Quote:
Originally Posted by ngcles
I tried to vote but it won't let me because I can't put a tick in any of those boxes. Been there, done that for all these, many/most are multiples. There are probably several if not many other members of this forum who can claim this too so I don't think I'm in an exclusive club.
|
Hi Les,
With regards the list, I'm lucky enough to be in your club as well.
There are obviously additional objects that could be added to the list, including
a Quasi Stellar Object (QSO or 'Quasar'), a supernova and a Wolf-Rayet Star.
I have been lucky enough to have seen these as well.
SN1987A was in the LMC and it certainly would be exciting to see a galactic
one - as long as we are outside of the death zone when it goes off.
The visible afterglow after a Gamma Ray Burst - now that is a tough one,
but, who knows, in this day and age of near instant communication
it one day might be possible to observe one.
The spectacle of Aurora Australis or Borealis observed at polar latitudes is
something I still look forward to seeing one day. One evening whilst coming
back from Singapore to Sydney on a British Airways 747, I was seated
up in the hump and took the opportunity to ask if I could visit the cockpit.
The Captain was on his break and I was chatting to the First Officer
and whilst we looked out the window at the stars over the Timor Sea, I
remarked that he must have seen some remarkable sights out of the cockpit
window during his career and I asked what he thought was the best thing he had
ever seen. Without hesitation he remarked seeing the Northern Lights whilst
flying the Polar Route between the US and Europe.
Best Regards
Gary