide, and even then it was a good case of 'averted imagination'.

Some people seem to see it very easily, I've heard stories of complete novices seeing it clear as day (no preconceptions, I suppose) but I'm an experienced observer and I have always struggled with it. I've also heard stories of people seeing it in smaller scopes.

But whatever you're like, I don't think I'd be buying a 16" just to see the Horsehead (although I could think of plenty of other reasons to do so....)
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Old 21-06-2008, 10:44 PM
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quite frankly even with a 24 inch and a H beta filter and from a really dark site-I couldnt see the Horsehead-visually

I have imaged it though with a 70 mm scope (no filter)-from suburban Sydney

Phil Harrington seems to have seen the Horsehead with a 10 x 25 pair of binos..but really it is visually a very very challenging taget... and ridiculosly easy in comparison for imagers
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Old 21-06-2008, 11:02 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lesbehrens View Post
hi. i was thinking of buying a 16 .i was wondering if i would be able to see the horse head nebule with this scope?
would i see this nebule like most other nebs through a telescope?
thanks.
les
Les.

Some have claimed to see the horsehead with a 4 inch telescope. At this aperture it would appear as a small notch in the dim grey barely detectable mist of IC434. The Horsehead is a dark cloud highlighted(?) against the background glowing emission of IC434.

What you really need to visually detect B33 is pristine skies - very dark, low humidity and few dust particles. A hydrogen beta filter is almost essential.

I have only ever seen it through 18, 20 and 25 inch telescopes, but I see no reason it would not be visible in a 16.

As to why you would want to see this dark neb, is another issue. If the image of this object did not appear in almost every astronomy book, I suspect it would be ignored by most amateurs. It would be in the same obscure category as Be146/ngc5367. Like many celebrities, B33 certainly doesn't look anything like the photos in real life.

For some background on the Horsehead Nebula, go to
http://home.earthlink.net/~astro-app...head/B33_2.htm
I believe this is an article written for Astronomy magazine, but never published. The author appears puzzled by this, but I suspect that the editors of Astronomy magazine read the article and decided that most of their readers would not find this interesting. I certainly found it fascinating.
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Old 21-06-2008, 11:12 PM
你B
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I've seen the horsehead with ease from a moderately dark site with a H-beta filtered 18" obsession. To be 100% honest, it was very easy.
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Old 21-06-2008, 11:56 PM
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Hi Les, the HH can be a tricky neb to observe visually but I can't see why it could not be found in the right dark sky with a 16"

There are also a lot of other great sights to be seen as well that are well within the reach of a 16"

Cheers
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  #7  
Old 22-06-2008, 12:22 AM
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thats a good link and a great read

I've had a good look at IC434 once in my 12" from home.. seeing fell away the next night with any chance of B33 gone with it...and that was it ... one night in a season...its a challenge alright.

Last edited by GrahamL; 22-06-2008 at 12:47 AM.
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Old 22-06-2008, 03:29 AM
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I have seen the HH nebula from here with my 12" Dob, but only the head not the chin. I saw it really well from the SPSP with a 25" a few years back. Will (Argonavis) mentioned NGC 5367.
NGC 5367 is easier to see than the horse head and NGC 2626 is fainter than NGC 5367, both were found by John Herschel with an 18.5" that was about equivalent to a modern 16.5" newtonian. His father William found IC 434 in 1786 with the same telescope.

Last edited by glenc; 22-06-2008 at 03:55 AM.
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  #9  
Old 22-06-2008, 07:42 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 你B View Post
I've seen the horsehead with ease from a moderately dark site with a H-beta filtered 18" obsession. To be 100% honest, it was very easy.
It's comments like these that make me wonder why I struggle to see it. Hard for many, easy for some, with no apparent rhyme or reason. It's got me beat.
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Old 22-06-2008, 07:54 PM
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Have seen the horsehead with my 10" lightbridge and h beta filter as described in this link.....cheers Kev.
http://www.iceinspace.com.au/forum/s...ight=horsehead
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  #11  
Old 22-06-2008, 08:13 PM
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well its seems its good for some harder for others. its worth a try. i had a go with my 10" dob but had no luck., buyng the 16" still will be a good scope to get. thanks for the help.
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Old 22-06-2008, 10:57 PM
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Originally Posted by Argonavis View Post
For some background on the Horsehead Nebula, go to
http://home.earthlink.net/~astro-app/horsehead/B33_2.htm
I believe this is an article written for Astronomy magazine, but never published. The author appears puzzled by this, but I suspect that the editors of Astronomy magazine read the article and decided that most of their readers would not find this interesting. I certainly found it fascinating.
Well, I should have read this earlier. Very interesting, indeed (read on from this link to other pages on the site where he discusses what it takes to see it). Stephen Waldee has put a lot of time into investigating this particular object. But I'm still a little puzzled as to why I have had so much trouble seeing it. He says that aperture is no barrier to observing it but clean optics, good sky transparency and the object near the zenith is important. The H-beta filter is useful but not always essential. However I do wonder if some of the ease he reports on is from familiarity of the size and position of the Horsehead.

Perhaps I should have a go with my 8" some day...
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  #13  
Old 23-06-2008, 12:00 AM
ausastronomer (John Bambury)
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Quote:
To be 100% honest, it was very easy
Quote:
Originally Posted by Blue Skies View Post
It's comments like these that make me wonder why I struggle to see it. Hard for many, easy for some, with no apparent rhyme or reason. It's got me beat.
It's comments like those that have led me to not even waste my time posting here any more. That just gives people the whole wrong idea about the difficulty of observing it.

I have observed it countless times in telescopes from 10" to 25" and to say "it was very easy", is just plain misleading. To make that as a blanket comment without qualification is so misleading it isn't funny. The difficulty with which it can be seen can change dramatically in the space of hours and also from individual to individual. You can take it to the bank that while I have observed it in scopes down to 10", it is a very difficult target in any scope under 16".

For starters, some people are in fact not even observing the Horsehead (B33), they are observing The Flame Nebula NGC 2024.

However, let's assume the observer has the right target. The ease with which it can be seen are dependant on many things:-

1) How dark the skies are.
2) How transparent the skies are.
3) How clean the optics in the scope are
4) How well baffled the scope is. This has a major effect on contrast.
5) How good are the optics in the scope. High grade optics yield better contrast than low grade optics, making it marginally easier to see.
6) Did the person use an eyepiece yielding a suitable exit pupil? 3mm to 5mm is ideal as this effects contrast and target luminosity
7) Did the person use a high quality eyepiece with good light throughput and contrast.
8) Did they use a filter. A H-Beta filter helps enormously and a narrowband or UHC filter helps a lot.

and last but not least and by far the most important.

9) How sensitive to RED light are the individual observers eyes? A very significant portion of the light emitting from the background emission nebula IC434 is at the red end of the spectrum and observers with eyes that are less sensitive to red light will simply not see it irrespective of the conditions, because they cannot see the background emission nebula very well.

I have observed it on countless occasions in my 18" Obsession and on some occasions felt that it was easily visible "to me" . I have then moved aside and let someone else have a look and the person cannot see it. Some of those have been exceptionally experienced observers. A beginner has then followed and seen it easily.

In a nutshell, sometimes it's easy, many many times it isn't so easy. It depends on many things.

Cheers,
John B
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  #14  
Old 23-06-2008, 12:48 AM
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I've looked for it in a few scopes.. spotted IC434 through a 16" with a UHC and 13mm TV Nagler, but couldnt make out B33... Through my 8" with a UHC and a 15mm plossi, I looked, and saw squat.

both observations on the same night, perhaps 10 minutes apart, dark dark skies, above average seeing and transparency...

Thus proving 2 things.. Aperture Rules! and quality optics are essential.
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Old 23-06-2008, 07:25 AM
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Originally Posted by Blue Skies View Post
Well, I should have read this earlier. Very interesting, indeed (read on from this link to other pages on the site where he discusses what it takes to see it). Stephen Waldee has put a lot of time into investigating this particular object. But I'm still a little puzzled as to why I have had so much trouble seeing it. He says that aperture is no barrier to observing it but clean optics, good sky transparency and the object near the zenith is important. The H-beta filter is useful but not always essential. However I do wonder if some of the ease he reports on is from familiarity of the size and position of the Horsehead.

Perhaps I should have a go with my 8" some day...

It all comes down to the sky conditions - good seeing and a transparent dark sky are a must. They also tend to be somewhat rare, when you consider that if you work in the city and only have the weekends to get away to a dark sky, and you only get one weekend a month around new moon, and the weather and seeing has to co-operate, the number of ideal observing opportunities gets somewhat limited.
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Old 23-06-2008, 07:30 AM
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Originally Posted by ausastronomer View Post
It's comments like those that have led me to not even waste my time posting here any more. That just gives people the whole wrong idea about the difficulty of observing it.

I have observed it countless times in telescopes from 10" to 25" and to say "it was very easy", is just plain misleading. To make that as a blanket comment without qualification is so misleading it isn't funny. The difficulty with which it can be seen can change dramatically in the space of hours and also from individual to individual. You can take it to the bank that while I have observed it in scopes down to 10", it is a very difficult target in any scope under 16".

For starters, some people are in fact not even observing the Horsehead (B33), they are observing The Flame Nebula NGC 2024.

However, let's assume the observer has the right target. The ease with which it can be seen are dependant on many things:-

1) How dark the skies are.
2) How transparent the skies are.
3) How clean the optics in the scope are
4) How well baffled the scope is. This has a major effect on contrast.
5) How good are the optics in the scope. High grade optics yield better contrast than low grade optics, making it marginally easier to see.
6) Did the person use an eyepiece yielding a suitable exit pupil? 3mm to 5mm is ideal as this effects contrast and target luminosity
7) Did the person use a high quality eyepiece with good light throughput and contrast.
8) Did they use a filter. A H-Beta filter helps enormously and a narrowband or UHC filter helps a lot.

and last but not least and by far the most important.

9) How sensitive to RED light are the individual observers eyes? A very significant portion of the light emitting from the background emission nebula IC434 is at the red end of the spectrum and observers with eyes that are less sensitive to red light will simply not see it irrespective of the conditions, because they cannot see the background emission nebula very well.

I have observed it on countless occasions in my 18" Obsession and on some occasions felt that it was easily visible "to me" . I have then moved aside and let someone else have a look and the person cannot see it. Some of those have been exceptionally experienced observers. A beginner has then followed and seen it easily.

In a nutshell, sometimes it's easy, many many times it isn't so easy. It depends on many things.

Cheers,
John B



John B - Thank you for a comprehensive post. I think we are all entitled to our opinion. You list forgot one thing - a good star chart. You cannot find B33 without a chart. You need to become familiar with the stars in the area to locate this object. In my experience and opinion, you cannot find it otherwise. It is really faint.
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Old 23-06-2008, 07:33 AM
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At the last Qld Astrofest some guys told me they had seen the HH nebula with an 8" and it was easy.
I think they were talking about M42.
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  #18  
Old 23-06-2008, 08:43 AM
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Originally Posted by glenc View Post
At the last Qld Astrofest some guys told me they had seen the HH nebula with an 8" and it was easy.
I think they were talking about M42.
I observed it once from Coombell back a few years ago after a long spell
of crap weather using my 8" f/6 with a GSO 30mm. There was a general
discussion about it on a yahoo group where some really nice charts were
being past around the group. And I'll stand by that claim, however I never
been able to able to observe it since on the many other attempts except
the odd time where I couldn't say yes or no. I've always put it down to
sky conditions. From memory it appeared like a very faint shadow of
someones thumb and not a horse head.

regards,CS
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  #19  
Old 23-06-2008, 08:44 AM
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lesbehrens (Les)
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hi. is anyone going to the qld astrofest?
maybe some one could show me there??
since i had my scope i havent cleaned or sharpen my optics mabye i should do this and have better luck.
small eye pieces are esentual 4 -3 mm??
i have also read somewhere that using a uhc filter is a better filter to use because it is not as strong to to filtering the wave length of light to the h-betta filter, so i could be filtering to much light so i have troube seeing it?
thanks for the info.
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  #20  
Old 23-06-2008, 09:26 AM
ausastronomer (John Bambury)
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Originally Posted by Argonavis View Post
John B - Thank you for a comprehensive post. I think we are all entitled to our opinion. You list forgot one thing - a good star chart. You cannot find B33 without a chart. You need to become familiar with the stars in the area to locate this object. In my experience and opinion, you cannot find it otherwise. It is really faint.
Will,

You are correct. If you haven't found it plenty of times before and know exactly where it is, a good chart is necessary.

The other thing I forgot to mention which is also very important, particularly if your scope is a borderline job, is that you need to push "Alnitak" just out of the FOV. This reduces glare and scattered light within the field of view, greatly increasing the contrast and brightness of IC 434.

Cheers,
John B
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