Archive for the 'Observation Log' Category
September 7th, 2010 by Hersey
Date: 9/4/2010
Time: 9:00 PM – 12:00 AM EDT
Scope: Astro-Tech 66mm ED
Guidescope: Celestron C6-SGT
Mount: Celestron Advance CG5 GOTO
Eyepieces: 25mm Plossl for alignment
Location: Backyard, Suffolk, VA
Weather: Cooler, very clear, a little humid.
Transparency: 7/8 Seeing: 6
Alignment Stars: Arcturus, Antares
Calibration Stars: Deneb, Caph, Albireo
Hand Controller Polar Align Routine on Antares.
Very nice clear night. The Milky Way was easily visible across the sky, which is unusual for my backyard, the light pollution usually does it in. I was also able to see all the stars in the little dipper without assistance. So a very nice night for observing.
I was set up to image but I did have a look at M27 and M31 through both scopes with the 25mm Plossl and both resolved nicely. M31 was still very low but bright and the bright galactic core was very easy to resolve in both scopes. M27 was nearly directly overhead and looked fantastic.
I also check out M22. In the C6 it was very easy to resolve individual stars, it also looked great in the 66 but it was not as easy to see individual members.
My first target for imaging was Messier 11 (M11) – The Wild Duck Cluster. I took fifteen 60 second exposures with the Orion Starshoot DSI II through the Astro-Tech 66mm guided with the Starshoot Autoguider on the Celestron C6-SGT and ended up with a twelve minutes (12×60 seconds)to stack. I had a little problem with the guiding after about 10 minutes and this caused some issues with the last few shots.

I think I need to work on this a bit more. It looks a little over exposed to me. I am going to try to reprocess what I have and will definitely spend some more time on this in the near future. It really is a nice looking cluster.
The next target was Messier 16 (M16) – The Eagle Nebula. I calibrated the autoguider and it seemed to be working well. I started with 10 60 second exposures and these turned out nice so I up the exposures to 120 seconds. I ended up with twenty minutes (10 x 120 seconds) of exposures with the Orion StarShoot DSI II through the Astro-Tech 66mm guided with the StarShoot Autoguider on the Celestron C6-SGT and I think it turned out very nice.

I also took some images of M31 but they were all junk. I am not sure why. I was having a few issues with the autoguider, not sure if there was a balance issue, if it had something to do with where M31 was in the sky, or what but I just could not get it work right.
All in all a great night to be out looking at the stars.
September 6th, 2010 by Hersey
Date: 09/03/2010
Time: 8:00 PM – 11:00 PM EDT
Scope: Celestron C8-SGT
Mount: Celestron Advance CG5 GOTO
Eyepieces: APM 26mm SWA, 16mm Nagler
Location: Northwest River Park, Chesapeake, VA
Weather: Warm, VERY humid
Transparency: 7 Seeing: 6
Alignment Stars: Arcturus, Vega
Luck for us Hurricane Earl ended up just brushing by and the rain and wind stopped in the early afternoon on Friday. The sky cleared just in time for the BBAA Skywatch at Northwest River Park in Chesapeake. There were four scopes set up, on big Dob, a 6″ (??) refractor, a smaller reflector, and I had my 8″ SCT.
There were a ton of cub scouts out there and this made getting things set up a bit frustrating. It is cool, they were all just very excited to look through the scopes and that is really what we are out there for. The humidity was very high and dew heaters on all the scopes were working over time. The dew got to the small reflector pretty quick which left only 3 scopes and a bunch of anxious cub scouts. Several of the scouts asked some really great questions and I think they had a pretty good time looking through scopes.
This was my first time with my 8″ scope in the field. It took me several attempts to get it aligned but once it was it was dead on for the entire night. My DIY field power supply did great. It is powered by a 12 volt 105 amp hour marine deep cycle battery and it had no problem powering the mount and dew heater for the time we were set up.
I did not keep a very detailed log, just a list of objects. M27, M22, M11, M17, M15, M10, and M12. Jupiter rose above the trees about 10:00 or so and looked great.
One object that I did get a pretty good view of was M71. So far every time I have attempted this one in my backyard the light pollution (or moon light) has made it impossible to find. With the clear dark sky I was able to find M71 and it looked great. In the 8″ scope, M71 appeared as a tight faint cluster of stars, it was hard to resolve any individual members.
All in all it was a great Skywatch and I am already looking forward to the next one scheduled for Friday, October 1, 2010.
August 30th, 2010 by Hersey
Date: 8/28/2010
Time: 9:45 PM – 12:00 AM EDT
Scope: Stellarvue 80BV
Mount: Celestron Advance CG5 GOTO
Eyepieces: 16mm Nagler, 7mm Nagler, 4mm Radian
Location: Backyard, Suffolk, VA
Weather: Warm, clear, humid.
Transparency: 4 Seeing: 6/7
Moon: Bright Waning Gibbous
Alignment Stars: Arcturus, Vega
Calibration Stars: Caph, Deneb
I knew the moon was going to be fairly bright, but I wanted to have a look at and maybe try to get an image or two of Jupiter. It was nice and clear, a bit warm, and very humid.
I recently picked up a 16mm Nagler on Astromart and was looking forward to giving it a try in the SV80BV – WOW! This will probably end up being my main eyepiece for this scope. Nice crisp views, sharp focus, just very nice. Since it is a 1.25″ eyepiece I stuck with all 1.25″ eyepieces so I did not have to keep switching out the 2″-1.25″ adapter.
The notes in my log are not as I usually do them – Object: Description of what I see. This time they are a bit more free form, I guess I was just not feeling very structured during this session.
I tried to check out several Messier objects before moon rise, but even with the moon over the horizon the bright light from it still made a wash of the night sky. I did get a view or M27, M57, M13, and M15 but because of the bright moon light I was not able to see very much detail for any of these. M13 was very faint and I was not able to resolve and individual stars with either the 16mm or 7mm eyepieces. M27 looked like a faint bubble and showed no detail.
Jupiter was just awesome! Very clear and crisp in the 16mm and 7mm. Even very nice and sharp in the 4mm Radian. Lots of detail in the 4mm – one dark band and at least two visible lighter bands. The views through the eyepiece were just spectacular! The four Galilean moons of Jupiter were very bright and easy to spot. I could keep all of them in the FOV of the 16mm and 7mm eyepieces. (I made a rough sketch of their position in my log, I might scan it later)
I hooked up the Orion DSI II camera to the Televue 2x Powermate and took 100 exposures at 0.04 second and 100 exposures at 0.05 second. I was a bit out of focus on the second set so they are pretty much trash, but after stacking the 100/0.04 seconds I ended up with my best Jupiter image yet.

I ended the night with a look at M31, the Andromeda Galaxy. Even with the bright moon the galactic center was easy to find and looked very nice in the 16mm. With a darker sky I think this object will end up looking amazing with this eyepiece through this scope.
August 16th, 2010 by Hersey
Date: 8/14/2010
Time: 9:45 PM – 01:30 AM EDT
Scope: Astro-Tech AT66ED
Guide Scope: Celestron C6-SGT
Mount: Celestron Advance CG5 GOTO
Location: Backyard, Suffolk, VA
Weather: Warm, clear, light breeze. A few thin clouds after midnight.
Transparency: 7
Moon: Waxing Crescent that set early
Cameras: Orion Starshoot DSI II, Orion Starshoot Autoguider
Software: Maxim DL Essentials, PHD Guiding
Alignment stars: Arcturus, Antares
Calibration stars: Deneb, Albireo
Very nice clear night. Still a bit warm, even late, but better than it has been. After the two star align I did the polar align routine using Antares. The mount GOTO was right on and tracking well. PHD guiding was doing a great job making minor adjustments. I probably could have gone for longer exposure times but I think the shots below turned out pretty well. I still need a bit more practice and information on processing the shots after stacking them. (Anyone know of a good book or resource?)
Messier 17 (M17) – The Swan Nebula or the Omega Nebula
This was my first target. It was very easy to find in the dark sky. The image is a stack of 20 1 minute exposures. The mount guided great for over 30 minutes. I also got a small set of 120 second exposures but I have not stacked/processed them yet.

Messier 27 (M27) – The Dumbbell Nebula
The Dumbbell Nebula was almost directly overhead and I had a hard time keeping the mount guided. I think my balance may have been off a bit with the way the scope was pointing almost straight up. I had to refocus since I forgot to set the lock screw and the weight of the camera caused the focuser to slip when the scope was pointing straight up. The image below is a stack of 7 1 minute exposures.

Messier 8 (M8) – The Lagoon Nebula
The Lagoon Nebula was also very easy to find. It is in the same area of the sky as M17 – this area was nice and dark. Again the mount guided well for this set of images. The image below is a stack of 20 1 minute exposures.

I forgot to take the dark frames for the night. I was going to, I even set the camera and scope up for it, but then I started looking at Jupiter and forgot all about them.
All of these images have also been posted to my Flickr page here.
August 10th, 2010 by Hersey
Date: 8/9/2010
Time: 8:45 PM – 10:30 PM EDT
Scope: Stellarvue SV80BV FL: 750mm
Eye Pieces: 22 Panoptic, 9mm Nagler, 7mm Nagler
Mount: Stellarvue M1 Alt-Az
Location: Backyard, Suffolk, VA
Weather: Warm, passing clouds, breezy early – then still.
Seeing: 7 Transparency: 4
Moon: None
Not the best conditions for observing – lots of passing clouds but the seeing was a bit better than it has been. Star images were steady at 107x (7mm Nagler). I used Venus to get the finder and scope aligned. Venus, Saturn, and Mars were all visible just after sunset but they disappeared behind the tree line pretty quickly.
While waiting for it to get a bit darker I focused on Albireo and easily split the bright yellow and blue double with the 9mm Nagler. This is a very pretty double and I enjoy looking at it.
Messier 29 (M29) – Found the cluster with the finder and then with the 9mm. Both the 9mm and the 22mm showed the 6 brightest stars. The 9mm revealed 2 more faint star and the 7mm brought out 2 more. Below is a sketch. I spent a fair bit of time on this one trying to get a sketch that represented what I seeing in the eye piece.

I inverted the original sketch and cleaned up the stars a bit using Gimp.
Messier 71 (M71) – I am still not able to find this with the SV80. Will try again another night using the 8″ SCT. I am sure I am in the right place, but I was not able to resolve the globular.
Messier 39 (M39) – I did not have much luck finding this one either. The clouds were thicker and I was not able to find my reference stars. After a few minutes of searching I thought that I may have finally got it in my eyepiece but I am not 100% sure. I should be able to find this with this scope so it will be a target on another night.
Messier 13 (M13) – Since I was having trouble locating the other targets on my plan I decided to point the scope towards something a bit brighter – M13 the Great Cluster in Hercules. It was easy to find nearly directly overhead. The bright core was easy to see with the 22mm Pan and the 9mm Nagler. The 9mm showed a few details of individual stars and with the 7mm I was able to resolve a few more individual stars closer to the core.
August 1st, 2010 by Hersey
Date: 7/30/2010
Time: 9:00 PM – 11:30 PM EDT
Scope: Celestron C8 SGT-XLT
Eye Pieces: 33mm SWAN, 22 Panoptic, 13mm Nagler
Mount: Celestron Advance Series CG5 GOTO
Location: Backyard, Suffolk, VA
Weather: Warm, Few high thin clouds
Seeing: 6 Transparency: 5 (4 after Moon rise at approx 10:30)
Moon: Waning Gibbous
Alignment Stars: Arcturus, Antares
Calibration Stars: Deneb, Alberio
Not the best night for observing, but it has been a long week and I just wanted to get outside, look up, and get a bit lost in the stars. I have not had the Celestron C8 set up in a couple of months and I have been looking forward to trying some of my new eyepieces in it.
I installed Bob’s Knobs on this scope since the last time I set it up so I had to collimate first. Took a little while to do this, but it would have taken a lot longer with the Phillips screws originally installed. I collimated using the 13mm and 9mm Nagler eyepieces.
I did a quick polar alignment – not really spending a lot of time getting a precise polar alignment since I was only planning on visual observing. Even so I had the mount aligned pretty well. Did the two star alignment with a couple of calibration stars and the GOTOs were right on.
The views through the 33mm were very nice. Crisp and bright with a nice wide field of view.
My plan for the night included M27, M29, and M71 before the light from Moon rise washed out most of the fainter objects.
From my observing notes:
Messier 27 (M27) The Dumbbell Nebula – A lot larger that I thought it would be in the 22mm Panoptic. Looked like 2 faint clouds in the 13mm Nagler. Tried the O III filter which produced a bit better contrast that showed more detail to the center. The 33mm SWAN showed the nebula with a nice star field background. This will definitely be a target for my camera in the near future.
Messier 29 (M29) – Open Cluster – In the 22mm Panoptic I observed 7 bright stars and 6 fainter stars. The 13mm revealed a couple more fainter stars. In the 13mm I could count 16 stars that appeared to be part of the cluster.
Messier 71 (M71) – The moon rose about 10:30 and I was not able to find this one in the eye piece. Will try again another night.
After the Moon rose I observed M4, M3, M10, and M12. I was able to observe each of these objects, but I did not make notes.
July 20th, 2010 by Hersey
Date: 7/18/2010
Time: 8:30 PM – 9:45 PM EDT
Scope: Stellarvue SV80BV FL: 750mm
Eye Pieces: 13mm Nagler, 9mm Nagler, 7mm Nagler, 4mm Radian
Mount: Stellarvue M1 Grab and Go Alt-azimuth
Location: Backyard, Suffolk, VA
Weather: Warm, low thin clouds, windy, cumulonimbus clouds and lightning to the northeast
Seeing: 4 Transparency: 4
Moon: 1st Quarter
The skies did not clear much over the weekend. Venus was very bright in the West on Sunday afternoon and could be spotted well before dark. I decided to set up the SV80 for a quick look. A thunder storm to the northeast was producing a lot of lightning so I decided to call it a night pretty early. Ended up viewing 3 planets, 2 of them well before dark.
From my observing notes:
Venus – Very bright and was easy to find even before the sun had set. Easy to see the phase at 9mm, 7mm, and 4mm. I think it is waxing since it appears there is more of the planet lit than in other recent observations. A purple halo was visible around the planet – not sure if this was because of the atmospheric conditions but if is not something I have noticed before. The halo was apparent in all eyepieces. The sharpest views of the planet were with the 9mm. The 7mm and 4mm views were not very sharp and showed a lot of wavy movement – similar image as looking down hot asphalt.
Moon – Very nice 1st quarter moon. Bright, white. Very sharp views with the 9mm and the 7mm. Some wavy turbulence could be seen at the edge with the 7mm but not bad at all with the 9mm. Very nice detail of craters and ridges at the line between dark and light. Sharpest most stable view with 9mm, the moon filled the FOV of this eyepiece very nice.
Saturn – Found Saturn well before dark in the 9mm eyepiece. Even before the sun went down I could make out the detail of the ring shadow on the planets surface. I was surprise to be able to see a single moon even before dark. Looked nice in the 7mm, but not as sharp. The 9mm was sharp and showed nice detail.
Mars – Not visible until dark. Orange disk in the 9mm. No other details visible. Tried to crank up the magnification with the 4mm but could not get a sharp image.
A satellite crossed nearly directly overhead (maybe a degree or 2 south of directly over head) at approximately 9:07 PM.
July 12th, 2010 by Hersey
Date: 7/9/2010
Time: 9:15 PM – 11:00 PM EDT
Scope: Stellarvue SV80BV FL: 750mm
Eye Pieces: 22mm Panoptic, 9mm Nagler, 7mm Nagler
Mount: Stellarvue M1 Grab and Go Alt-azimuth
Location:Backyard, Suffolk, VA
Weather: Warm and cloudy.
Moon: None
It was pretty warm and mostly cloudy. A few breaks in the clouds as they passed allowed some views of Venus and Saturn. Around 10:00 PM it cleared up a bit to allow me to look for a few Messier objects. I was able to view M3 and M94. I looked for M51 but was unable to find it.
Not really the best night for star gazing, but I just felt like getting outside and looking up for a bit. I did not have an observing plan, I just used the July Sky Map to locate a few objects.
Since the conditions were not really good for deep sky observing I am happy that I was able to find a few things. By 11:00 PM the clouds had pretty much taken over the sky so I called it a night.
From my observing notes:
Venus was low in the west. Very bright. The phase appears to be a little over half, approaching gibbous. It was easy to see the phase in the 22mm, 9mm, and 7mm.
Saturn was very nice in the 7mm. Shadow of rings across planet surface showing good contrast. Only one moon was visible – Titan. I was able to see the ring shadow and moon in all eye pieces but the views were the best in the 7mm Nagler.
Messier 3 (M3) – From the bright star Arcturus I slowly worked to the west with the 22mm Panoptic until I was able find the fuzzy globular cluster. I could not resolve any individual stars at 22mm, 9mm, or 7mm. Just a faint fuzzy object with a brighter core. Going to have to revisit on a night that is darker and more clear.
Messier 94 (M94) – I was very surprised to be able to find this. I scanned between the two stars that make up the constellation Canes Venatici with the 22mm Panoptic. Very faint, small, with a faint border around a bright core.
I spent a bit of time looking for M51 but was unable to find it.
July 6th, 2010 by Hersey
Finally got the chance to try out the new to me Orion StarShoot Color Deep Sky Imager (DSI) II I picked up on Astromart Classifieds a while back. Saturday and Sunday night were both nice. Clear skies and cooler than it has been. A few clouds rolled by later on Sunday night, but still a great night.
For all images I used PHD for guiding, MaxIm DL Essentials for imaging with the DSI, and Deep Sky Stacker to stack the exposures.
On Saturday (7/3/2010) I set up to image through the Celestron 6″ SCT with a f/6.3 focal reducer while using the Astro-Tech 66ED to guide.
Early in the evening I used Venus to get the two scopes aligned and to test focus of the imaging camera and the guide camera.
After doing the two star alignment on the mount I used the polar align routine on the hand controller to make sure I had my alignment down. Not bad, had to make a few minor adjustments.
I then redid the two star alignment using Spica and Arcturus for my alignment stars and Antares, Deneb, Albireo, and Vega for my calibration stars.
The first target for the camera was the globular cluster Messier 4 (M4). It took some work to get the globular in focus, and I think I am still a little off – something I am going to have to work on a bit. The first set of images were over exposed, I changed the screen stretch to MaxVal and that fixed that. I ended up with 10 60 second exposures.

I then moved on the Messier (M80). I forced calibration in PHD after moving to each new object. I ended up with 10 decent 60 seconds exposures and stacked them to get the image below.

Messier 22 (M22) is a great globular cluster to observe visually and I think if I can increase my exposure times a bit it will be a great one to photograph as well. The image below is 12 60 seconds exposures stacked.

This one was not on my plan, but Mary Shannon had seen M57 at the SkyWatch on Friday night and wanted me to try to get a photo of it. Messier 57 (M57), also known as the Ring Nebula, turned out to be my favorite image of the night. My guiding was off, I think I have an issue with balance, but the 7 30 second exposures look pretty good stacked.

Sunday (7/4/2010) night was a bit warmer with a light breeze. I decided to image through the Astro-Tech 66ED with an Orion Skylight filter and use the Celestron 6″ SCT to guide. I just wanted to get a feel for the difference in imaging between the two scopes.
I went through the same alignment process as the night before. Again using Spica and Arcturus to align and Antares, Deneb, Albireo, and Vega for calibration. I did not do the polar alignment routine, the GOTOs to the calibration stars were pretty much dead on so I figured it was probably still in good alignment.
The first target was Messier 10 (M10). Here are 16 60 second exposures stacked.

Then on to one of my new favorites to observe Messier 20 (M20) the Trifid Nebula. It was hard to find in the camera at first, the nebula does not show up until you increase the exposures to 10 seconds or more, because of this it took some work to get it close to center. I ended up with 21 60 second exposures and I think it turned out great.

I still had a problem with guiding. It wanted to drift south and the guider could not keep up. Not sure if it is a polar alignment problem or a problem with balance. Going to have to look at this a bit more. The PHD test moves the mount fine E & W RA and N & S DEC so I think the guide pulses are being sent. Going to have to research this a bit more to figure it out.
Both the 6″ SCT and the AT66ED produced decent images with DSI. With the wider field it was easier to locate and center images in the AT66ED. I still need to work on fine tuning my focus but I am pretty happy with how the images turned out. I learned a lot about the camera, the scopes, and the process plus I really enjoyed taking them (that’s what really matters).
July 3rd, 2010 by Hersey
Date: 7/2/2010
Time: 8:30 PM – 11:45 PM EDT
Scope: Stellarvue SV80BV FL: 750mm
Eye Pieces: 22mm Panoptic, 9mm Nagler
Mount: Stellarvue M1 Grab and Go Alt-azimuth
Location: Northwest River Park, Chesapeake, VA
Weather: Cool and clear, a little humidity. A few passing clouds after 11:00 PM.
Moon: None
The Back Bay Amateur Astronomy club holds a monthly event called Skywatch at the Northwest River Park in southern Chesapeake. Sandy and I have been out there before to just look but this is the first time I have taken my own scope.
I have been trying to learn to better navigate the sky without using the GOTO computers on my CG5 mounts. I don’t have my mobile power worked out yet anyway so I figured this would be a good opportunity to do some star hopping using just a Skymap and a red dot finder. If I got totally lost or was not able to view anything there would be others there to help me get back on track or if I got totally frustrated with it there would be a number of other scopes to look through.
Sandy, Mary Shannon, and I loaded up the Xterra with the SV80BV, the M1 mount, a cooler with a few bottles of water, a couple of camp chairs, and the bug repellent. We arrived at the observing site in the equestrian area of NWR park at about 8:00 PM and set up. I have one cigarette lighter plug in the cargo area of the Xterra so I used that to power the dew heater controller.
I got everything set up and we waited for the sun to go down. Venus and Saturn were the first targets visible well before the sky was even dark. After that I started searching out globular clusters.
We had a really good time. I did not take a count but I would guess there were between 10 and 15 scopes set up – ranging in size from my 80mm refractor to Kent’s monster 25″ dob (the views of M13 through that thing are INCREDIBLE). I learned a lot about navigating the sky. Mary Shannon had a great time learning about the different constellations and stars. Both Mary Shannon and Sandy enjoyed looking through Ted’s 18″ Dobsonian that was set up next to us.
The Skywatch event is open to the public and if you get a chance you should check one out – the schedule is here. We are already looking forward to the next one.
From my observing notes:
Venus was very easy to spot well before dark. Though the scope you could easily see the phase of the planet using both the 22mm and the 9mm eye pieces. The phase is very similar to the gibbious moon phase (somewhere between the quarter phase and gibbious phase) I am not sure if it is waxing or waning. Because of the brightness it was actually hard to observe this as the sky became darker.
Saturn was beautiful as always. The shadow of the rings across the planets surface was very easy to resolve. It was approximately 9:10 PM when we were viewing it so the sky was not yet completely dark. I was only able to resolve the moon Titan.
Below are my two quick sketches I made in my log book of the phase of Venus and the location of Saturn’s moon Titan.

A BBAA member walked by (sorry I do not remember who) and said that Albireo would look good through my scope. He showed me where to look, and he was right. Albireo is a double star, it is the head of the constellation Cygnus. The double contains one larger blue star and a smaller gold/yellow star.
Messier 4 (M4) Very faint but it was easy to find by centering on Antares and slowly moving the scope to the west using the 22mm. The 9mm brought out more detail of the bright core and was able to resolve individual stars around the core.
Messier 80 (M80) Was also fairly easy to find by centering on Antares and slowly moving the scope up to about half way between Antares and Acrab (Beta Scorpii) in constellation Scorpius. It has a bright core, but I could not resolve individual stars to the core. Also tried with the 7mm Nagler.
Messier 57 (M57), the Ring Nebula, is found in the constellation Lyra about halfway between the stars Sheliak and Sulafat. M57 resolved as a fuzzy bluish thick walled bubble with the 9mm.
Messier 20 (M20), the Trifid Nebula, and Messier 21 (M21), an open cluster. This was one of my favorite targets of the night. Both M20 and M21 could be seen in the same FOV of the 9mm Nagler. I was able to resolve the dark lanes that separate the Trifid Nebula.
Mizar and Alcor is another double found in the handle of the Big Dipper. Mizar is a large blue star and Alcor is a much smaller blue star.
I did not note any specific details about these clusters. Basically a BBAA member (Ted) was calling these off and I was going looking for them. Messier 10 (M10), Messier 11 (M11), Messier 22 (M22), and Messier 15 (M15)