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08-08-2010, 09:21 PM
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Canis Minor
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Strangways, Vic
Posts: 2,214
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Observations! It's been so long!
It seems a very long time since a cloud free night coincided with an absence of moon. So time to wheel out the 16". Here are the notes from a very good evening in Sagittarius.
Telescope 410mm f4.9 tri-dob reflector
Eyepieces 28mm UWAN, 17,13,9 mm Naglers, Paracorr
Observing guide and maps: Night Sky Observer’s Guide (NSOG)
Seeing 2/5 and transparency 6/7
2040
Clear skies! First observing for too long. The evening starts with the beautiful triangular conjunction of Venus, Mars and Saturn low in the western sky.
NGC 6818 PN in Sagittarius Type 4
Dia 17” Mag 9.3
175X At first glance appears a fairly uniform small blue disc, but careful inspection reveals a brighter edge to the disc on the SW side. Not much internal structure to be discerned, although it does appear slightly fainter in the centre than at the edges. No central star seen.250X Seeing standing up quite well, brightness at SW edge and darker centre confirmed. Brightens somewhat with OIII filter, reduced sense of darker centre, still softer on the NE edge than the SW. 500X is stretching the friendship tonight - visible, but quite blurred.
NGC 6822 GX in Sagittarius – Barnard’s Galaxy Type IB(s)m IV-V
19.1’x14.9’ mag 8.8 SB 14.8
135X A faint haze which appears quite a bit longer than wide (looking at the photo in NSOG, I think I can see the central bar but not all of the surrounding halo, hence the different sense of width than the above listed measurements would imply). A clump of about 8 foreground stars is seen at the SW end. The galaxy is reminiscent of a small, faint version of the Small Magellanic Cloud. The bar is quite distinct, fading gently and irregularly to the edges, with some larger bright and dark patches in the halo.
After a brief visit to Messier 22, whose beauty is beyond words, I come to
Messier 28/NGC 6626 GC in Sagittarius
Dia. 11.2’ mag 6.8 Class IV
175X Not quite as impressive as M22, but still quite a stunner, with a distinct core, many resolvable stars in across the core and spilling out across the halo. To the west of the core, there is a thick inverted U-shape gap in the spray of resolvable stars, with a haze of unresolved stars behind it. There is a matching parallel gap to the east of the core. Because the core is so distinct, there appears to be a slightly darker annulus around the core and the halo brightens beyond this, but my impression is that this is a bit of an illusion. Wide projections of haze spread out from the cluster to the south, north and east, northwest and west. These are not well defined.
NGC 6638 GC in Sagittarius
Dia. 5’ mag 9.1 Class VI
175X Just the other side of Lamda Sagittarii to M28, this GC looks about half the size and brightness of M28. Hints of resolvable stars, but they don’t jump out. Quite concentrated with a distinct core and fainter, very regular halo. Quite a spattering of foreground stars surround the GC.
NGC 6642 GC in Sagittarius
Dia 4.5’ mag 9.4
175X Significantly small and fainter than NGC 6638, on first view at a lower power the GC appeared to have a strange double core. At 175X a distinct core is visible, but there is a small bright patch just to the south east of the core. I can’t tell if this is a clump of resolvable stars belonging to the cluster or something in the foreground. The core is very distinct compared to the halo and the GC seems very concentrated.
NGC 6629 PN in Sagittarius
Dia 15” mag 11.3 Type 2a
250X This is one of those PNs that is easy to overlook as with direct vision it appears stellar. With averted vision, a bluish, soft-edged disc is apparent with observable central star. At first glance, the disc seems featureless, but with careful observation, I can make out a thin faint outer halo beyond the disc of the PN. OIII confirms the sense of the bright inner disc and a fainter haze of an outer shell.
NGC 6717 GC in Sagittarius, Palomar 9
Dia 3.9’ mag 9.2 Class VIII
175X Very small faint patch of haze near bright foreground star (nu2 Sagittarii). Some stars resolvable, but I think that these must be foreground stars. This reminds me of the many small knots of haze in the SMC. Little discernible detail due to the proximity of nu 2 Sagittarii. 250X shows little further detail, but the GC looks a bit less regular.
Messier 25/IC4725 OC in Sagittarius
Dia 32’ mag 4.6 Trumpler type I3m
90X A stunning sight – many bright stars, mostly bluish-white, but some of more yellow hue. The cluster seems to form a distorted W-shape. A narrow triangle of stars in the centre of the cluster points west and forms the cnetre of the W. Two sprays of stars join each side of the base of this triangle. One heads NW and the other SW. The northern edge of the centre triangle is missing some stars, so a narrow dark lane divides the cluster. The cluster looks about half a degree wide and 15’ across.
Messier 24 The Small Sagittarius Star Cloud + NGC 6603
95’x35’ mag 4.6
90X This instrument is probably not the best for observing this DSO. I find it very hard to define the edges of the cloud. It seems quite a bit larger than that specified in NSOG and listed above. A bright fuzzy patch of many faint stars may be NGC 6603, but again this looks too big. However it is in the centre of a triangle of bright stars, on apex of which is a double and this is consistent with the photo in NSOG. So I think I’m on track. Overall a very impressive bit of sky.
Messier 18/NGC 6613 OC in Sagittarius
Dia. 10’ mag. 6.9 Trumpler type II3pn
90X A bright little clump of stars which looks a bit like a distorted bow tie. At the centre of the cluster is a narrow triangle of stars reminiscent of a smaller version of the centre of Ara. Two wings of bright stars flank this. Mostly bluish-white stars.
Messier 17/NGC 6618 OC and emission nebula in Sagittarius – the Swan Nebula
20’x15’
135x One of my favourite DSOs, this occupies much of the FOV at this magnification. The graceful neck of the swan heads north, the water to the east and the fainter wings to the west. I note an intricate lacework of dark lanes where the neck joins the body of the swan. A fainter spread of more diffuse nebulosity trails the swan and again to me the nebula seems much larger than the 20’ listed. This nebula always has a very dynamic look to it, seeming to move across the sky and the more I look, the more subtleties I see.
NGC 6522/6528 GCs in Sagittarius
Dia 5.6/3.7 mag 8.6/9.5 Class VI/V
135X Both in the same FOV, 6522 looks twice the size and a magnitude brighter, they look about 20’ apart. Both small and faint GCs with no resolvable stars and both quite compact and concentrated. 175X Both still in one FOV. 6522 has a notable foreground star, distinct core and grainy appearance to its very regular, round haze. The brightness falls off fairly sharply from the core to the periphery. 6528 is very similar but fainter. Not quite as distinct a core and hence a less abrupt fall in brightness from the core to the periphery.
NGC 6624 GC in Sagittarius
Dia 5.9 mag 8.0 Class IV
175X Brighter and larger than 6522 but with no resolvable stars. It has a marked central core, it looks like a little 47 Tuc with its punctum of a core.
NGC 6565 PN in Sagittarius
Dia 9” mag 11.6 Type 4
250X Another PN that appears stellar with direct vision. Very small round bluish disc with no structure or central star discernible. OIII does not reveal any more detail, but the PN remains bright. NSOG suggests that this PN looks annular with OIII, but it looks if anything brighter in the middle to me.
NGC 6544 GC in Sagittarius
Dia. 8.9’ mag 8.1
175X Not very concentrated, this GC looks somewhat irregular in shape, squashed so that it is longer N-s than E-W. A string of faint resolvable stars runs N-S across the centre of the cluster. I suspect that these are foreground stars as the cluster is small and faint. It looks to me as if it’s had a few encounters with the disc of the Milky Way. It appears to have a small point projecting eastward from the centre of the GC. With the slightly flattened N-S appearance of the GC, this point makes it a little reminiscent of a thumbtack. Quite intriguing.
NGC 6553 GC in Sagittarius
Dia.8.1’ mag. 8.1 Class XI
175X Appears larger than 6544 to me and although it is of the same magnitude it looks less bright. I think this is because it is much less concentrated, has no core and an even distribution across the disc. A very regular cluster. 250X shows a grainier texture.
To conclude the evening, I visit epsilon Lyrae to split the double double, Jupiter and 47 Tuc. A most enjoyable evening.
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09-08-2010, 11:10 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: May 2009
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 15
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Thanks Paddy. A very enjoyable report to read.
Apart from NSOG do you use any other atlas/software to locate DSO's
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09-08-2010, 12:32 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Melbourne, Vic
Posts: 465
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Well done Patrick, great report, I feel quite envious. I gave up at 9pm with total cloud cover in Melbourne west.
Thanks
Rod
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09-08-2010, 01:53 PM
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Canis Minor
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Strangways, Vic
Posts: 2,214
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Thanks for the replies. Parkwood, I use the Night Sky Observer's guide almost exclusively at the moment. I find the charts quite up to the job. I also have Tirion's SkyAtlas 2000, but don't often need to use it. I still occasionally use "the Sky" software that came with my first Tasco telescope if I'm looking for something that's not in NSOG but this is rare. If I'm hunting Arp galaxies I use "the arp atlas of Peculiar galaxies" and I find that its charts are also quite adequate. Many of the fainter Arps are not in the NSOG.
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09-08-2010, 03:27 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Renmark, SA
Posts: 2,986
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What a great haul! You certainly filled up your quota for this orbit of the galaxy.
Those globs sound great. I'm sure there's alot of unexpected beauties in that area. I agree with you on M17, as far as detail and surface brightness in nebula go, it gives the "big 3" (m42 / ngc 3372 / ngc 2070) a real run for its money.
I caught NGC 6818 in near perfect seeing a few weeks ago. My impressions from the morning of 23/5/2010 include a horse-shoe shaped annularity with the open end pointing to the N, and at 762x a tiny knot could be seen "broken" off the northwestern end of the horse shoe. A very faint outer halo was seen slightly buldging out from the E and W sides of the nebula. Scope was 12" dob.
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09-08-2010, 04:52 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: southern highlands, Australia
Posts: 679
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Great observation report Patrick,
I'm so overwhelmed by the sagitarius region there is just so much stuff in there.
regards Orestis
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09-08-2010, 08:44 PM
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Quietly watching
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Yarra Junction
Posts: 3,044
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Lovely written up report, delight to read.
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09-08-2010, 10:14 PM
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Searching for Travolta...
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Brisbane, Australia.
Posts: 3,700
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I thoroughly enjoyed your obs report Patrick; it was like a novel I couldn't put down!
Thank you so much for sharing that with us.
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09-08-2010, 10:41 PM
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Like to learn
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: melbourne
Posts: 4,835
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A very absorbing read Pat. A lovely nights viewing.
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09-08-2010, 10:49 PM
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Bright the hawk's flight
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Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Mt Duneed Vic
Posts: 3,981
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Well done Paddy. Nice report. Very impressed you nabbed NGC6822. Tried for that twice now without luck, LP and aperture may be defeating me, hope to get under a proper dark sky to get it!
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10-08-2010, 01:46 PM
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Canis Minor
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Strangways, Vic
Posts: 2,214
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Thanks all. I really appreciate your encouraging responses.
Quote:
Originally Posted by pgc hunter
I caught NGC 6818 in near perfect seeing a few weeks ago. My impressions from the morning of 23/5/2010 include a horse-shoe shaped annularity with the open end pointing to the N, and at 762x a tiny knot could be seen "broken" off the northwestern end of the horse shoe. A very faint outer halo was seen slightly buldging out from the E and W sides of the nebula. Scope was 12" dob.
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Sab, you continue to amaze me with the detail you can see in faint PNs and galaxies. I'll have to try this one again on a night when the seeing will allow very high magnifications and see if I can see what you've seen.
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11-08-2010, 10:48 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Renmark, SA
Posts: 2,986
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Paddy
Thanks all. I really appreciate your encouraging responses.
Sab, you continue to amaze me with the detail you can see in faint PNs and galaxies. I'll have to try this one again on a night when the seeing will allow very high magnifications and see if I can see what you've seen.
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thanks! I've found images of this PNE which confirm the features I saw..see this link: http://web.utah.edu/astro/pics/paul/ngc6818A-352.jpg (north is down, east is right.)
Last edited by pgc hunter; 12-08-2010 at 08:28 AM.
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12-08-2010, 02:41 PM
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Canis Minor
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Strangways, Vic
Posts: 2,214
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pgc hunter
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It is very rewarding to have one's observations corroborated like that. Very good observing indeed!. I was quite chuffed when the faint outer halo that I saw in NGC 6629 and not described in NSOG was apparent on photographs. Gives me a bit of confidence in my observing skills.
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15-08-2010, 03:31 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Renmark, SA
Posts: 2,986
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Paddy
It is very rewarding to have one's observations corroborated like that. Very good observing indeed!. I was quite chuffed when the faint outer halo that I saw in NGC 6629 and not described in NSOG was apparent on photographs. Gives me a bit of confidence in my observing skills.
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Too true. My favourite thing to do post-obs is to look up pics of objects I observed and more often than not I'm surprised how much detail can been seen visually in certain objects.
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