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Old 18-04-2016, 09:29 AM
Capricorn (Matty)
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Join Date: Apr 2016
Location: Brisbane
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newbie

Hi all
Just received a celestron powerseeker 127EQ from a friend about to travel overseas. Just wondering what I should be able to see with this scope?? My mate told me I should planets and of course moon.. Will I be able to see DSO and nebule??? and he gave me some camera adaptors so I'm guessing I can take pics with my pentax dslr????

Really hoping for some clear nights so I can see the night wonders of the sky!!
Thanks in advance..
Matt
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Old 18-04-2016, 04:05 PM
Kunama
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Hello Matt and welcome to the fray,

I don't know that scope personally but a 5" reflector should show you a decent image of Jupiter and its 4 Galilean moons, Saturn and its rings, Orion Nebula (middle of Orion's sword), the moon quite well and whole lot more.
Newtonian scopes on EQ mounts can be a pain in the neck (literally) for as you move the scope about the eyepiece can end up all over the place.

Perhaps that mount can be set into Altitude/Azimuth configuration, if so it becomes far more user friendly with the Newtonian.

Use the 20mm eyepiece to get used to the scope, it will give you a magnification of 50X, but first you need to align the scope and the finder (hopefully it came with instructions for this). This is done in the daytime with a target at least a kilometre away.

Keep the camera adapters in a bag in your study till you learn to the scope and the sky, ENJOY !!!

The scopes can be very affordable, clear nights cost extra !!!

Last edited by Kunama; 18-04-2016 at 04:45 PM.
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Old 18-04-2016, 09:02 PM
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OzEclipse (Joe Cali)
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Location: Young Hilltops LGA, Australia
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Welcome

Hi Matt,

Welcome. My first scope was a home made 6 inch reflector. I observed with this scope from light polluted suburban Brisbane for many years. Even though a six inch gathers 50% more light than a 5 inch, views are similar enough that I think I can give you some indication of what you can see.

Apart from the obvious Moon, Jupiter, Mar, Saturn, Venus.

There are numerous bright deep sky objects that are worth looking for. Observing from inner Brisbane, I suspect you won't see the fainter more challenging objectsin the list. Thise marked with a * are the brightest objects which should be visible even from a moderately light polluted suburban Brisbane. They will look much better from a dark sky, this is, of course, true of any telescope.

Search on any of these names and you'll find information about them and their location.

Globular clusters
Omega Centauri *
47 Tucana *
Messier 4 *

Nebulae
Orion Nebula *
Lagoon Nebula *
Trifid Nebula
Eta Carina *
Messier 17

Galaxies
NGC 253
NGC 55
Andromeda Galaxy
NGC 5128
NGC 1365
Messier 104 - Sombrero Hat Galaxy

Planetary Nebulae
Messier 57 Ring Nebula *

This list is certainly not exhaustive.

You'll need a star atlas or planetarium program. As a beginner, a chart that covers a big area of sky is better so that you can see the brightest stars. There is a free printable PDF atlas called Taki's star atlas modelled on the classic Norton's star atlas.

http://www.geocities.jp/toshimi_taki/

Under
Astronomy.
"Tools for Observation"

Click on link #2 - Taki's Star Atlas.

Cheers

Joe
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Old 07-05-2016, 01:14 PM
AEAJR (Ed)
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Location: Long Island, New York, USA
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How much you can see will be strongly impacted by how dark your skies are. I have a 3.1" and an 8" scope. I use them both at home at my very light polluted site.

Planets are not too impacted by light pollution.

As for DSO, there lots of DSOs that can be seen with 50 mm binoculars. Your 127mm scope gathers 6X the light of a 50 mm.

Light pollution hurts you most when it comes to contrast.

The Andromeda galaxy is considered a naked eye object at dark sites and an excellent binocular target at most sites. But in my 8" scope at my house it is just a white smudge. But go to a much darker site and what I see changes dramatically. Same scope, different location.
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Old 07-05-2016, 01:17 PM
AEAJR (Ed)
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When you are planning an observing session there are a variety of way to
proceed.

* You can set up your scope and just wander around the sky. I sometimes do that.

* You can scan with binoculars or the finder scope and when you see
something interesting, zero in on it with the telescope.

* You can start to organize you observation sessions with a target list
using "Tonight's Sky", a free web site that will allow you to run a report
of what is in your sky tonight. It will let you select the difficulty of
the targets and will provide a printed, PDF or HTML report that you can use when you are at your telescope.

The default sort is by difficulty, from brightest to dimmest. That is
great but you could end up all over the sky trying to work the list. I
normally sort it by constellation. Then I can mark the constellations that
are in my best part of the sky and focus on them. You could spend an
entire evening working on small part of the sky finding all sorts of cool
stuff.

Aside from making it easier to observe, you get to know a specific region of
the sky. You can focus on Orion, for example. See all that is in Orion
up to the capability of your telescope. Then move on to Taurus or
Cassiopeia or whatever constellations are in the best areas for you to
observe.

Not sure which constellations are in your best viewing area? I use
Stellarium to help me see which constellations are in my best viewing area.

For me that is East and directly overhead. But you could use a Planisphere,
a star chart, "Turn Left at Orion, or an app on your phone or tablet.

Here is how you do it.

Tonight's Sky Web site
http://www.tonightss...om/MainPage.php

Put in your location and time settings and click the box to remember them

Select the difficulty level - If you are using binoculars then select that.
If you are in a highly light polluted area work naked eye and binoculars
first, maybe small telescope. If you can find all of those then on the next
report raise the difficulty level. I attached a screen shot of the
settings I used to create the sample report I attached.

Select what types of targets you want to see - Planets, clusters, whatever
you want.

Run the report - standard sort that will be displayed is by increasing
magnitude number, that is to say brightest to dimmest

Choose which ones you want in the printed report, or select all.

Select Print or right click and select print. If you want a PDF select
"save as"

Change default print out sort to "by constellation"

Run the report and it will be sorted by constellation. This is how I
normally sort it.

You can print it or save it as a PDF or a web page. If you save it as a web
page there are live links to resources for each item.

I have the settings that were used to generate the report. This site will
not let me upload the .PDF file but you can do that for yourself.

Just another resource.
Attached Thumbnails
Click for full-size image (My setting for Tonight's Sky.jpg)
64.8 KB21 views
Click for full-size image (Print setting to sort by constellation.PNG)
9.6 KB24 views
Attached Files
File Type: pdf Tonight's Sky Observation Plan sorted by constellation.pdf (156.7 KB, 14 views)
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