The Amateur Astronomy Thread

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icowden

Veteran
I have given up using mine. I have 3 of them and they have been in the cupboard for at least 2 years now. With the naked eye, you see small circle of yellow stars. Using a telescope, these circles are a bit bigger but still no details, just yellow circles.
I have seen Mars,( big red circle ) Saturn and Jupiter but not really impressed with the quality.
The only thing worth seeing is the Moon as you can see much details.
To see more detail you need a bigger and more powerful scope. And time. A lot of time.
The atmosphere changes a lot during the evening / night. You aren't going to out-see Nasa, but I get a sense of awe about being able to see objects that are incredibly far away with my own eyes.
If you can find a good dark site on a good night, you can pick out galaxies. But you need to be out for a while.
I haven't got there yet...
 

MrGrumpy

Huge Member
My mum and dad bought one of those tripod telescopes for the youngest for Christmas one year . Wrong thing to buy as a total mare to setup . However once you do get it focused in it’ok . The moon does look incredible through a scope . However decent set of binoculars may see you there as well .

Where we are is actually decent enough for the night sky , with not a lot of light pollution considering we live in a large town. Facing south I see loads on a clear night walking the dog .
 

gbb

Squire
Just stood at my back door last night and was struck how many stars were shing through. Got my birdscope out and had a look at the Plaedies (sp) cluster, crystal clear group of stars considering you normally see a fuzzy group with the naked eye.
What I assume was Sirius was also incredibly bright and low. What was maybe atmospheric conditions gave it a slightly purple blue 'twinkle'

5 minutes later, everything back to 'normal'...far less clear skies, not from cloud but again I assume atmospherics.
 

MontyVeda

a short-tempered ill-controlled small-minded troll
Just stood at my back door last night and was struck how many stars were shing through. Got my birdscope out and had a look at the Plaedies (sp) cluster, crystal clear group of stars considering you normally see a fuzzy group with the naked eye.
What I assume was Sirius was also incredibly bright and low. What was maybe atmospheric conditions gave it a slightly purple blue 'twinkle'

5 minutes later, everything back to 'normal'...far less clear skies, not from cloud but again I assume atmospherics.
I popped to the shop at about 9pm last night and it was so clear i took a big detour through some unlit paths on the way back home. Chilly but worth it.
 
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classic33

Leg End Member
The Moon is about to get walloped by more than 2,700 kilograms of space junk, a punch that will carve out a crater that could fit several semi-trailers.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-03-03/space-junk-rocket-hurdling-towards-to-moon/100877494
 

MontyVeda

a short-tempered ill-controlled small-minded troll
Before the clocks sprang forward, I've been enjoying seeing Venus at dawn on my way to work, but never spotted Saturn and Mars...

637310
 
As you can imagine there's total cloud cover here tonight. 😂

Typical, I think Juipter is closer to us at the moment, but it’s also close to the moon.

If the cloud breaks you may get some good viewing, fingers crossed for you.
 
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