About five years ago, muchachos, a young amateur astronomer
and ardent Trekkie, Clara Scattolin,
had a great idea; she’d go through the Star
Trek canon as it stood at the time (with the exception of Enterprise)—STTOS, TAS, TNG, VOY, DS9, and
the original movies (not the reboots)—and
make an observing list of the real astronomical objects that were mentioned.
Clara’s list was a big
hit with Trekkie amateur astronomers including moi. I downloaded the .pdf, converted the list to SkyTools format, and spent an evening
looking at and showing off some of the Trek objects. Six altogether. That’s only a fraction of Clara’s observing plan, which
consists of 37 objects, so the other evening, I decided to knock off a few more
of ‘em.
Should you do the same? Darned right. If you are a Trekkie,
you will thoroughly enjoy the experience, even though most of the Enterprise’s
destinations and the other astronomical objects at least talked about in the
shows are “just” stars. But, what’s wrong with looking at a pretty star? Some
are doubles, and almost all are bright and look good in small telescopes. As
Clara says:
"You might wonder why anyone might want to look at stars that are probably irrelevant. I don’t know about you, but I would love the opportunity to look at a star that someone believed was a solar system with habitable planets in orbit."
So it was that one recent evening I hit the backyard at 8
p.m. (curse this DST) to do more voyaging. How would I do that? I originally
intended to set up a C8 on my Atlas mount. I’d just downloaded the new SynScan
firmware build, v3.37, and needed to give it a test run. Unfortunately, clouds
were predicted to be on their way in, and I don’t like to lug the Atlas out
unless I can keep it set up in the back forty for at least two nights. Severe
weather was said to be in the offing, so I decided C8 and Atlas would stay snug
and dry.
So, my Celestron C102, a 4-inch achromat, would be my
starship of choice for the night. This refractor, “Amelia” by name, is easy to
waltz out into the backyard or onto my deck despite her longish tube. I can
have her set up in 5-minutes, and she requires almost no thermal equilibration
whatsoever. My backyard skies are hardly perfect, with a limiting zenith
magnitude of about 5 on a really outstanding night, but the only challenging
object on the list this evening would likely be M1, the Crab Nebula, which
isn’t that hard for a 4-inch, even under bright skies.
Or it wouldn’t be with clear skies. Unfortunately, there was
significant haze building in advance of the front, and I wasn’t at all sure old
Crabby would appear in my eyepiece. At least there were no drifting clouds, not
yet, so there’d be nothing to prevent me from scoring my other targets, mostly bright
double and single stars.
So, out on the deck
went the C102, into the diagonal went my Zhumell 100-degree AFOV ocular, The
Happy Hand Grenade, and…
Rigel
When the U.S.S. Amelia
emerged from warp space, we were at Orion’s beautiful sapphire, magnitude .13 Rigel,
the 6th brightest star in the sky, which looked lovely in the big
eyepiece field. The seeing was not perfect, but it was good enough that the
sparkler was not dancing around much. How was the chromatic aberration? At the
reasonable focal ratio of the C102, f/10, and the reasonable magnification with
the HHG, 63X, I didn’t note much. Something besides the color purple was
missing, however.
Rigel is not a single star, but a double, boasting a little
magnitude 10.4 companion a hair less than 10” away. Actually, Rigel is really a
triple star; Rigel B is itself a binary, but a spectroscopic one that cannot be
resolved by any scope. Even given the huge magnitude difference between the
primary and the B star(s), the relatively large separation makes the pair easy
to resolve with a C8.
I expected Rigel B to be nearly as easy with the C102 as
with the SCT, but nada did I see of the little comes when I put my eye to the ocular. Well, 63X was a little low
in the magnification department, I thought, so I upped it to 142X with my 7mm
Uwan 82-degree job. There was the spark of Rigel B. Maybe not as prominent as
in a C8, but not bad, not bad at all.
The Shows
“Wolf in the Fold”
(STTOS). Takes place on a planet orbiting Rigel, Rigel IV, and involves grisly
killings done in Jack the Ripper style. The crew is enjoying shore leave in a gloomy
fog-enshrouded city, with Scotty doing some good, old-fashioned whiskey
drinking, when a grisly murder takes place. Scotty is initially suspected, but
it’s soon obvious to his companions that a sinister force is at work.
One of the best original show episodes in my opinion, “Journey to Babel” (STTOS), has Rigel as
its destination. Specifically, the planet Rigel V. The story concerns the Enterprise’s journey to a diplomatic
conference on the planet, and features Spock’s father, Sarek, and mother,
Amanda. I won’t give anything else away if you somehow haven’t seen it. If you haven’t seen it, you will love it.
“The Cage”
(STTOS). This is another great (2-part) episode, and was the original pilot for
the series. Its relation to Rigel is only peripheral in that yet another
inhabited Rigellian planet, Rigel VII, is mentioned. See this episode not just
for a great SF-like (as opposed to Sci Fi) story, but for a look at the proto-crew
of the enterprise, with Jeffrey Hunter as Captain, Majel Barrett as his Exec
(Number One), and John Hoyt as the ship’s doctor (Dr. Phillip Boyce).
“Mudd’s Women”
(STTOS). Can you believe that there’s yet another
(semi) habitable planet in the Rigel system, Rigel XII? There is, and we visit
it in this one for replacement dilithium crystals thanks to the (probably) unintentional
actions of conman Harry Mudd. The balance of the episode is played out in the
harsh environment of Rigel XII’s a mining colony.
In “All Good Things”
(STTNG), a movie-length episode, the finale of the show, we are told Enterprise
Engineer Geordi LaForge lived on Rigel III following his retirement from
Starfleet. Rigel IV is mentioned in “Prodigal Daughter” (STDS9) as a “pergium”
ore processing facility.
Mintaka
Since we were in the Orion neighborhood, Mintaka, Delta
Orionis, was our obvious next destination. This westernmost belt star is
another bright beauty, a blue-white B0 monster shining at magnitude 2.14. It’s
a triple star with a very noticeable 7th magnitude companion 52”
away. The other component is closer and way dim, magnitude 14, and was, of
course, invisible in my refractor.
The Show
Mintaka’s sole appearance is in an STTNG episode, “Who Watches the Watchers?” The Enterprise is studying a race of Bronze
Age level people who appear to be related to the Vulcans. The Away Team is
discovered, violating the Prime Directive and putting the normal development of
the people of Mintaka III in jeopardy. Not a great episode, but a good one.
Messier 45, the
Pleiades
Taurus’ Seven Sisters is a beautiful open cluster, but
really too big for an f/10 4-inch. I enlisted my 35mm Panoptic to allow me to
take in the whole of the cluster’s main “little dipper” shape, but to be honest
the group’s many blue sparklers really looked best in the Orion 7x50mm RACI
finder scope I use on Amelia when we are observing in light polluted environs.
The Show
The Pleiads are mentioned in just one episode, STTNG’s “Home
Soil,” as the destination of the Enterprise,
which has been tasked with surveying and cataloging planets in the star
cluster. Before it can get to M45, however, the ship is diverted to a planet
along the way, Velara III, to check on the faltering progress of a terraforming
colony there. What the Enterprise finds is a crystalline lifeform that appears
similar to one discovered in the (nearby, we assume) Pleiades.
Messier 1, the Crab
Nebula
The next logical
destination for my starship of the mind was one of the other relatively few
deep sky objects in the Trek canon, Messier 1, the famous Crab Nebula. I turned
the scope on it, or at least thought
I did. The Crab is undeniably subdued in a 4-inch in light pollution. Not
surprising given its relatively dim magnitude of 8.4 and relatively large size
of 8.0’. I think I saw I as a dim
little oval. I was convinced enough that it was there that I didn’t go looking
for a light pollution reduction filter, anyway.
The Show
The Crab is mentioned in one of STTNG’s light-hearted
episodes, “Manhunt,” wherein Picard must
deal with a menopausal Lwaxana Troi (mother to Deanna, natch).
Regulus
Regulus, Leo’s alpha star, was now nice and high above the
trees to the east at mid evening, so it was our next port of call. While this
star, another blue one, a B7 this time, doesn’t look overly impressive in the
eyepiece, it is a pretty remarkable one. It’s a quadruple star with the primary
being a very young sun that has assumed a strongly oblate shape due to its
fast rotation.
Of these wonders, the only thing visible to my little scope other
than the bright primary, was the star’s b-c companion. The (unresolved in my little
scope) pair is 175” from the planetary and shines at a combined magnitude of
7.6, which made it easy and pretty in the C102. The 4th system
member hugs the primary closely and is only detectable spectroscopically.
Regulus is referred to in one of the most famous and beloved
of the STTOS episodes, “Amok Time.”
While the story doesn’t visit Regulus V, it is discussed as the home of a giant
bird that returns to its nest once every eleven years to mate. Not unlike poor
Mr. Spock, who's suffering from something called pon farr, the Vulcan equivalent of the Regulan bird’s need to
return to home to fulfill its biological imperative or the Terran salmon’s need
to swim upstream to do the same.
Regulus is also talked about in a rather minor first season episode
of STTNG, “The Vengeance Factor.”
Our current target also came up in a STDS9 show, “Fascination,”
as the location of the Regulus III Science Academy.
Aldebaran
Aldebaran, a huge, red K5III star couldn’t be more different
from the blue stars we’ve visited so far. They are young and it is old, having
moved off the Main Sequence and swollen to a huge diameter, almost 45 times
that of the Sun. In the eyepiece, it is glorious, a shimmering orange vision.
The Show
You’d think we’d hear more about such a prominent star, but
no. It does come up in “The Deadly Years”
(STTOS), but only in passing. Aldebaran
III is the home of the Aldebaran Music Academy.
It also makes a brief appearance in an in the STDS9 episode
“Past Tense, Part I.” It seems one
of Quark’s relations has been picked up by the federation cops on Aldebaran III
and he wants Sisko to do something
about it.
After watching Aldebaran, who began to not just shimmer, but
to dance, as the seeing degraded and the haze thickened, I figured it was about
time to wrap it up. I didn’t want to do any more of the list on an evening that
was becoming putrid, but I wasn’t quite ready to haul Amelia back inside,
either.
Venus is the bane of achromatic refractors. Not only is she usually
intensely bright, she’s usually small. That makes her the A-number-one victim
of chromatic aberration. But the love goddess suckered me in as she always
does. She just looked so bright and pretty. In truth, she was not that bad.
Yes, there was a substantial purple halo, but the little gibbous disk was sharp
and clear in the midst of it when the seeing occasionally cooperated.
Back in the Sol system, I studied the second planet on my
ship’s “viewscreen” for quite a while. Longer than I thought I would. I am glad
I did. I don’t want any of the sky’s wonders to ever become mundane, muchachos.
And none of them ever have. Not even too bright Venus, who seemed to still
radiate some of the mystery she had in excess back in my youth, when she was a
Strange New World, a water rich swamp world trod by dinosaurs, and I couldn’t stop looking at her.
"Mr. Sulu, All ahead warp factor 3."
"Mr. Sulu, All ahead warp factor 3."
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