Friday, March 29, 2024
Issue 602: SeeStar in the Lion’s Den
NGC 2903 |
In particular, “Lion’s Den” is the chapter in the book (I
often call it “the City Lights book” since its genesis was a series of articles
by that name in my old SkyWatch newsletter) concerning Leo the lion and his
innumerable galaxies. What I thought I’d do this time was turn the SeeStar
loose on those Leo galaxies and see how the little telescope would fare under
varying conditions from a typically light polluted suburban backyard.
And light polluted the backyard of Chaos Manor South is.
Oh, nothing like the back forty of the original Chaos Manor South
downtown. Here, we are on the edge of the suburban/country transition zone. It’s
not that bad. On a really good night I suspect you can pick out 5th
magnitude stars at zenith. The trouble is getting a good night,
especially in the spring when humidity in the air scatters light pollution, making
it worse. I didn’t give a hoot ‘n holler. I’d take what I could get and find
out what the ZWO could pull out of the hazy soup.
In particular, I wanted to see what the SeeStar can do more
as an “EAA” (“Electronically Assisted Astronomy”) system than the more serious instrument
some are using it for. Talented workers are doing flat-out amazing stuff with
the little ZWO. You know, the people who append information to their images like,
“Ten hours exposure with the SeeStar, processed in PixInsight.”
Leo Trio |
Now, none of that is meant to talk down Rock Mallin’s wonderful
cameras. They really are flat-out amazing. During the vaunted Herschel Project, they brought home bushel baskets of
PGC galaxies and quasars in addition to every one of Willie and Lina Herschel’s
thousands of deep sky objects. But… "right tool for right job,” no?
My brief foray with the SeeStar had already shown me it was
capable of better on the more prominent objects. And not by me
downloading fits frames from the scope and stacking and processing them with
fancy software, but just by letting the telescope do the work. And me at most doing
some minor processing of the .jpgs the SeeStar sends to the phone. That is
where I am at right now for many things, campers: “No fuss, no muss.”
It ain’t just the difficulty involved in making OK-looking still
pictures from Mallincam videos, either. The other drawback to the Mallincam Xtreme,
you see, is the setup it requires. In addition to telescope and mount, I need a
computer to control the camera, a separate DVR to record the video, an analog
display for the camera, power supplies, cables, video switcher, etc., etc. I
just don’t have as much patience for that sort of thing in these latter days as
I used to. Oh, I’ll still do it, or do similar for conventional DSLR
astrophotography, but it’s obvious I won’t do it very often.
My routine with the SeeStar couldn’t be more different: Plunk down my old Manfrotto tripod in the
backyard. Eyeball level with a circular bubble level. Mount SeeStar on tripod.
Turn on SeeStar. When the little gal says (she talks), “Power on! Ready to
connect!” I can head back in the house, plunk myself down on the couch in front
of the TV with the felines, tell the scope to go to the target of my choosing,
open some cold 807s and some catnip, and let the SeeStar do the
work.
Do I miss fiddling with a telescope and computer in the cold
or skeeters to take pictures? Not one bit. Now, visual observing is
still something I like. A lot. But that is a whole ‘nother kettle o’ fish. Here,
we are talking getting nice pictures of the deep sky from suburban skies in a
fashion that encourages me to do so more than once in a blue Moon.
NGC 3190 Group |
Let’s go. If you’ve a mind to glom onto a copy of The
Urban Astronomer’s Guide and follow along, that won’t hurt my feelins none,
but if not, if you rummage through those old issues of SkyWatch, you can
find the Leo article “Lion’s Den” germinated from…
Having, as above, set Suzie up on her tripod and returned
inside, I opened the SeeStar app, turned on the little scope’s dew heater (it
was a rather humid evening just before the change to DST), and accessed the
SeeStar app’s built-in star atlas. Oh, I probably could have found my quarry
under “Tonight’s Best” on the main page, but I chose to use the nice atlas. I
searched on “M65,” and when the app located the galaxy, I told it to center M65
on the star atlas screen.
M65 was up first since, just as in the Urban book, I thought
I’d begin with Leo’s showpiece, the Leo Trio, M65, M66, and NGC 3628.
The idea was to try to frame the shot so as to include all three in one image.
I did that by moving the image format frame the atlas displays until all three
galaxies were within its border. Possible, but just barely. I mashed
“goto” on the iPhone’s screen and off Suzie went.
After Suze did some various calibration stuff in addition to
gotoing, and finally stopped, I could see despite the short exposures of the
preview mode that the little scope’s pointing (via platesolving) was right on.
There were two obvious dim smudges on the right side of the frame, and maybe
the barest hint of one on the left side. The stars in the field looked purty
sharp to me, but I engaged autofocus anyhow. The scope took a minute or so to
deal with that, and when done I had to admit them stars did look a mite
smaller. OK. Off to the races. I touched the “go” button and Suzie began
accumulating and stacking 10-second exposures.
While the telescope was doing her thing, I thought I’d
refresh my memory as to what I’d thought of the Leo Trio on that long-ago
evening when I did the observing for Urban Astronomer. As for M65 and M66:
These galaxies, and especially M66, are fairly impressive in
the C11. No core noted for M65, it’s an oval smudge of light. M66 is brighter but looks much the same. The real attraction under these skies is that both can
be seen in the same field of a 22mm Panoptic eyepiece at 127x.
The third member of the Leo Trio is substantially harder to
see than either M65 or M66 in the C11. It’s a dim smudge that fades in and out
as the seeing changes. Some hint of its strong elongation…
M105 and friends... |
I’ll let you be the judge (picture above), but it’s clear we
are in a whole other dimension here. M65 and M66 aren’t just elongated
somethings-or-others without cores. They are detailed, both their outer
regions and their centers. No, Unk don’t know pea-turkey about processing, and
has overexposed the nuclei, but yeah, detail there. Otherwise? Damn…you don’t
have to guess at spiral detail. It slaps you in the face. The “hard” member of
the Trio, NGC 3628? It could have used a little more exposure but still looks
purty awesome with that dark lane and the distinctive flaring ansae of its disk.
Yes, your Uncle is something of a Luddite, has a hard time
wrapping his mind around technology—especially involving smartphones—and is
easily impressed. But, yeah, just damn. It simply astounds me I was able
to see the Leo Trio like that from my suburban yard. In a few minutes. With a
50mm f/5 telescope. Without me having to do much of anything.
After The Good Ones, the Leo Trio, I traveled the
constellation stick figure, beginning with the Sickle, the Lion’s mane, and the
galaxies I called <ahem> “Mane Lice” in the book. The first of which was
with a sprite I didn’t find exactly overwhelming in the eyepiece, NGC 2903:
Visible but not starkly apparent in the C11. Its large disk
tends to wink in and out of view as I switch between averted and direct vision.
Averted vision seems to show a tiny nucleus at 127x, but I’m not sure on this.
After Suzie had devoted half an hour to this one, I picked
up the phone and had a look. Again, the difference between what I could see in the
simple picture and my visual description couldn’t have been starker. In fact,
that difference was more apparent here than with the Leo Trio, since NGC 2903
was higher in altitude and well out of the light dome to the east (Greater
Possum Swamp).
Lest I make all this seem like magic, it was not at all
immune from your silly Old Uncle’s fumbling and bumbling. Take the Leo Trio
image. The one shown here is actually one I took a week or two later. The
original? It looked good enough, but the bottom half was hurt by a
strong light-pollution gradient. Why?
“Oh, yeah… Shoulda turned the carport light off, I reckon.” My initial attempt
on NGC 2903 failed completely. Why?
Forgot to turn on the telescope’s dew heater. So, some things never do change
in Uncle Rod Land.
Continuing on down the sickle, getting close to Algieba, we
land on the NGC 3190 group of
galaxies. There is a bit of confustication here. The brightest galaxy in the
group is sometimes identified as NGC 3190, and sometimes as NGC 3189 with the whole group of
galaxies being referred to as “the NGC 3190 Group.” Be that as it may be in the
sometimes-baffling world of deep sky object nomenclature, I was quite taken by
prominent little 3190 and its nearby neighbor, NGC 3193, in my old 12.5-inch Newtonian, “Old Betsy” from my
downtown backyard:
This little pair is a real surprise. NGC 3190 is bright,
definitely elongated, and shows a small, stellar core. It really “looks like a
galaxy” and not just another smudge. NGC 3193 in the same field, is a typical
round elliptical, a fuzzy ball… A third galaxy, NGC 3185, should also be
present…but I’ve never seen it from light-polluted home.
Looking at the final pic Suzie Q kindly sent to my phone (if
you like, you can watch each 10-second exposure come in and be added to the
stack and see your subject getting better and better), my visual description
with the C11 was pretty right-on. While bright 3190 does offer some detail, especially in its inner
region, it’s basically that typical small galaxy with a bright elongated core.
3193? I pretty much nailed it: bright
core set in haze. What’s notable is what I couldn’t see but Miss S. could.
This group actually has a name, “The Leo Quartet.” Galaxy three, NGC 3185, is fairly prominent in my image, but isn’t that
interesting. Elongated core, oval haze. The fourth
member, which I didn’t mention at all—because I didn't see it in the C11—is NGC
3187. It could have used more
exposure, but when I really cranked up “levels” in Photoshop and made the
picture look ugly, I could begin to see its weird bent ends. It’s one of those really barred spirals that look like a
pair of connected hockey sticks.
Done with those Mane Lice, we move to the Tummy fleas and M105 and company. I’m
not sure how many of you look at this little group of three galaxies regularly,
but they deserve your time and are especially rewarding if your skies ain’t
perfect:
This trio was quite a treat… M105 is bright and round with a
stellar nucleus. NGC 3384 looks larger and dimmer than M105 and shows some
elongation. NGC 3385 is smaller and
dimmer and a little difficult in the 12.5-inch scope—it was dim enough that I
couldn’t be sure exactly what its shape was and whether or not it displayed a
core.
NGC 3521 |
How did 50mm Suzie stack up against 300mm Betsy? In a mere
15-minute exposure (the night was getting a little old and I was ‘bout ready to
tell Suze to shut down)? M105 and NGC 3384 are just as I saw them in Bets, if,
naturally, better defined. “Bright cores set in haze.” NGC 3385 is more
interesting. It’s easy to see in the picture, and, YES, shows off one of its
spiral arms. This nice galaxy needed more exposure, and twenty lashes with a
wet noodle for Unk for not giving it more, but, yeah, looks way better than
just another faint-fuzzie.
A mere degree and a quarter to the southwest is the somewhat
far-flung (40’ apart) pair of bright galaxies, M95 and M96. “Bright,” of course, is a relative thing when talking
galaxies, and both are fairly large and in the magnitude 9 neighborhood, making
them a little dicey in the city at times. Anyhoo, my look at ‘em with my 8-inch
f/5 Konus (Synta optics, natch) from the public schools’ suburban Environmental
Studies Center where I often observed revealed…
Conditions are not good and getting worse as the night wears
on… M96 is large and fairly prominent. It is obviously elongated and shows a
stellar core. M95 is considerably harder and requires averted vision at times,
but I can see it is elongated and also that it doesn’t possess an obvious
nuclear region.
So, I really didn’t see much. In the final image that popped onto my iPhone screen “No nuclear region”?! Both show impressive details. M96's bar is prominent and lovely. M95? The SeeStar shows a lot going on there, including a bright nucleus, bars coming off that nucleus, a “ring of stars” feature, and tenuous spiral arms. In addition to the two nice galaxies, I noticed a roundish fuzzy in the frame and checked Stellarium. The little guy turned out to be PGC 32119, a 14th magnitude galaxy. Good show, Suze, my girl!
I ended my visit to the Lion’s Den with what I called
“Hindquarter Ticks,” but that was really kind of a stretch, since the
destination, NGC 3521, is considerably removed from the Lion’s triangular rear
end, being located some 18 degrees southwest of Denebola. NGC 3521 is sometimes known as the “Bubble Galaxy,” but which I
christened “Sunflower Junior” because of the clumpy appearance of its disk. It is
a nice one to end on:
On this not-so-good night, I was surprised to find NGC 3521
without much of a struggle. At 220x in the C11, it is large, obviously
elongated with a stellar core, and its disk seems to occasionally give up
fleeting hints of detail, as if a multitude of spiral arms is just on the edge
of detection.
In the Suzie Girl? As you can see…the patchy nature of the disk is on display. However, my experience is that in images as opposed to visual, the galaxy looks a little less like M63's twin and more like a normal intermediate inclination spiral.
I didn’t end here, actually. One of the things I did in The Urban Astronomer’s Guide is end
every chapter with a double or multiple star. I love double stars and am glad I
did that. The choice for Lion’s Den was obviously Algieba, which I likened to
yellow cat’s eyes winking in the darkness in a low power eyepiece as seeing
changed.
Alas, I got distracted and let the sequence run on too long. 10 or 20 seconds would have been appropriate. Two minutes? The comes was buried in the glare of the primary star. Oh, well. I had a pretty portrait of golden Algieba, anyway.
Algieba in the can. One for the Road imaged. And the night a big success—given my modest goals—it was time to close down. What that involve? Clicking on the picture of the SeeStar in the app and sliding the shutdown thingie to shut-her-down. By the time I got outside, Suze had folded herself up, turned off her dew heater, and killed main power. I grabbed her and her tripod in one go, took her inside, put her on charge, and settled back on the couch where I had spent the evening. Time for a mite more TV-watching with Thomas Aquinas, Chaos Manor South’s resident black cat.
That wasn’t all. I was pretty darned happy about what The
Suze and I had accomplished (the above actually recounts three separate nights
under the sky) in pretty short order. Suzie was enjoying a nice shot of 5-volt
current, so I thought I’d allow myself a touch of the ‘Yell as my reward. Not that I’d felt like I’d done much. The scope did most of the
work. And you know what? At this stage of the game I am just OK with
that, muchachos.
Up Next: The Big Eclipse. If it’s clear. Hope it is.
Don’t want to jinx myself.