Sunday, June 08, 2014
The Universe from My Backyard
With apologies to Astronomy Magazine's Dave Eicher, muchachos, whose The Universe from Your Backyard is still
one of Unk’s favorite deep sky observing books over twenty-five years down the
line. The subject this Sunday, however,
is not the Universe from your
backyard, but from my backyard, the
backyard of the new Chaos Manor South out in the far western suburbs of Possum
Swamp.
How is the sky? I will cut to the chase: it is hardly
pristine. We are still inside the city limits after all. That said, even on the
uber hazy nights we had at the end of
May, I found I could pick up magnitude 4.29 Zeta Ursae Minorus without much trouble
when it was a smidge over 30-degrees over the horizon. I believe on a clear,
dry night I should be able to see stars well innto the 5th magnitude range without much
hassle. Which may not seem like much for those of y’all who live in dark
locations, but it danged sure is an improvement for little old me.
We had plenty of good times at the old Chaos Manor South,
and despite city lights that brought the limiting magnitude to four or worse on
a “good” night, I was able to do a fair amount of productive deep sky observing
for ten years. Especially with my big gun, Old Betsy, who I received shortly after I moved into the Old Manse. Over the
last decade, however, my backyard observing had been completely shut down.
That was due to the growth of the oaks that surrounded Chaos
Manor South. My few windows on the sky were slowly strangled to the point where
it was an exercise in frustration to try to see anything from the backyard,
even when most of the trees were leafless in winter. Don’t even think about cutting down an oak tree in
the Historic District, either. There was the front yard, but it was only good
for casual looks at the Moon and planets. That was not just because of more
trees; there were streetlights all up and down Selma Street. About the only
deep sky work I did from home over the last decade was our yearly Christmas Eve
look at the Orion Nebula.
So, on to the new place, which had a couple of things going
for it astronomy-wise that I didn’t fail to note the Sunday morning Dorothy and
I visited the open house. Most importantly, a fairly open backyard. There’s
only one tree that will cause much of a problem. Dorothy and I have already
decided the poor thing’s days are numbered.
Another (big) plus was the presence of an air-conditioned
shop. It began life as a standalone garage, but had been improved with some
sheet-rocking and the installation of a big workbench, a window
air-conditioner, fans, plenty of AC outlets, and a connection to the main
house’s alarm system. It was obvious that was where most of the telescopes would
live (Mrs. Emma Peel, our year old Edge 800, and her VX mount are in the house
with us). It was also obvious that would be where I would do most of my
observing.
Miss D. and I have already discussed the observatory
question and have decided a dome of some sort will eventually go in the backyard. What sort? We don’t know yet. Could be an Exploradome. Could be a Skyshed Pod. At the moment, the Pod is probably ahead in
the running, but we decided an observatory is for next year. For now, I would do my Solar System imaging and
Mallincamming by setting a scope up outside the shop and running it from
inside.
Before I could do anything
with the shop, however, it would need no little cleaning. It would have been
best to do that before I moved in the scopes, mounts, and copious accessory
cases, but they had to have a place to live during the move. Cleaning had to
wait till we’d been in residence at Pine
Needle Drive for a week.
And what a job it was. Don’t get me wrong, the folks who
owned the house before us were scrupulous about maintenance and cleanliness.
But the husband, a Coast Guard officer, had been interested in building
hotrods, and that’s what he did in the shop, to include, apparently, lots and
lots of grinding.
That the floors were covered with a fine film of what
appeared to be a mixture of iron oxide and carbon wasn’t apparent at first, but
it dern sure became so when I decided to sweep up. The result was me, the
scopes, the gear cases, and everything else was soon covered in fine orange
dust. The poor old RV-6 looked like she had been sitting on the surface of Mars for
a year or three. It took the remainder of day one to clean up the gear and
myself.
It was obvious what I’d have to do on day two: move all the stuff out of the shop, wash down
the floors (and walls), give the equipment a second dusting/cleaning outside,
and move it back inside. Doing that took the balance of a day. After enjoying
my customary two cups of java on the New Manse’s deck just after dawn, I got to
work in hopes of beating the heat of the day—we are already in the 90s F. down
here, y’all. First step was rinsing floors, workbench, and walls with the
garden hose. That done, I squirted plenty of Dawn dish soap on workbench and
floor and began scrubbing with a broom.
The scrubbing, rinsing, and scrubbing again went on for a
couple of hours till I wasn’t seeing any more black or orange in the water I
was sweeping out of the shop. When that finally happened, I turned on the fans
to help dry things out, grabbed dust rags and damp rags, and commenced cleaning
the gear. I’d grab a case, dust it, and wipe it down till it was good as
before. Actually better than before.
Some of the gear had admittedly been on the dusty side—after not getting much use
this long, cloudy year—before I’d
moved it into the shop.
When I was finished, it was 3 o’clock, over eight hours
after I began, and Unk was plumb tuckered despite having taken frequent breaks
in the heat. A long, hot shower followed by a nap in the den (sans TV, alas; at
this point we still didn’t have cable) brought me back to life somewhat. I
decided that after all that work, I should give the backyard observing setup at
least a preliminary try out. It would be a long time till astronomical
twilight, and I didn’t know if I was going to make it that late, but I thought
I could at least get some shots of Jupiter in the gloaming with my amazing
little ZWO planet cam.
First order of bidness was finding a place for the computer,
the Toshiba laptop. The workbench was not only too high for the seated use of a
PC, it was on the wrong end of the shop. I set up my camping table, the one I
use for the PC and video monitor at star parties, near the door and ran the
cables out to the scope.
On this evening, that scope was the time-tested pairing of
Celeste, my 1995 Ultima 8 OTA, and her CG5 mount. In addition to a USB cable
(plus two extensions) for the ZWO, the cabling consisted of the NexRemote line for mount control, an
extension cord for the mount and dew heater power supplies, and the JMI motofocus
cord for focusing. Only hiccup was that it looks like I will need a longer
motofocus cable. I had enough slack for the focuser, but just barely enough.
How’d it go? Purty good, despite me not having much in the
way of results to show for it. Poor seeing and a low Jupiter prevented me from
getting any shots that were worth a hoot. Oh, and the skeeters were back in
force. I lit off the Thermacell for the
first time this year. I’d taken it with me to the Deep South Regional Star Gaze Spring Scrimmage a month ago, but hadn’t had to
use it, not even in the wilds of Louisiana. I dern sure did have to use it this
night in my backyard.
That was the bad. The good was that while not as convenient
as having an observatory, the setup was far less labor intensive than hauling
all the stuff to the Possum Swamp Astronomical Society dark site. Throwing the
Big Switch at the end of the evening was much
easier, that’s for sure.
Without wheelie bars or a dome, I still had to remove OTA
from mount and carry both inside separately, but I didn’t have to pack all the
cables, power supplies and other astro-junk back in cases. Nor did I have to
drive home; I was home. I laid the
stuff out neatly on the table for use next time and quitted the shop, heading
inside for a little Yell and a DVD of Season One of the pea-picking X Files.
I pronounced Run One from the new Chaos Manor South a
success, but what I was really interested in finding out was what the
Mallincam, maybe equipped with a light pollution filter, would bring back from
the skies of the New Manse. Had to wait a few days to see about that. The
surprisingly long clear, dry spell we’d been having ended the following day
with heavier haze that turned to clouds on Memorial Day and dadgummed thunderheads
shortly thereafter.
Would you be surprised if I told you everything didn't go
smoothly last Wednesday night, the clear (if hazy) evening I chose for my first
Mallincam Xtreme run from the new place? Nope, prob’ly not. As I have said
before, it wouldn’t be an Uncle Rod observing run if everything went as planned.
I certainly had my share of foul-ups, but you might be surprised if I told you
that for once the only major malfunction was not Unk’s fault.
I set up as I had the first time, Celeste and the CG5
outside the shop door, maybe a little closer to the door this time so as to
give myself more slack on the Motofocus cord. I’ve ordered an extension cable
(Unk’s way too lazy to build one himself), but it has not yet arrived. Fired up
the scope and went back inside the shop to get the computer going. I thought
that if there were any problems they would have to do with that Bad Tree
blocking the East – Southeast and my view of alignment stars.
I intended to keep things uber simple and record video on
the laptop using my EZ Cap frame grabber cable. I’ve formerly eschewed that for
a couple of reasons. One being that it’s so convenient to be able to pop the SD
card out of my Orion StarShoot DVR. Insert
the SD into the desktop and my videos are ready for viewing and processing on
the main PC. No copying nothing off the hard laptop’s drive. No figuring where
to tell the Mallincam capture module (I am still using the original Mallincam
Xtreme software for now) to put it—or finding it later. The video the StarShoot
records is not perfect; there are some compression artifacts, but it still
looks mighty good even on our 60-inch LG.
The other reason is that I have not yet figgered out a way
to record audio to the computer from a microphone while I am recording video.
Maybe one of you smart folks can tell me how the hell to do that. One of the
things I like most about the little Orion recorder is that it has freed me from
using an outboard audio recorder for observing notes. I went from micro-cassettes to
a solid state recorder, which was an improvement, but using the dadblamed thing
was still awkward. With the Orion, once I get an object on screen, I just mash
the one-button (wired) remote, it begins recording video, and speak my
notes into its built-in mic in a more or less normal tone of voice.
While the StarShoot ain’t much more than half the size of a
pack of smokes, I thought I’d eliminate it for this one run. I wouldn’t be
doing any serious deep sky work, and leaving it in the house would mean one
less piece of gear to worry about. Two less, actually. The Mallincams don’t have
quite enough drive, enough oomph, to
feed video to both a recorder and a monitor at the same time. So, I use a
little analog switchbox left over from the VHS days. When I have sumpin
onscreen I want to save, I mash the switch to send video to the StarShoot,
engage that one-button remote and record to my heart’s content.
Alrighty then. Scope power on. NexRemote lit off. Let’s plug in the frame grabber and get the
Mallincam software capturing. I tried
to do that, but computer did not seem to be seeing the EZ Cap. What the—? It had worked perfectly during my tests just
before we moved out of the Old Manse. Unplugging and replugging the thing from
its USB port didn't help—no bing-bong. Restarting the Toshiba didn't work
either. I wondered what I should do next. I could think of a couple of troubleshooting
steps, but I was now burning dark as astronomical twilight came and went. That
would normally have been OK, but the weather goobers were predicting clouds
after 2200.
Dagnabbit! Twarn’t nothing for it but to drag out the DVR
and the switchbox, hook ‘em up, and keep on trucking. Which was what I did, but
I most assuredly did not keep on trucking. I could see there was no “raster”
(or whatever you call the presence of a video signal in these digital days) on
the monitor, and checking the “crosshair” box on the Xtreme control program
didn’t result in crosshairs being drawn on the portable DVD player I use as my
monitor. Well, what in the h-e double L was I gonna do now?
Then, as occasionally happens, one of my few remaining brain
cells decided to do its thing and fired. Last month at the Deep South Regional
Star Gaze Spring Scrimmage, I’d had video problems when I was doing my initial
testing of the Mallincam Micro. I’d thought
they’d had something to do with the connector on the little Mallincam. But
maybe not. Maybe they were due to a fraking BAD CABLE. The same cable I was using now.
A little of the old jiggle, jiggle proved that to be the
case. Moving the cable would result in me briefly getting a picture. Unplugging
and reseating it more firmly didn't help, unfortunately. Apparently the cable had
deeper problems. Luckily, I recalled I had a semi-spare. “Semi” because I knew
the other cable had some kind of a problem, too (that I’d never got around to
diagnosing). But I also remembered it worked most of the time and that would
have to be good enough.
Plugging up the new cord got me video immediately. It was
now time to see whether I’d be able to center enough alignment and calibration
stars to get decent goto performance. Star One, Pollux, was visible, barely.
Star Two, Arcturus was behind a tree. Vega was rising right over the house,
though, so I used it. It was now time to do the four NexStar calibration stars,
which greatly improve goto accuracy. By running through all the star choices with
the Undo button, I was able to find three that were visible. That proved to be
enough. When the scope slewed to the third star, Mizar, it was near the center
of the monitor’s crosshairs when the mount stopped.
Sheeesh. Between
fumbling with the fricking-fraking video cord and “undoing” bunches of cal
stars in the search of visible ones, I’d been outside for over an hour and had
absolutely nothing to show for it. Normally, I would have done the NexStar’s
polar align procedure next, but that would have probably meant doing yet another 2+4
alignment, which did not appeal (if you have to move the mount much in altitude
and azimuth to polar align, you will need to redo the goto alignment). Given
the light polluted, hazy skies, I didn't believe I’d be able to go longer than
a 14-second exposure, anyhow, and since I’d been careful about eyeballing the
North Star through the CG5’s hollow polar bore, I thought we might be in Good Enough territory.
Hokay, rubber meets road time. I mouse clicked the virtual
hand control buttons to enter “M82,” mashed the virtual Enter button, and
crossed my fingers. Celeste’s CG5 made the weasels-with-tuberculosis sounds
common to all CG5 mounts and stopped. On the monitor? I could see M82 was dern
near centered, but OH! MY EYES!
Even at 14-seconds, the sky background was bright. Real
bright. Then I realized the Xtreme’s gain was still set to the “6” I use at
dark sites. It would obviously have to be dialed-down. I went to “4,” and while
waiting for the camera’s 3-minute “safety timer” (to prevent a camera crash
when you change settings) to run out, I took the additional step of screwing my
Orion Imaging Filter onto the Xtreme’s nosepiece. It is a mild light pollution
filter much like the old Lumicon Deep Sky, and while I haven’t used it a lot
since I bought it a couple of years back, when I have put it on the camera I’ve
noticed it does darken the sky background a mite without dimming galaxies much.
“Now that’s better.” I still don’t like
consarned Wendy’s hamburgs, but the above and a little tweaking of the gamma resulted
in an image that was respectable. Color looked OK, and—dang—I was actually
seeing a right fair amount of bright and dark detail along Cigar’s strange
disk. Nearby M81 was OK, but I wasn’t seeing any arm detail. That takes more
exposure and more gain and that wasn’t going to play well from the backyard. I
moved on. Where did I move on to? Bunch of Messiers and some NGCs, too…
M97, the Owl
Nebula. I was somewhat to surprised to see old Owley show up. But there he was,
and he was even showing the weird dark patches that are his “eyes.” Hell, I
could even make out his green hue.
M108 is just a
hop, skip, and a jump from M97, so that’s where I went next. Even in dark
skies, this isn’t the brightest galaxy around, but it was visible and showing off
a little of its nice disk detail.
M101. I couldn’t
possibly see the Catherine Wheel Galaxy from my backyard, could I? I went there
anyway. It didn’t put my eye out, but it was visible the instant the slew
stopped. It was even visible with a freaking 7-second exposure. At 14-seconds,
I saw the magnificent face-on Sc’s spiral form easily enough.
M13. How ‘bout
some eye candy? It’s hard to make the Great Globular look bad in a Mallincam no
matter how compromised the site. It was magnificent, rising over the New Manse.
Nuff said.
M92. Hercules
other, smaller glob wasn’t half-bad, neither.
I wasn’t completely sure I’d see Hercules’ little Turtle
Nebula, NGC 6210, but the oddly
shaped planetary nebula was eminently visible.
M57 is another
one that looks good under any circumstances, and it surely did.
I’d done forgot M51.
How could I do that? There I went. While not as good as it is from a dark site
where I can pump up the gain and exposure, I’ve definitely had worse views of
the Whirlpool.
Wonder how NGC 4565 will look? Not like it does from the Possum Swamp Astronomical Society Dark Site, but not bad. The dust lane and the Day the Earth Stood Still flying saucer shape were there.
And so it went, campers, me sitting snug in the shop,
issuing gotos and viewing marvels on my little monitor. Till about 10 p.m. when
I noticed images were becoming lackluster. Even M13 wasn’t so hot when I
revisited him. Had the predicted clouds begun to move it? I stuck my head
outside for a look. Nope, still clear. Well, damn, what now? Couldn’t be dew
could it? Maybe I should turn up the ‘Buster? It was then I noticed both the DewBuster’s
lights were blinking in unison. When do they do that? “When the controller is
turned on without the temperature probe and heating element being plugged in,
Unk. You dummy.”
I reckon I could have hunted up my dew-zapper, my 12-volt winder
defroster, and cleared the corrector, but, to tell y’all the truth, after all
the alarums and excursions I was a mite weary. Even though there wasn’t a whole
lot of packing up to do, there was, as above, still some. I threw that cursed
big switch, and when Celeste was tucked in I headed inside for a little Rebel Yell
and a little Atlanta Braves baseball courtesy a replay of the evening’s game on
the cable TV.
Next morning, after reviewing my SD card full of videos, I located
the Two Men with a Truck box that contained my multimeter and checked that dang
Mallincam cable. I was hoping it was a connector problem, but my testing
revealed the cord had a problem somewhere along its length. In other words, it was
ready for the ol’ round file. Reckon I’ll have to rustle up a replacement. Gull dernit.
The EZ Cap? Almost unbelievably, yet another cable problem; in this case, the frame grabber’s little USB
extension. Plugged directly into a USB port the EZ Cap worked. Plugged into a
USB hub, it worked. With the extension? No-go. Into the rubbish bin went the
cord.
Naw, things didn’t go that smooth, but I didn’t expect ‘em
to. This is a new situation and the start of a new observing life for me. I
knew there’d be plenty of wrinkles to iron out in the beginning and for a
while thereafter. I am overjoyed with these early results of mine, but there
are changes and decisions aplenty ahead. One thing I discovered is that there
is a far better view of the sky from the area of the deck than from closer to
the shop.
It may actually be better to set the scope up next to the deck
and operate from the deck. Once I get a Pod in, I may sit with the laptop on the deck on pleasant nights (don’t think I want to sit
inside a freaking Pod). When it is c-o-l-d, I may run things from inside the sun room. Yeah, there’s a right long road ahead, but the thing
is, y’all, after all these years I can finally see the deep sky from home
again. That is one hell of a change for the better.
What’s up next? There’s a Moon back in the sky, so, assuming
the clear weather hangs in (you know what they say about “assume”), muchachos,
I’ll be back to my Destination Moon project
with the ZWO and maybe with Big Bertha, our NexStar 11. The next Big Thing on
the agenda, however, is—once I have a new video cable—more testing of that cute
little Mallincam Micro. I intend to do that in conjunction with checking out a
new Mallincam control program, AstroLive, which looks like it could be the
kitten’s meow. Stay tuned, you-all.
Next Time: Destination Moon Night Five…
Comments:
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Think my mobile killed my first comment... Anyway. Congratulations for your new observing site and the first results. For me it is the same. Without my light-polluted garden site I would basically do no observing. Last night was the first night in 2014 where my schedule and the weather cooperated so that I could do some observing under dark skies (ignoring the Moon).
A small nitpick though. ;-) Probably a typo. Because M94 is not in Hercules. It is a galaxy in CVn. The nice globular in Hercules is M92.
Regards
Johann
A small nitpick though. ;-) Probably a typo. Because M94 is not in Hercules. It is a galaxy in CVn. The nice globular in Hercules is M92.
Regards
Johann
I hope everything works out for you with observing from home, and thanks for that little bit about the "safety timer". To wait three minutes every time you tweak the gain?? Certainly not something you will find advertised among the "key features".
I don't think Rock makes any kind of a secret of it. At any rate, it's really not a problem in use. You can bypass the timer for certain changes, BTW.
Rod, congratulations on your new home. I moved to my first house almost 3 years ago and I am still sorting things out, including my observing situation. It'll take time. Do you still have cats? How'd they take to the move?
Yep, Growltiger and Thomas Aquinas are still with us. How did they like the move? Not worth a crap. They hid behind the refrigerator in the utility room for three days. Tommy would probably have been OK, but Tiger is old and was very freaked out and freaked Tommy out. Tiger is at least on his way to adjusting now, however. :)
Cats are funny creatures. Maybe the previous owner had cats and your cats were smelling them -- "Oh no, i'm in someone else's territory now!".
Do you ever call Tommy the "Dumb Ox"?
I just started really using my Orion LCD-DVR and really like it so far. Especially the built-in mike and the one-button remote. Can you get much simpler than that? - "Here's a big red button - push it, and that's all there is to do."
My LCD monitor though has an output jack, so i hook the LCD-DVR onto that. Works pretty well.
Thanks for the info about changing Gain for less-dark skies. But is that different than changing integration time?
Do you ever call Tommy the "Dumb Ox"?
I just started really using my Orion LCD-DVR and really like it so far. Especially the built-in mike and the one-button remote. Can you get much simpler than that? - "Here's a big red button - push it, and that's all there is to do."
My LCD monitor though has an output jack, so i hook the LCD-DVR onto that. Works pretty well.
Thanks for the info about changing Gain for less-dark skies. But is that different than changing integration time?
Thomas Aquinas? Never. He is the smartest cat I have ever known. His antics include arranging his toys in lines and circles, and adjusting a mirror to move the reflection of the Sun around. No fooling. Tommy is almost SCARY. LOL
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