Wednesday, October 29, 2025
Issue 621: The Messier Project 2... M15, M31, M32, M110, and M33.
Before we hit the leading edge of the autumn Messiers, muchachos, let’s get one thing out of the way: Yes, I did see comet Lemon (c/2025 A6). I didn’t observe the visitor in any kind of elaborate fashion, though. I didn’t even give my Richest Field Telescope, Miss Tanya, a shot at it. Weather and my health (I’ve been down with a bad cold/some kind of bronchial infection) impelled me to keep it simple. When I decided I’d better get to the comet before she got into the trees—Lemon is moving south at a good clip, now—I grabbed my beloved Burgess 15x70 binoculars.
These glasses, purchased at the 2003 ALCON in Nashville where I was a speaker, have long been my goto when I
want reasonably wide fields, and a little power—both in magnification and light
gathering—in a compact, hand-holdable package. They are also high in optical
quality, and I simply cannot believe the late Bill Burgess sold them to me for a
mere fifty bucks!
Anyhoo, out onto the deck I went. The Moon had waned away,
so that was not a factor. The factor was the race between altitude and
position. Every day I waited put the comet a little higher in the sky, but
every passing day also put it farther to the south. Chaos Manor South’s
southwestern sky is almost completely obscured by trees, so, I didn’t wait too
long. On my chosen evening, I had to do a little scanning around, but it wasn’t
long before I turned up Lemon. At first as just a fuzzy “star.” A little
staring, however, revealed a delightful wee tail!
That, friends, was the extent of my adventures with the
comet. I didn’t image it, not “even” with a smartscope; I just didn’t feel up
to it. I was glad, however, to have seen our visitor from the outer depths and
have enjoyed looking at the lovely pictures y’all have taken.
But onto the main
course, the next batch of Ms. As I mentioned in the first installment, this
time we’ll be taking them on constellation by constellation rather than by
numbers. The constellations for this evening are few but lustrous: beautiful Pegasus
the Flying Horse and Andromeda the Maiden. They are the heralds of the star
pictures of fall and are renowned both for their beauty and for the ease at
which they can be picked out even by novice observers.
So, let’s go. The instruments for this bunch? I’d like to say
Zelda, my 10-inch Dobsonian, was one of them, but ‘twas not to be. While, as I
told you last time, I can still get Z into the backyard safely if I am careful
and take it slowly, my Bad Cold meant I didn’t feel up to lugging her sizeable self
into the back forty. So, the visual telescope would be my 6-inch SkyWatcher Dob. What’s that? Her name? Let me ask; I haven’t thought to enquire. OK, she’s says,
“Patty.” Why Patty, I don’t know.
But that is what she said, and a scope should know her own name, shouldn’t she?
The imaging telescope? The SeeStar, Suzie, natch. She is really no trouble at
all even when I’m not feeling so hot.
Messier 15
There is no doubt globular cluster M15 in Pegasus is a grand
sight. One of the best globs in the northern sky. However, that comes with a
caveat. In addition to its lovely appearance as a ball of tiny stars, this
cluster is famous for its very tight, preternaturally
bright core. The cluster isn’t the densest one on the Messier list, but at
Shapley-Sawyer Type IV, it’s dense enough, and the brightness of that core (a
feeding black hole is thought to lurk there) makes it tough for smaller scopes
to resolve. On the plus side, M15 shines at magnitude 6.15, making it at least
a near naked eye object from dark
sites. It subtends an impressive 18’0” of sky.
So, to the Horse’s Nose Cluster me and Patty went. What did
we see? With a 30mm finding eyepiece in the focuser, what we saw was probably
not much different from what Jean-Dominique saw on that Italian evening those long
centuries ago: a bright fuzzball with a brighter center. Seeing more required
more magnification, and as much as I like Miss Patty, that is not easy for her.
Her optics are good, but at 150mm f/5, you need a short focal length ocular. Luckily,
I had one, a 4.7mm Explore Scientific wide-field eyepiece (160x) that I won at
the last Chiefland Star Party I attended. When I looked into it, I was
gratified to see the spray of tiny, tiny stars that surrounds that blazing
core.
Famous observer
(obviously not moi) impressions? Tonight,
we turn to Walter Scott Houston.
He’s often described as “the dean of deep sky observers.” So frequently, in
fact, that that has come to sound like a cliché. It is nevertheless oh-so-true—and
how. What did Scotty have to say about M15 in one of his “Deep-Sky Wonders”
columns?
The view of M15 is
impressive with anything from binoculars to the largest telescope. My 4-inch
Clark refractor at 40x shows M15 as a slightly oval disk, more luminous in the
center, with edges just beginning to break up into individual stars. Increasing
magnification enhances the view, and at 200x stars at the center of the cluster
start to be resolved.
Which is right on the money as far as I am concerned.
Then it was Suzie’s turn. Despite the Seestar smartscope’s 50mm
of aperture and 250mm focal length, the girl brought back a very pretty
rendition of M15. That said, I need to let my longer focal length Smarty-scope,
Evie, the 4-inch Evolution reflector, have a go at M15 before the season is
out.
Messier 31
There are few objects in the deep sky I’ve had as much of a love-hate relationship with as M31, the Great Andromeda Galaxy. The hate stems from my disappointment as a young’un with one of the very first deep sky objects I observed. When I finally ran it down, what was in the 1-inch Kellner eyepiece of my 4-inch f/11 Palomar Junior Newtonian? A big, bright blob that pretty much filled the field. Extending southwest to northeast from the blob was a stream of dimmer nebulosity that I guessed represented the galaxy’s disk. What? No spiral arms?! Little Rod expected spiral arms.
Despite M31’s closeness and brightness, it was no wonder I didn’t see spiral structure. This is a huge object, a blazingly bright (magnitude 3.4) SA galaxy that extends across a whopping 3.1 degrees of sky. Not only did its size make it a challenge for my small, long focal length reflector, the galaxy’s rather shallow inclination to us—77°, not edge-on, but not far from it, makes it difficult to detect signs of spiral structure in any telescope. While M31 was first recorded by Persian astronomer Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi in his Book of Fixed Stars in the 10th century, there are apparent references to it going way, way back.Certainly, as the years rolled by and I acquired more
suitable scopes for M31 and learned how to use
them, I came to see a lot more in M31. That included the dark lanes that are
the signature of spiral arms, a giant star cloud, a tiny near-stellar nucleus,
globular clusters, and more. However, most of those sights are reserved for
dark sites. What did my 6-inch pick up from the backyard of suburban Chaos
Manor South?
There was the blob, naturally, that enormous central
bulge that filled my field with milk. I struggled for at least a hint of the
compact nucleus but did not see a trace—not surprising, as that is an object
that often needs 10-inches and almost always needs a dark sky. The disk? I
didn’t expect dust lanes, but wondered if the giant star cloud, NGC 206, that
lies 49'0" southwest of the galaxy’s center might be visible. I convinced
myself I saw something in the correct position, but that may have been
averted imagination. M32 and M110? See below. If I’d been feeling a little
better, I’d have popped in the house for those Burgess binoculars, which are a
more appropriate instrument for M31 than even a short f/l 6-inch reflector.
Let me say that you can pick a far worse scope for M31 than a 6-inch f/5 at 25x with a 30mm
ocular. The problem was the light pollution-scattering haze of
autumn that is almost always with us in the weeks before cold fronts begin to
clean things out.
Scotty’s thoughts? He just isn’t bullish on Andromeda,
remarking that it is often a disappointment. That is certainly true, but I do
take issue with his claim that spiral structure “Probably cannot be seen in
amateur instruments.” I would say the aforementioned dark lanes are certainly the
galaxy showing that spiral structure. He does admit these dark lanes can be
seen in modest scopes but does not connect them with “spiral structure.” That
quibble aside, yes, Scotty nails it again. Andromeda is more famous for its
brightness (I was able to see it with ease as a fuzzy star from the backyard of
the original Chaos Manor South downtown) and what it represents, the closest large galaxy to us, than how it looks in
the eyepiece.
How did The Suze do with Andromeda? M31 was the first object
I essayed after ZWO implemented “mosaic mode” with the Seestars. When you
engage that, the scope takes a picture, moves, takes another picture, etc.,
making it able to frame objects too large even for its short focal length. I
was pleased by the results, but found the mosaic business to be a pain, taking
hours to complete and often not
completing due to the target getting into trees or other obstructions before
all the shots were done. Still, it’s a nice tool, and Suzie returned a pretty
good Andromeda. The bottom line is that this bright and big and obvious object is much more difficult to image than you would think.
M32
This little E2 elliptical is the most prominent of
Andromeda’s retinue of satellite galaxies. While it’s “only” magnitude 8.2,
it’s small, 8’30” x 6’30”, and appears bright indeed. If you’ve successfully
located M31, there’s no “finding” to M32; it stands out like a sore thumb about
25’0” south of the core of M31. Visually, it’s just outside the disk of its
parent galaxy. Who discovered the little guy? That is attributed to Guillaume
Le Gentil in 1749, but I’d guess whoever it was who first turned a
telescope to M31 saw M32; it would seem impossible to miss.
For me, M32 has always been, “Yeah, nice, adds to the beauty
of M31” and that is about it. There’s just not much to see here; it’s a
bright, featureless elliptical that appears completely round. At magnifications
of 150x and up, it should be easy to see the center is surrounded by a dimmer envelope
and… End of story. Scotty? He has little to say about the elliptical,
merely noting that it can sometimes be mistaken for M110.
I didn’t bother to do a separate image of M32; there’s just
not much reason to do so. The Seestar’s M31 picture shows the small companion
well enough. Frankly, large telescopes and long exposures don’t get you much more
with M32. They can show the elliptical’s elongation, but that is about it.
M110
Like M32, M110 is a satellite galaxy of Andromeda,
but it is at least a somewhat more interesting one. It’s an E5 with a magnitude
of 8.1 like M32, but is considerably larger at 21’54” x 11’0” and looks much
dimmer—it can be rendered completely invisible in the suburbs by sky conditions
that allow M32 to shine on. It’s also considerably more distant from M31’s
center, lying 36’19” to the northwest. The discoverer? Messier never added this
elliptical galaxy to his list, though he did include it in drawings he made of
M31. In my opinion, then, the credit should go to Caroline Herschel who
observed it on August 27, 1783.
Scotty doesn’t have much more to say about M110 than he does
about M32, just that it is the next closest satellite galaxy to M31 after M32,
the remaining companions being to the north in the Cassiopeia area.
As for The Suze? She did a rather nice job on M110, as you
can see here in this crop from her main M31 images. Maybe I’m fooling myself,
but I believe I can see signs of that subdued detail in M110. It’s enough to
make me want to turn the Unistellar smartscope loose on M110 some evening.
M33
M33, the Triangulum
Galaxy, is another object that really fired my imagination as a kid observer. It was obvious to me from pictures that,
unlike Andromeda, Triangulum should show spiral arms. Given the galaxy’s inclination
angle of 50°, I figured it
should be duck soup to see some arms. As I soon discovered after multiple nights
observing it in Mama and Daddy’s backyard, ‘tis not so. While this
magnitude 5.7 SA galaxy can be spotted with the naked eye from darker sites,
that is not an easy task. With a telescope, especially a longer focal
length one, M33 is almost as difficult. That magnitude 5.7 light is spread
out over an area of 1°08’42”
x 0°42’00. I was lucky to see anything at all. The recipe for success if you want spiral
arms? Dark skies and a 10 – 12” telescope at f/5 or below.
Historically, while
a naked eye object (if only marginally), it does not appear to have been recorded
before the age of the telescope. When it was first noticed, it wasn’t by
Charles Messier, but by Giovanni
Battista Hodierna in/around 1654.
How did me and Miss Patty fare with the Triangulum Galaxy? Not so hotsky. The best we could do on a semi-punk night (because of the haze) was detect a subtle brightening in the field in the correct spot. It wasn’t even clear we were seeing an oval patch of nebulosity, just a generalized hazy something in the field. I tried a UHC light pollution filter in hopes of seeing NGC 604, the enormous complex of nebulosity in one of M33’s arms, but no dice. I have seen the nebula with fair ease with the 10-inch Dobsonian from a site on the edge of the city-country transition zone, but that was on an outstanding night.
As you can imagine, ol’
Scotty has a lot to say about Triangulum—despite my near failure with it
on this night it really is one of the premier galaxies for Northern Hemisphere
observers. I urge you to read his column “The Great Triangulum Spiral”
for yourself, but to sum up, the Old Man mentions both the difficulty some observers
experience trying to see even a hint of M33 on the wrong night or with the
wrong scope, and his delight at not just having seen the spiral, but of having
conquered NGC 604.
The Suzie girl had
no problem with M33. The picture she returned impressed me quite a bit. It’s
not quite the equal of the M33 I got with one of my APO refractors and my old EQ-6
mount one dark night at the Deer Lick Astronomy Village some years ago, but it’s nice and the color balance is better. And, hell, it was
taken on an average night from my bright backyard!
And the Messier
road goes ever on. The
autumn objects hidden among the subdued stars of the “water” constellations
await us. But that’s for another time. The night has grown old, Hercules has
plunged into the west, and me and my faithful telescope have covered enough light
years for one fall evening.
The Bottom Line: 11 down 99 to go…
Nota Bene: If you’d like to read Scotty’s “Deep-Sky
Wonders” columns, you have a couple of options. If you have access to the
original magazines, you’ll find him in just about every issue from 1946 to
1994. Don’t have all those old magazines? If you’re lucky, you glommed onto the
Sky & Telescope DVDs that were
sold some years ago. These contain the entire run of “Deep-Sky Wonders.” Got
neither? You can get an excellent sampling in the compilation volume edited by
James O’Meara, Deep-Sky Wonders.
The Passing of a Giant…
I received the
shocking news that optical genius Al Nagler, founder of TeleVue, passed
away last Sunday, the 27th of October. Yes, I was shocked. I
shouldn’t have been—after all, Al was mortal like all of us and was getting up
there in years. But it’s just hard to imagine an astronomy without Nagler. What else
is there to say than that Al Nagler was one of the people who didn’t just leave
their mark on astronomy but changed it forever. There are two eras in
eyepieces, “Before AL” and “After Al.” Nuff said.
Wednesday, September 24, 2025
Issue #620: Once More Unto the Breach… The Messier Project Night 1
What’s ol' Unk goin’ on about now? I was thinking the other day—yes, I do that occasionally—about a nice observing project to do (mostly) from my backyard, and figgered it might be a good idea if it were something y’all have at least asked for for a change.
What is that something? Why, the good old Messiers, of
course. While they are not always the best of the best in the way of
deep sky objects, they are almost always among the best. I never tire of them—never. But
didn’t I go through the list just a little while ago? That’s what I thought, muchachos,
but when I checked, I found it has been eight years—actually, a little more—since
I last strolled through the M list here. I also recalled that when I
finished I was a little sad to be done. Apparently y’all were too, since I’ve
had periodic requests for more Ms over the intervening years.
So, what’s the plan, Stan? My primary goals are, first,
to image every one o’ them Messiers with a smartscope. I want to find out how
today’s inexpensive robotic scopes do on the whole-big-thing, the 110 objects
we (well, most of us) consider part of the M list today. This time we’ll do
them by constellation or groups of constellations, not by their numbers. When
will the installments appear? Whenever Unk feels like it.
Secondly, I want see what I think of them visually
after 60 years’ of observing these beauties. Most of all,
I want to try, best I can, to approach each one as if I were observing it
for the first time. No preconceived ideas nor notions. No, “I know there’s
a dust lane there, so maybe I did see it this evening.” Whether I’m in
the backyard or at a dark site, how does M-umptysquat
look to me right now. How good is it, really? Sometimes
I’ll draw an object, most of the time I won’t.
What’s on tap as a visual scope? I’d like to say, “Zelda-Zelda-Zelda.”
That’s my 10-inch GSO Dobsonian, who is in my opinion of the optimum aperture required for a good look at Messiers from a suburban backyard. I hope to use her frequently but know
sometimes the flesh will be weak and smaller scopes will be used for The
Messier Project (Gotta have a name, don’t it?). And, of course, for some
objects smaller scopes will be appropriate any time.
What else? You don’t need much in the way of observing planning
software for “just” the Messiers, but one still helps you decide which
constellations/objects are available on any given night. I could use Deep
Sky Planner or SkyTools 3, and I probably will use those two super-programs at home. But I hope to do a
little star-partying again soon and will want to have a laptop with me.
I prob’ly ain’t gonna lug my humongous and current-hungry
Alienware laptop onto an observing field…so…what? As y’all know, I am a Mac user much of the
time now. So, I thought it would be a Good Thing to install a deep sky planning
program on my MacBook Air. The one I chose is an old favorite, AstroPlanner.
Paul Rodman’s (very) long-running observing planner is
as capable as the others, and I’ve always liked it.
So why haven’t I talked about it in a long time? I’d got used to using SkyTools
and Deep Sky Planner and stuck with those programs. Neither of them runs
on Apple computers, though. Since my power-sipping MacBook is the laptop I’ll
take to star parties, I thought AstroPlanner might be just the thing. Assuming it was still around,
which I hoped it was.
Well, of course it is, as I soon found out. The only
change I could see is that Paul now classifies his astro-ware as shareware,
which I believe is a change from the
olden days. At any rate, I was gratified to see it works on Apple Silicon Macs.
I downloaded a copy and soon had it cranking on my M2 Macintosh. Even better,
after a small amount of fiddling around I discovered that, yep, I still
knew how to work AstroPlanner! That alone should tell you what a winner it
is, since it’s been at least 10 years, and probably more, since I last sat in
front of the program.
Planetarium software? Likely, that will be SkySafari
running on my iPhone and on the Macintosh. I still use Stellarium; it’s still
a fine program and free to use. Ditto Cartes du Ciel. But… I’ve
always got SkySafafi on the phone in my pocket, it’s beautiful, and
performs very well indeed on the Mac, and…there just ain’t much reason not
to use it.
Since one of my goals will be to make portraits of the Messier
objects with the smartscopes, I thought I should really take advantage of the
new SeeStar equatorial mode. I’d tried it out, and it worked fine, but I knew I
could make it work better. Mostly by doing better polar alignments.
What I have been doing is just tipping over the pan-head of my Manfrotto
tripod. That works, but it is difficult to fine-tune tilt for latitude
adjustment. I decided to get a genu-wine equatorial wedge.
When the wedge arrived, I was rather impressed. It looks
nice dressed in SkyWatcher’s current white/green-anodized color scheme. I also
noted that a mystery was solved. It does include a 3/8-inch to Vixen
dovetail attachment to mount the SeeStar (or other scope) to the wedge. The
pictures on Amazon do not show one.
A down-check? The bolt that secures the dovetail to
the wedge is a knob-headed one, and the base of the SeeStar will interfere and prevent
you from using it. I could see that from the pictures, so before the wedge
arrived, I’d hied myself to the Home Depot and got a hex-head M8 bolt to
replace it (a bag of two was just a buck or three).
Anyhoo, got out my SkyWatcher Star Adventurer tripod and attached
the wedge to the 3/8th bolt on the tripod, bolted the dovetail to my
Suzie-girl, mounted her on the wedge, and was ready to rock after adjusting the
tilt of the wedge to roughly 31°
using my phone’s gyrocompass utility. Oh, one further down-check,
though I guess it don’t amount to much: The wedge’s latitude scale is screwy.
Or maybe it ain’t a latitude scale at all...
Before moving the wedge to tilt the scope at the angle of
Polaris, I looked at the scale and realized it would read “0°” when pointing straight
up, and “90°”
when pointed to the horizon. That’s the opposite of how it would be if
it were meant to indicate latitude.
Pasted on upside down? Somebody at the Synta factory got
confused? Not meant to indicate latitude at all (why not on a wedge fer
Chrissakes?)? No big deal, though. If you want to use it to help with rough
setup, just remember to subtract your latitude from 90 and set it to
that. I adjusted the wedge to 59°,
which would be 90 minus my latitude, 31.
When it was time for polar alignment, the SkyWatcher widget
showed its value. I’d set the wedge midway between the two push-pull
azimuth adjustment bolts (like on an AVX or EQ-6 mount, just smaller) and
nudged the tripod to point north using my phone’s compass. After it got dark, it
was easy to move the wedge to just the right azimuth for the NCP. Likewise, the
smooth latitude adjustment knob made it laughably easy to move in altitude. I
achieved the best polar alignment I have ever had with the S50. We was ready
to bring home some Ms!
Where will we go for this first night of The Messier
Project? Let’s begin with The Great Bird of the Galaxy, Cygnus the Swan.
He’s on the meridian in early evening and will soon be sinking into the west as
another year dies. Tucked under Big Bird’s wings are the small star figures Vulpecula,
The Little Fox, and Sagitta, The Arrow. Also close at hand is the small
but distinctive group Lyra, The Lyre. The four bring with them six
Messiers, three Real Good Ones, M27, M71, and M57, two in the “OK” camp,
M29 and M39, and one in the “also ran” category, M56.
So, it was on a somewhat hazy but clear evening I set out
once again on the Messier Road….
NB: My
observations were done over the course of several evenings, mostly to dodge clouds. I set aside one visual-only night, but it was plagued by haze—same
as the other evenings, but worse—and rising humidity.
Messier 27 (Vulpecula)
Why did I hit M27 first? Simple: it was placed so as to
give me an hour or so of imaging time before it was on the Local Meridian, which
is not a good place to try imaging an object whether your telescope is mounted
in altazimuth or equatorial fashion.
There wasn’t any drama involved in getting Suzie on target. As
above, the new wedge made it easy to dial-in alignment. One thing I did
do? Two polar alignment iterations. When you click “get alignment error,” the
SeeStar does that based on the
plate-solved image. But as you adjust in altitude and azimuth, the figures
you see are determined by the scope’s level sensors. So, best to mash
“get error” a second time when you’ve got it close, let the SeeStar take
another image, and dial it in one more time.
And then, I plunked myself down on the couch with the
felines and did a little reading and reminiscing about this legendary planetary
nebula. The basics? It was
discovered by Charles Messier on the 12th of July 1764. Today, you’d think it
would be difficult to mistake for a comet, but remember, Messier was using a very
small scope. Also, while he may have begun with “objects that can be mistaken
for comets,” almost from the beginning he was putting anything he saw that was weird/interesting
in his list, comet-like or not.
Today, the Dumbbell is thought to lie about 1360 light years
from this little rock. It’s a planetary nebula, the corpse of a dead
solar-mass-range star that has blown off its outer layers. What remains is a beautiful corpse, the green-glowing Dumbbell
(it’s always looked more like an apple core to me). There’s also M27’s magnitude
13.8 central star, the cooling core of its progenitor, which is visible in
medium-sized scopes. The nebula itself is magnitude 7.4 and 8.0’ across,
and obviously not a challenge for small scopes or even binoculars.
What did the man I still consider my Messier guru, John
Mallas, think of the ol’ Dumbbell? Obviously, in 60 years more has been
learned about this planetary, but the stats John gives are not far off the mark,
with the major change being we now know it’s a little farther away than the
1250 light years it was estimated to be in his time. His visual impression of
it (in the book he did with Evered Kreimer, The
Messier Album) is for the ages:
A superb planetary for low to medium magnifications with
small apertures; even the 10-power finder (of Mallas’ 4-inch Unitron) reveals
details. Glowing quite greenish, M27 is one of the few planetaries to show
vivid color in a small telescope. At low power when the air is not too steady,
the Dumbbell may seem three dimensional.
The only thing that puzzles me, then and now about M27’s
entry in the book is John Mallas’ drawing of it. It is nothing more than a
rectangular smudge that looks nothing like the Dumbbell I’ve seen in any
scope or binoculars.
That was then, how
about now? What was M27 like in Zelda 60 years down the amateur astronomy
road? On this less than stellar (ahem) visual night, the Apple Core was the best
of the night’s catch. On this evening, I preferred its look at 78x in my old Happy Hand Grenade 16mm 100° eyepiece to that in shorter focal length oculars. Surprisingly, it was a little
better, I thought, without either a UHC or OIII filter. That was probably due to conditions—usually the UHC is my goto for the Dumbbell.
So, Zelda did well, with her 10-inches bringing out mucho
nebulosity. Only "problem"? She has enough light-gathering power to make the
Dumbbell shape fade away. I was mostly seeing a football-like oval of nebulosity. Under
these conditions, I could not make out the brighter bar of nebulosity that
extends diagonally across the object. Nor could I see the slightest hint of green. The nebula was uniformly gray.
Suze acquitted herself nicely. I was a little worried about
the high altitude of her target, but she only dropped one frame over the course
of 45 minutes. I could no doubt further enhance the red “edging” of the apple
core with post-processing with Siril,
etc., but you know what? I kinda like what came out of Suzie (albeit with AI
denoise applied) just as it is.
M39
As a kid, I thought this open cluster was the height of “ho-hum.” Has my opinion changed over the years? Let’s see... Anyhow, it was discovered a long time before Charles Messier began his sky adventures, having been recorded by Aristotle in 325 BC. Chuck paid it a visit on 24 October 1764 and added it to his list. What it is is a bright, large, loose open cluster shining with a combined magnitude of 4.6 and covering a whopping 31.0’ of sky. Pretty obviously, there’s no way Messier mistook it for a comet.
If there’s something
to be said against this lovely group, the Arrowhead Cluster (Wikipedia refers
to it as the Pyramid Cluster, but I’ve never heard anybody actually call it
that), it is that it’s just so large, 31.0’ across. Back in the
supposedly glorious Day, most of us were using telescopes, large or small, with
relatively long focal lengths, and eyepieces with narrow—often very narrow—fields.
Put a 31’ cluster in a 30’ field, and you’ll see what John Mallas saw. After praising the cluster’s appearance in
binoculars, he goes on to say, “M39 is less impressive in the limited field of
the 4-inch.” And so it was in my Palomar Junior.
On this night in
Zelda, M39 was and was not a disappointment. 1250mm is a bit much for looking at this big galactic cluster, of course. But it
wasn’t bad even so. What was in my ocular was three bright stars arranged in a near-equilateral
triangle shape filled with 30-40 dimmer suns. However, the cluster just barely
fit in the 16mm’s big field. I
said, “Waaaalll we’ll fix that!” and snatched my good, old 35mm Panoptic out of the eyepiece case. No
dice, y’all, no dice. The Pan’s lower magnification made the field way too
bright on what was turning into a rather icky night.
Suzie’s image? OK. The Arrowhead could have stood considerably more
field than what Suze delivers, but the S50 is what I had in the backyard, the
night was growing old, and lazy Unk, wisely perhaps, stuck with what was set up
and working.
M29
As a young observer, I was every bit as dismissive of M29 as I was of M39. Why? I’m not completely sure. The cluster’s stats certainly don’t tell the tale. M29, which first appeared in the field of Messier’s small scope on a summer Paris evening in 1764, shines at magnitude 6.6, and is a mere 10.0’ across. You’d think that would be just about perfect for a 4-inch f/11 Newtonian. No sir buddy, I didn’t like it. As for Mallas, he found it to be attractive in his finder scope but not so much in the main instrument.
In Zelda M29 was, I
fear, not lookin’ so hot, either. The
cluster itself was nice, showing off its little dipper shape very well. There are
eight prominent members with a few dimmer stars scattered among them. However,
even in the 13mm Ethos, which I’d switched the ‘Grenade out for in hopes of
darkening the field a bit, the scads of dim stars that make the cluster’s field
so lovely were mostly missing. On the other hand, not having the distraction of
all them stars, sure made Messier 29 pop out.
As for the Seestar?
I have nothing to complain about with the image that appeared on my iPhone. I
could have given it more than 15 minutes and brought out more field stars, I
reckon, but I’m not sure that would have been good thing. As is, the little
dipper-shaped group stands out better than it usually does in astrophotos.
M57
If M27 is a famous
planetary nebula, M57, The Ring Nebula, is the famous planetary nebula.
I know that as a beginning observer of the night sky, pictures of the Ring were
one of the things that fired my imagination along with images of beautiful
spiral galaxies. Best of all, for once, an object I admired in books wasn’t
hard with my small scope.
M57 was discovered not by Messier, but by another French astronomer, Antoine Darquier, in 1779. It is 1.3’ across, and thanks to that relatively small size remains bright at magnitude of 9.7. I liked it in my Pal Junior. I liked it a lot, even though it was smaller than I thought it would be in my ½ inch focal length Ramsden eyepiece. Still, I judged this one “cool.” Mallas? He oddly calls it a “challenge” for the visual observer. Well, maybe it is if you’re after details including the notoriously difficult central star, but otherwise this is a showpiece for smaller instruments.
Like M27, the Ring
was surprisingly good visually under the poor conditions. In fact, its small—but not too small in the 13mm
Ethos—disk looked amazing in soup that was getting thicker and thicker.
In a 10-inch class instrument, it’s easy to see the ring is elongated, that the
center is not dark, and that there are brightness variations across the ring. Howzabout
the central star? I have seen it in a 10-inch on a night perfect for that pursuit, but there wasn’t a prayer on this sticky
Tuesday’s eve’.
I let Suzie have a brief go at the Ring, but it is just too
small an object for her short focal length. The planetary is much better in
another Chaos Manor South roboscope, Evie, the Unistellar Equinox, a
4-inch reflector. She did a nice job, but underexposure by me (I’m still
learning the scope) meant the central star didn’t stand out like I wanted it
too. Here, in a shot from last season, it’s maybe overexposed, but I dang
sure did bring out the central star.
Messier 56 (Lyra)
The next stop on my sightseeing tour was the subdued globular
cluster M56 over in Lyra. It was already across the meridian and would be a
good Suzie target. This is another object actually discovered by good, old
Chuck. On 19 January 1779, he found a smudge in the field of his scope. You can
bet his small refractor didn’t come close to resolving it, and he put it down
as a possible comet. However, coming
back some nights later, it hadn’t moved and M56 went into his Big List. This
was just the sort of thing he’d had in mind when he started the catalog.
I’d be a-lyin’ if I
were to tell y’all I was excited by the prospect of visiting Lyra’s
oft-overlooked globular cluster. Why? It’s surprisingly difficult from the
suburbs. When I was a kid running down the Messiers for the first time, I figgered logging M56 would
be like shootin’ those proverbial fish in a barrel. It was a glob, and it was magnitude 8 and 8.0’ across. How hard
could it be? Oh, brother was li’l Rod in
for a surprise! It wasn’t there.
I looked and looked with my Pal. Night after night—nada. Finally, I spotted the
dimmest of glows in the field on a superior evening. Why so dim?
The problem is M56 is quite loose. It is a X (10) on the famous Shapley-Sawyer scale. For comparison, the devilish little NGC 5053 is a XII. That means M56 is almost as bad. Our old pal M2, in contrast, is a II. M13 is a V. So, what you have is a cloud—almost like an open cluster—of dim and distant globular stars. That makes M56 tough. I’ve found that for a nice visual look, a 10 – 12-inch under country skies is desirable.
Referring to The Messier Album, I’m surprised about
what John says: “An impressive object. In a 4-inch refractor, M56 is a bright,
nearly circular glow in which a few individual stars are seen.” I’m not sure
exactly where he did the observing for the book, but for M56 to show stars in a
freaking 4-inch, it must have been awful dark. What was it like in a 10-inch
under hazy suburban skies?
On some nights, M56 has surprised me, but I wasn’t sure this
would be one of those nights. As I keep sayin’, HAZY, which is typical for our
early autumns. Some days the humidity is a little lower now, sometimes it is a
little higher. But “lower” will still be 50 something percent, and tonight was tending toward "higher" with a vengeance. Anyhow, tracked
the little glob down with Astro-Hopper, inserted my Happy
Hand Grenade 100-degree 16mm eyepiece and put my eye to the ocular. What
was in that huge spaceship porthole FOV?
Geez Louise, the answer is “not much.” I re-aligned
Astro-Hopper
on a nearby star, Albireo, because I wasn’t sure we were on the proper
field. After considerable eye-straining and ocular switching, I finally noticed
a dull glow in the field, and that was it. Higher magnification didn’t help, nor
did lower. And no wonder, I’d had to use Zelda’s 50mm finder to locate Albireo
so I could align on it. The normally prominent star was almost invisible with my eyes and Rigel Quick
Finder. Frankly, it appeared the heavens were now well on their way to “considerably
worse” in advance of a storm font predicted to arrive the following day.
Image wise, Suzie had no trouble with this sprite despite
being limited to a half-hour. Her shot is not unlike the one Kreimer captured
with his immense Cave Newtonian and cold camera for the Album all those decades
ago. That is, a bright(ish) core, a fairly
good spray of stars around the core, and, overall, an OK-looking globular star
cluster.
Messier 71
After the awe-inspiring (ahem) M56, I was ready for a treat. Over we went to little Sagitta, the arrow clasped in one of the Great Bird of the Galaxy’s talons. Given M71’s Shapley-Sawyer Class, again X, this should be another punishing one, but it is not. In fact, it is easy for almost any telescope on any decent evening. Mallas is right on the money when he says, “A beautiful sight even in Mallas’ 10 x 40 finder.”
M71 is another Messier object not actually discovered by Messier but only cataloged by him (he did observe it). The discovery bragging rights go to Swiss astronomer Philippe de Cheseaux. Anyhow, it is a magnitude 8.4, 7.2’ across clump of Suns. Yep, clump. The stars appear brighter than those of M56 (it is about 13,000 light years out compared to 33,000 for M56), but it looks decidedly less globular-like. In fact, what it looks like is M11, the Wild Duck (galactic) cluster.This galactic/open appearance caused a lot of debate for
years. Was it a globular cluster or was it actually an open cluster?
Surprisingly, the talk went on for a long while, until the 1940s, when somebody
finally decided it might be a good idea
to look at the cluster’s color-magnitude diagram. When you do, it’s, “Say, this thing is a globular cluster!” I’m embarrassed to say that some
amateur astronomy books continued to question its status for decades
thereafter.
With M71, I was ready for that much-desired Something Nice
in the 10-inch’s eyepiece. Was I disappointed? Yes I was. The sky was
now even worse than it had been during me and Zelda’s visit to M56. Oh, I could
see a small clump of stars that was (I assumed) Messier 71, but the normally
amazing field of the cluster was on the barren side this evening.
Little Suze did another right good job with M71 despite the
fact lazy old Unk only gave her 15 minutes on the cluster. Her portrait does a
fine job of showing off the glob’s “arrowhead”/M11 look. Anyhoo, the first bunch
of Ms in the bag, I was ready to call it a night despite the fact Suzie-girl’s
battery still had plenty of juice left. Yes, I know you can use a cell phone
charging battery to power the little scope for a long while, but she has always
outlasted me. Out to the scope, removed her dewshield, shut her down, waltzed her
inside, and called it a night, and what a
night it was—the Messiers are just fun.
I had finished the evening’s list, and by this time, near midnight, I was sweating and everything—eyeglasses, finder, oculars, even Zelda’s secondary—was fogging up. Her tube was wet with dew, and I had that yucky damp feeling that always impels me to pull that metaphorical BIG SWITCH. I covered Z, lugged the eyepiece case (which seems much heavier than it used despite me not having added a new eyepiece in about eight years) and headed to the den for Yell and YouTube with the felines before it was sign-off time.
The Bottom Line: 6 down 104 to go…
Where is M13?
I mentioned this program years ago. It was a good one;
having been useful to me as an astronomy educator. What’s it do? Among other
things, it can show you where deep sky objects are in relation to the Sun.
Imagine my surprise to find it is still around and better than ever, now going
by the moniker Our Galaxy. It has many more features
than before, and I find it very nice to be able to get some perspective on
where those Messiers are in the galaxy (or outside it).
Thursday, August 21, 2025
Issue #619: Space Summer Redux + Uncle Rod’s Yearly M13 Part II
Muchachos, down here on the borders of the Great Possum Swamp it sure has been that proverbial long, hot summer. I’ve been able to do some astronomy here and there, but not much, campers, not much. I hope conditions will begin to change as August takes its place in the rearview mirror, but I am not counting on that. In September and October, we here in the ‘Swamp really begin watching the stormy Gulf of Mexico…
SOOO…. No big observing plans or projects till the
thunderboomers at least reduce their intensity and frequency. What, then? I got
out last month and captured my yearly M13 with the SeeStar S50, Suzie. One
reason for using the Smartscope was I wanted to try out her new equatorial
mode. Worked fine. I had no problem doing a polar alignment, and The Suze
tracked amazingly well, dropping nary a frame over the course of a half-hour.
Yep, worked fine, and I thought I was done experimenting with Suzie for now.
Not so. First off, I hadn’t tried longer exposures,
longer subframe exposures, that is. EQ mode makes exposing for longer than 10
seconds more practical, and the SeeStars can now go up to a minute. How would
that work? I also wanted to test the scope’s new 4K feature. I thought
ZWO would rest on their laurels for a while after nailing down EQ mode, but
they didn’t. Just weeks ago, they added the option to have the app upscale
your pix to 4K resolution. What was that all about?
In typical Unk fashion, howsomeever, that is putting the
dadgum cart ahead of the nag. Traditionally, I’ve offered an account of my
birthday doings here, though your routine-loving correspondent’s b-day has been
much the same year after year. In homage to my days as a space-crazy kid when I’d
spend my summers with my head out in the stars, one feature of Unk’s big day is
space modeling. I didn’t do much this year, but as you can see, I did
continue (slowly) with the launch umbilical tower (LUT) for my completed
Airfix Saturn V model. ‘Twas fun, and maybe I’ll pay more attention to my
little sub-hobby e’en as summer wanes away.
Natcherly, on Unk’s birthday evening (last month) he and Miss Dorothy
made our way to my favorite Mexican (well, Tex-Mex) restaurant, El Giro’s.
There, Unk ordered his usual, the Number 13: Chili rellenos, tamale,
burrito. Yes, of course there were many, many cold 807s in the mix
in celebration of your old Uncle’s 72nd trip around Sol.
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| Oh, how Unk loves the number 13! |
Anyhoo, there’s no denying it. My 60s were fun and rather
wild in subdued fashion. Hell, back then I thought nothing of yukking it up in
El Giro’s or Heroes till, damn, 10 o’clock at night with me mates! But those days are gone. As they say, “Fun is Fun but Done is Done.” I am feeling fine most
of the time, though.
Yep, I am I feeling good, friends, and we are even making
plans to attend our area’s long-running and—yes—legendary star party, the Deep
South Star Gaze. I am pleased to say it will be back at the Feliciana
Retreat Center this November, which furnishes nice, small motel-type rooms with
air conditioning and showers, just right for an (ulp!) senior like Uncle
Rod. My attendance had dwindled away to practically nothing during the years
the star party was at a different and more spartan facility, but I hope to be
back now and keep on being back for as long as I can be.
“Blah-blah-blah. What else happened on your birthday, Unk?”
Skeeter, that was about it. I missed out on my other traditional birthday
activity this year, activating a park for Parks on the Air. I was all set to head for Gulf Shores State Park. Batteries
were charged and my little G90 transceiver was all checked out. But it was just
too blamed hot. Even with them Gulf breezes, even under shade trees. Ah well,
just like serious observing, serious POTAing will wait for cooler WX.
I set Suze up in the backyard on the Manfrotto tripod and
waited for darkness late on a sultry Tuesday afternoon. The weather station
display in the radio shack said, “Feels Like 102.7,” and the sky was festooned
with clouds. I was doubtful, but the weather services, including the usually
dependable Astrospheric, agreed it was gonna
clear by dark. Even if it did, Astrospheric also predicted sky transparency
would be just this side of skim milk.
That done, I retired to the couch in the cool den with the
felines and sent Suzie to the Great Globular, instructing her to take 20 second
exposures of M13 till I told her to stop. While she was doing her thing, the
cats and I amused ourselves by watching YouTube videos. Tommy, Chaos Manor
South’s resident black cat, favors programs about the war in the Pacific, especially
Midway, and—even moreso— “The Great Marianas Turkey Shoot.” That is just
what we watched until Tommy fell asleep and began snoring heavily as 9pm came in.
I did have to keep an eye on Suzie early on. I’d set her up
for, yeah, 20-second subframes, but we weren’t having much success. Less than 50%
of ‘em were keepers. After 20 minutes or so, we had maybe 7 minutes worth. The
reason was, I thought, twofold: poor conditions and a less than good polar
alignment. When I’d done the alignment, I’d been sweating in the high humidity,
and was already weary (Unk ain’t quite recovered from the Huntsville Hamfest).
I just got the numbers in the green and called it “good enough.”
I know I need to do better and have a SkyWatcher EQ wedge on
the way. The Manfrotto is a very good tripod, and very steady indeed, but there
is no way to adjust the scope’s tilt with any precision. I was a little disappointed,
but there weren’t nothing for it… I backed off to 10-second subframes, let Suze
run for just under an hour, and called it a night. A look at the clock showed
we were coming up on ten freaking thirty, quite the late one for Unk in these
latter days.
The next morning, I imported my M13s into the PC out in the
Batcave (my radio shack/workshop of the telescopes) and had a look at them on a
large monitor. How were they? OK. Not bad, anyway. Well, nothing
to write home about, friends. The high humidity and scattered light pollution
made for blotchy, off-color backgrounds. I had to do something I rarely worry
about with SeeStar images: I ran the pix through Graxpert to make them
look at least presentable.
Hows about the 4K business? Wasn’t much to say about it. On the live screen before beginning my
exposures, I’d touched the three-dot menu and turned on 4K. Or thought I
had. By the light of day, it appeared my finished images were the same resolution
as always. I wasn’t sure what I had done wrong, and the instructions from ZWO are
on the vague side, “Turn on 4K before framing.” I assumed (you know what
they say about that word) they meant “before beginning a capture sequence.” I thought
that was what I’d done but wasn’t sure. I had noted that the switch
turned red when I turned it on.
Oh, well. It looked like the next evening’s skies would
again be passable if not great. In fact, it ‘peared Wednesday might be a smidge
clearer in advance of—yep—another storm front. So, Unk resolved to give the 4K
stuff another try. I set The Suze up in the back forty again, and when it was
dark enough (not till around 8:45, damn this DST) again polar aligned her.
| Night 2, 10-second subframes... |
I was more concerned about the 4K feature than getting
20-second sub-frames, so I set the scope for 10-second subs, letting them run
for half an hour. That done, I tried 20-second ones again. This time Suze only
rejected a single frame over the course of half an hour. Whether that was due
to my better polar alignment, better conditions, or a combination of the two, I
do not know.
Next mornin’, I again dumped the pictures to the PC and
wound up scratching my head. Yes, they were twice the normal 1080x1920
resolution, just as they should have been after upscaling. But when I brought
up the previous night’s photos, so were they, 2160x3840. What the—?
I can only presume I got on the wrong directory when I was checking the shots the
previous morning. I didn’t pay much attention to the dates on the images and,
well, one M13 with the same scope is pretty much like any other. At any rate, the
4K feature does work and does seem to make the images look smoother and just better.
It ain’t like night and day, but I do see a difference. Yes, I know, “TANSTAAFL”
applies. Upscaling introduces noise, but I couldn’t see that it was any worse
in my upscaled frames.
And that was that. 4K works, and longer subframe
exposures are practical now when called for. Were they in my case? Not really. In
suburban light pollution, 10-second subs will often be more practical if you
ain’t up to doing a lot of processing, which your ignernt old Uncle don’t know
how to do anyway. In the wintertime or from a darker site, I suspect it will be
a far different story.
On the Chaos Manor South horizon? The SkyWatcher EQ wedge will be here on Saturday, and I will report on my results with it in the next article rat-cheer. What will that be about other than the wedge? I’d like to say it will concern my big (sort of), new (sort of) observing project. As above, though, I ain’t convinced September will bring better skies to Possum Swamp. We shall see, muchachos, we shall see…
Monday, July 28, 2025
Issue 618: My Yearly M13 for 2025
“Well, I made it and made it before July ran out. Just barely, but I did!”
“Hell, sounds like Unk’s been hittin’ the dang Yell
again.”
Not at all, Skeeter. Well, maybe I have had a drop or two of the Rebel Yell, but I ain’t any more addled this morning than any other morning. What did I make? My yearly portrait of the Great Globular in Hercules. It’s one of my little yearly rituals, like my Christmas Eve look at M42.
I really wanted to get Herc done this month—before
you know it, the constellation will be plunging into the west. Unfortunately,
this July's weather has not been conducive to any sort of astronomy. Rain.
Heat. Bugs and lots of ‘em. In other words, a typical summer in Possum Swamp,
muchachos.
What I did was keep an eye on the Weather Channel and Astrospheric. That paid off last Sunday evening.
The day had been mostly cloudy. Hell, at sundown, it looked like we were in for
another round of thunderstorms. The forecasters stuck to their guns, though: “Mostly
clear.” By dark, the clouds had rolled off, and I was left with a clear but hazy July sky. Hokay,
time to get a telescope into the backyard.
Which telescope? Do you even have to ask? There was simply
no way I’d deal with a conventional scope under these conditions, which
included a temperature that would still be near 90 when astronomical twilight
came in. If you guessed, “Miss Suzie the SeeStar S50 smartscope,” you’re right on the
money. This was the perfect time to let the scope sit out in the steamy
backyard and do her thing while I sat on the couch with the cats watching TV and drinking cold
807s.
That and only that would, however, be a repeat of exactly how
I captured Herc last year, and normally wouldn’t be much of a subject for an
entire blog entry. There would be something different this time, however.
A very big something…
The SeeStar is a great little scope hampered by one big
limitation: alt-azimuth tracking. That creates problems like field rotation,
and depending on the object’s elevation can result in The Suze rejecting a
large number of sub-exposures. As y’all know, I’m not after perfection.
However, alt-azimuth tracking results in pictures that can be just a little
ugly sometimes, uglier than I want even my simple cosmic snapshots to be.
Not long after the SeeStar was released, its fans began
clamoring for an equatorial mode. Some creative souls even managed to run the scope in
equatorial fashion using workarounds to fool the software into tracking in EQ
(and even being able to do gotos in limited areas of the sky). ZWO, the SeeStar’s
maker, watched and listened, and a few months back released an update for the SeeStar
app and firmware that, yes, included EQ mode.
I was quick to download the new stuff, but a couple of
things got in the way of me trying it. One being wrapping up the semester at
the university, and the other being my involvement in putting on our big yearly
amateur radio event, The Mobile Hamfest. I really wanted to give EQ mode
a try, though, and M13 night seemed to me to be a good time to do it.
The hardest part? For your impatient old Uncle, it is indeed the waiting. It was nearly 9pm before I could begin the process of turning Suze into an equatorially mounted scope. When that time finally came, I began with step one, which is tilting the scope over so she points at the pole, roughly. Some SeeStar owners have invested in little equatorial wedges. ZWO sells one and so does SkyWatcher, and they are nice enough. As you know, though, your Old Uncle is loath to spend a dime if’n he doesn’t have to. I have a fairly heavy duty Manfrotto tripod. It’s never failed me for any photographic task in the 20+ years I’ve had it. Why couldn’t I just put Suze on the normal head and tilt that so as to point Missy at Polaris?
It turned out I could. As you can see in the picture, down
here at 30 degrees north latitude, the little scope is really tilted over and
hanging out in space. I was a little leery, but the Manfrotto seemed steady
indeed and Suze didn’t plunge to the ground or anything. The only catch to keep
in mind when you are setting up: be sure to mount the SeeStar so that the power
button is pointed up when the telescope is initially pointed in the direction of Polaris. Done,
I could proceed to the second (and last) step, polar alignment.
To get going, you connect to the Seestar with your phone, go
to “Advanced Feature,” mash “Mount Mode,” and then touch “switch” to go
from alt-AZ to EQ. Next, you’ll see a graphic of the scope and two numbers, the
current latitude and the SeeStar’s current angle. Don’t mash anything on the
screen, just adjust the tilt of the scope till the two numbers match. Which I
did. While it would no doubt have been easier with a wedge, it wasn’t difficult
with the Manfrotto’s pan-head, either.
When the tilt is good, touch, “Get Polar Align Deviation.” That will cause the scope to point near the celestial equator. When it stops, you will be presented with two more numbers, up/down and left/right, that indicate the direction and how far you need to move the telescope to polar align. When polar alignment is within one degree of the pole, you’ll bit a big, green checkmark on the screen. I strove to get both deviation numbers as small as I could, but I didn’t agonize over it. Even with “just” a camera tripod head, adjustment was not difficult. If all this sounds slightly confusing, the in-app help on polar alignment is well done and explains everything.
And then? That was it. I could get inside out of the heat,
change my clothes, settle down on the couch, and send Suzie to M13 using the built-in star atlas. I didn’t notice much difference from alt-az,
with the SeeStar doing her usual calibrations and autofocus routine. I did note
that when the first live image came in, M13 was dead center—but the S50 is
usually good with her gotos. Now to set subframe exposure time. With EQ mode
comes the ability to shoot sub-exposures up to 1-minute in length. First time
out, though, I decided to stick with 10-seconds and see what was what.
When the girl had accumulated that half hour of subs, I did
a quick AI denoise on the result, saved that and the un-denoised version and
moved on to the next target, Hercules’ M92, natch. That done with purty
much identical results, few/no dropped subs, we finished the evening with my
old “The Friendly Stars” pals, the globular clusters M10 and M12. By
then, it was past 11pm, way past your tired old Uncle’s usual bedtime.
What did I think of my results by the light of day? I was impressed. The stars are not quite perfect, but more than good enough for me, and I believe they would have been better if I hadn’t been shooting near the zenith the whole night. I was very impressed by how much smoother the pictures looked, and, of course there was no field rotation “noise,” which will begin to be apparent at about the half-hour exposure mark in alt-azimuth mode. The smoothness of the result made those two little sprites, the galaxies NGC 6207 and IC 4617 easy to see.
So, honestly, I don’t see many reasons not to shoot
in EQ mode with a SeeStar. Oh, I suppose if I’m in a real hurry, I’ll go
alt-az—it took me about ten minutes to get the little gal polar aligned. I do
expect that I’ll get quicker about that now that I am familiar with ZWO’s polar
alignment procedure. So, to sum up: EQ MODE IS A WIN FOR SEESTAR USERS. BIGTIME.
Wednesday, June 25, 2025
Issue #617: Scopes for Boomers
I’ll fess up right from the get- go, muchachos... No, I didn’t get a telescope into the backyard this month. I am old and lazy and, frankly, there weren’t many even partially clear nights in June. This week? This week brings ARRL Field Day and y’all know Unk is gonna be up to his ears in that. I have been ruminating about amateur astronomy, though. A day rarely goes by that I don’t. My ruminations at the moment? Which telescopes are best for boomers? What’s a practical scope as we watch our 60s recede in the rearview mirror?
If you’re a young sprout, you can punch out rat-cheer. But
you might want to hang around. You’ll be faced with this question almost before
you know it. And having a nice, portable scope is something not to be sneezed
at at any age.
Before we get to useful telescopes for the over-the-hill
gang, though, there’s a question you might venture: “Should I get rid of the
scope herd I have?” That mostly depends on the nature of the herd you have
and your circumstances. A 30-inch Dobbie you haven’t used since the 2019 Almost Heaven Star Party? Let it go. I know
you love it, and it holds some wonderful memories, but doesn’t it deserve to be
used?
You might say, “But Unk I’ve got a nice observatory for the
Dobbie (or the C14). It is no trouble for me to use it, and I still like to.
Sometimes.” Maybe so, coach, maybe so. But can I clue you in to something on
the not-so-pleasant side? You ain’t gonna be here forever and neither am I. Final exam time isn’t quite here, but spring
semester midterm has come and gone. You don’t want to leave a lot of STUFF for
your spouse, or partner, or children, or relatives to deal with when you exit
stage left. At the very least make firm arrangements as to what happens to
your gear when you’re gone, and make sure your family knows what the arrangements
are.
Hokay, that outa the way, let’s talk telescopes…
Newtonians
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| Us kids' dream scope in 1966... |
Moi? I was lucky enough to have one of the more
legendary telescopes of that distant age, a Criterion RV-6 Dynascope
6-inch, fall into my hands some years ago. It was a very fine telescope. The
DYN-O-MATIC drive still worked like a charm, and the optics were every bit as
good as I remembered them being.
I used the RV-6 some. Hell, I even did a little public
outreach with it. But, Jeez Louise! That pedestal! It was even worse
than the one on my Palomar Junior when it
came to getting it into the backyard. I mean clumsy and downright dangerous.
In my salad days as a star-struck kid, I damaged myself (and Mama’s prized
mahogany coffee table) more than once trying to get the Pal out of the house. Despite
its damned pedestal, the RV-6 was a lovely telescope and worked oh-so-well—it was a downright
marvel on the planets. How long had I drooled over the Criterion ads in Sky
& Scope? Give that up now? No way!
One summer I was visiting my friend and former Editor, Kelly
Beatty, and his wonderful wife in Boston when I spied a real monster
in Kelly’s garage. An Edmund Scientific 8-inch GEM reflector. How I
dreamed about owning one as a young teen. And Kelly scored one back in the day!
Man on man! Just looking at that huge mount and OTA, though... I didn’t ask if he
still used it; I hoped so, but it would be way beyond me now.
Which got me to thinking (always a dangerous thing)… I
decided the RV-6 needed to go to a new home. I knew I wasn’t going
to use her. Frequently—or maybe ever again. And a Good Telescope doesn’t
deserve that fate. But just to make sure, I set her up in the back forty.
Beyond the pain of moving that fricking-fracking pedestal outdoors (with the
GEM head on it, since it’s not easy to detach), I soon recalled what a pain a
GEM-Newt can be to use. The eyepiece always seems to wind up in a lousy
position for viewing. Sure, if your scope, like the Criterion, has tube rings,
you can rotate the OTA to put the eyepiece in a better position. But that
invariably causes you to lose that hard-won faint fuzzy.
So, my RV-6 went to a younger person who used her, and, I
hope, continues to use her. How about a more modern 6-inch or larger GEM Newt
on a more modern mount, though? The same things apply: GEM Newts are large and
not fun to move and not fun to use. Let them go…
CATs
SCTs and Maks are supposedly the perfect compact
telescopes. But are they really? For those of us who’ve crested the
hill, if not yet gone over it? Maybe. If…you set 8-inches as the
aperture limit and eschew fork mounts. Oh, a fork 8-inch isn’t terrible,
but I find a GEM the size of a Celestron Advanced VX or maybe a Losmandy GM8
makes for a telescope I’ll use more often.
I loved and used forks for years, and an 8-inch fork-scope is still useable
for me but, one that became less desirable years ago.
If you’ve got an C8 or Meade on a goto fork that can be used
in alt-AZ mode, you may be good for a while. But putting even an 8-inch on a
wedge? I can still do it but don’t want to. Why? Forks are OK, not
great, for imaging—or visual use. Once you move to the northern (or southern)
polar area or close to it, that old bugaboo of poor eyepiece placement rears
its ugly head again.
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| Oh, Bertha, how I still miss you! |
How about MCTs, Maks? Since most are in apertures of
7-inches or smaller, they are a definite possibility. The good ones can produce exquisite images of the deep sky as well as the Solar System. Do be aware,
though, that one on a goto fork mount, even a 5-inch like my own Charity
Hope Valentine, an ETX-125, is not much less of a hassle than a fork 8-inch
SCT.
In my opinion (and you know what they say about opinions), a
practical choice for a Boomer who wants a CAT they will use is a C5 or C6 if’n
you want an SCT. A Mak? A Celestron C90, old or new, ain’t bad and neither are
the 4 – 5-inch class MCTs from China.
How you gonna mount that CAT? Maybe on an undriven alt-AZ mount like
the SkyWatcher AZ-4, or a “custom” alt-AZ, or some kinda big video tripod? Not
for me. The high magnification nature of CATs larger than the C90 makes
them much better on a tracking mount. There are quite a few smaller goto alt-AZ
mounts available from Celestron, SkyWatcher, Ioptron, and others. A C90 or C5 on
a goto mount might be a sweet little setup and just the thing to get you into
the backyard if you are one of us Reluctant Astronomers.
Don’t like that consarned goto; you still want to STARPHOP?
There are some smaller manual GEMs still around, and since you ain’t likely
wanting to make 6-hour exposures with your C5, one could make for a nice,
portable package. The Celestron Omni CG-4 is a good candidate. I would get the optional RA drive, though, since tracking with a
manual slow-motion control is a recipe for THE SHAKES with lighter GEMs
Dobsonian Mounted Newtonians
Is a Dobsonian telescope the perfect Boomer rig? In
some ways, yes—as long as you keep that gull-dern aperture down. If you’re
content to stay at 8-inches or smaller and are in reasonable health and
physical shape, a Dobsonian just might be IT. Even if you think you need
to keep it down to 6-inches, 150mm will show you plenty of wonders. Remember,
when we were kids a 6-inch was a large and powerful telescope we
dreamed about.
Which brand to get? I don’t know that it matters much. I
haven’t heard of any real punk smaller Dobs in a long time. It is true one of
their prime purveyors, Orion Telescope & Binocular Center, is gone with the
wind and that is a shame, but remember, they didn’t make the scopes, they only
sold them. SkyWatcher has plenty of models and plenty of dealers offer them. So
does GSO (their scopes are sold by Apertura and several other concerns).
But you might say, “Unk, I gotta have more than
8-inches.” Be careful. While there are truss tube scopes available in less-than-monster sizes, in 10-12-15-inches, you may find having to
disassemble/assemble the telescope for set up deters you from using it frequently. You might also discover the mirror box alone is a lot heavier than you thought it would be.
How about SkyWatcher’s FlexTube Dobs with collapsible
OTAs? Being smaller when collapsed helps some, but they ain’t much lighter than a solid
tube scope. Yes, there are dodges like wheels and wheelbarrow handles that make
getting larger Dobsonians, Flextube or truss tube, where you want ‘em easier…
but… come on. You know if you can’t just plunk the scope down and
be observing in five minutes, you ain’t gonna use it.
Stick with 8-inches. Hey, don’t look at me with those
puppy dog “Why don’t you do as you say, Unk?” eyes. Yeah, I know I’ve
still got my 10-inch GSO solid-tube Dobbie, Zelda. But I probably shouldn’t. Last time I
got her out, I nearly had a little accident with her. She’s not quite
too much, yet, but she is becoming too much. I think I shall reserve her
for use at the yearly Deep South Star Gaze (which, I’m excited to relate, may
be held at its former home, the Feliciana Retreat Center, again) in the future.
Refractors
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| Unk's Pretty Little Patriot... |
That’s, of course, a refractor, campers. But which
refractor? How big? APO or achromat? Let us address size first. 6-inches?
Probably not. The 6ers most of us will want to or be able to afford are
import achromats, and while they may be well made, they will almost always be
on the heavy side. How do I know? My own 6-inch achromat, Big Ethel, stymied me
the last time I tried to get her on a mount. I just couldn’t get the telescope
in the saddle and wound up cutting myself on the dovetail bracket before, yep, giving
up. Now, I have some ideas as how to get the big girl onto her mount safely
and hope to do so soon, but I counsel against a refractor of this size unless
you are in much better shape than your broken down Uncle.
The next click down, a 5-inch, can be very manageable. Weight
and bulk don’t scale linearly with aperture, and many 5-inch refractors are much
easier to handle despite “only” being an inch smaller. My own 5-inch SkyWatcher
f/7 APO is light and easy to set up and does well on an AVX mount. But what do
you lose compared to, say, a C8 by going 5-inch APO refractor? Not
much. In fact, in side-by-side tests (at a dark site) my 5-inch compares very
favorably to a C8. If you want to observe the deep sky from suburbia with a
refractor, a 5-inch class telescope is my recommendation.
A 5-inch still seems too large and maybe too
expensive? Can you go even smaller? Sure. A 4-inch can show tons of deep sky
wonders from suburban skies. I did a large amount of the observing for The
Urban Astronomer’s Guide with a 4-inch Palomar Junior Newtonian from the
city. The 4-inch refractor doesn’t have to be an APO, either. I’ve seen a lot
of cool stuff from the backyard with Miss Dorothy’s fast Explore Scientific 4-inch
achromat.
Even smaller than that, say 80mm? A dedicated and practiced observer can see mucho cool stuff with a Short Tube 80. However, going smaller in aperture than 100mm is where outstanding optical quality becomes important. My 80mm William Optic fluorite APO can beat the Palomar Junior, being able, for example, to resolve, or at least begin to resolve, several Messier globular clusters my Pal has trouble with. There's no denying an APO can present a superior image in any aperture. However, you may find an achromat might suit you just fine. And on most objects, there isn't much difference. Many of the folks who looked through 6-inch Big Ethel at star parties commented on what a nice APO she was. Neither Ethel nor I corrected them.
Smaller still? Well, I sure did like the 66mm SD scopes popular
some years ago, but at less than 80mm, we begin to enter grab ‘n go territory.
Telescopes where ease of use and setup are their most important characteristics.
The tradeoff? 60 or 70mm is small for
the deep sky and small for the planets and even a little small for Luna. My own
grab ‘n go of choice? An f/5 Celestron 4-inch Newt, Tanya.
Yes, she takes a little while to acclimatize, but when I’m using her I’m not
after high magnification or high resolution and can be observing with her in
minutes.
The New Breed
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| Them dern smartscopes take better pictures than Unk can! |
Smartscope minuses? You just don’t lose the visual
experience; you lose the joy of being out under a starry sky. Also, they are
not well-suited for imaging the Moon and planets. That carping aside,
smartscopes have allowed me to continue taking pictures of the night sky
frequently, and not just shooting my yearly snapshots of M13. I am all for the
little widgets and believe they are the biggest thing to hit our avocation
since goto.
And I sure have gone on this morning, ain’t I? Before I say “vaya
con dios” (the legend on the Prude Ranch sign you see as you are leaving),
here’s my Boomer scope lineup:
Special occasions/events, Zelda, the 10-inch GSO Dob
or Mrs. Peel, a Celestron Edge 800 SCT (often on the AVX mount, but sometimes
on a Losmandy GM-811).
“Serious observing” (whatever that is), 5-inch
SkyWatcher APO, usually on the AVX mount.
Grab ‘n go, 80mm Skywatcher f/11 achromat on an
altazimuth AZ-4 mount. OR…maybe more frequently lately, Tanya, the
4-inch Newtonian on her little alt-AZ fork.
Even more informal grab ‘n go, the C90 on the
AZ-4 or my well-loved and oft-used Burgess 15x70 binoculars.
Picture takin? Smartscopes, Smartscopes, Smartscopes. Game over. End of story. Zip up your fly.
Up next? I haven’t forgotten my vow to set up the 6-inch
refractor and the GM-811, but I ain’t gonna do it on one of these “partly
cloudy, scattered thunderstorms, poor transparency” nights! I do hope to have a
look at the Moon (at least) through Ethel before July is in the rearview
mirror.


















