Archive for the 'Observing Reports' Category

Observing Report 15th-16th February 2008 (More of the Moon)

Posted by on February 16th 2008 in Astrostuff, Observing Reports
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Last night I was back out on the yard trying out different astrophotographic methods and a few home-made gadgets for making this scoping business a little easier.

Using the Baader zoom eyepiece for the 3-star alignment routine makes the process a doddle. Centre a calibration star in the finderscope and it's usually visible in the field of view of the Baader when it's set to 24mm. Re-centre it in the eyepiece then zoom in to 8mm and recentre it again. Reset the finderscope again, so the star's centred in both fields of view. Much easier than having to change eyepieces again and again...

After doing the alignment routine I told the handset to slew the scope around to the Moon and then I set the tracking to Lunar Mode. After taking a few shots afocally (D50 with 18-55 lens @ 55mm through 20mm eyepiece) I decided to try some prime-focus shots (D50 body T-mounted directly to the scope) and rattled off a series of shots at various speeds after getting a fairly good focus using the Hartmann Mask. I reduced the diffraction-spikes by fitting a shroud around the open end of the scope to prevent ambient light from hitting the vanes that support the secondary mirror. The shroud, like the Hartmann Mask, is a simple home-made jobbie made out of a bit of closed-cell foam sleeping-mat.

Mars was out of sight behind the house, so next up was Saturn. Again, I got great views through the zoom, the Cassini Division in the rings was well-defined and all five of the main moons stood out well despite the glare of their mother planet. I couldn't take any pics because the camera had iced up and needed taking inside to recover.

I had a look at a few DSOs before packing away and getting the kit (and myself) inside to defrost.

Anyway, here's the best image of the night, click it to go large:

D50 on C8-N at prime-focus, 12 frames at 1/1000s, ISO 200, stacked in DSS, not Photoshopped (yet).

Next, I need to work on the focusing for imaging stars using the prime-focus setup. Maybe when this cold-snap's over.

Observing Report 8th-9th February 2008 (First Saturns)

Posted by on February 11th 2008 in Astrostuff, Observing Reports
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After re-collimating the primary mirror (which, I found, was loose in the mounting cell) I got the scope out again to take advantage of the exceptionally clear skies, and to try out the new Baader 8-24mm zoom eyepiece and various combinations of camera mountings. After doing the polar-alignment and 3-star alignment routines, I told the handset to slew the scope around to Mars for a quick look before it went out of sight behind the house. With the eyepiece set to 8mm, I could just about make out some faint surface detail, but I couldn't capture it on camera as there was too much ambient light from the surrounding houses, causing excessive diffraction-spiking. Next was Saturn. I got great views through the zoom, the Cassini Division in the rings was well-defined and all five of the main moons (Enceladus, Dione, Titan, Tethys and Rhea) were visible. I set up the D50 and took a series of afocal shots through the 20mm eyepiece at various camera settings, trying to find a good compromise between exposure time and aperture. Here's a montage of the nine best pre-processing images:  

D50 with 70-300 lens @ 70mm, f/4.0, 1s, ISO 200, through 20mm ep in C8-N, Feb 09, 2008

  Focusing is still a little out despite using a home-made Hartmann Mask (made from a bit of grey closed-cell sit-mat), this is mainly due to the low-tech sloppy focuser supplied with the scope. I need to get it shimmed-up to take out some of the axial play. I had a look at a NGC 3628 (edge-on spiral galaxy in Leo), M45 (The Pleiades), M40 (double-star in Ursa Major) and M44 (The Beehive Cluster, also called the "Praesepe", in Cancer) before packing away before everything got dewed-up. The new tracking motors worked well, acceptably quiet and fairly accurate, although I've still to go through the Periodic Error Correction routine and I also need to refine the backlash settings. I've a minor cone-error on the scope mounting-plate which I'll correct as soon as I get the time.

Observing Report 27th-28th January 2008 (Stars and stuff)

Posted by on January 28th 2008 in Astrostuff, Observing Reports
I got the scope out again last night and had a couple of hours seeing what was about. The views were much better because I had collimated the OTA, after buying a second-hand Baader Laser Collimator from a helpful bloke on the SGL forum. Mars was a clearer sight than before, but I'm still waiting for better (greater magnification) eyepieces in order to make out detail on the surface. Next was the Orion Nebula (M42), a truly captivating sight which never fails to impress. Ella was gobsmacked by it when it was her turn at the eyepiece. At her request, we turned the scope to look at The Pleiades (M45), which didn't fit into the field of view but showed many more stars than she expected. Finally we had another look at Saturn. Elanor noted that more moons were visible compared to when we had observed three nights before. Sorry, still no photos. The adaptor widget is on the way. The tracking motors should be here tomorrow.

Observing Report 24th-25th January 2008 (Mooning)

Posted by on January 25th 2008 in Astrostuff, Observing Reports
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First time out for the new scope. It's not collimated yet (I'm waiting for the postie to deliver the required laser-gadget) so the view quality was never going to be good. Couple that with the fact that I've only got the one eyepiece until the new set is delivered, so I was restricted to just the one magnification (x50).

First off was a shufty at Mars. At x50 it's just a tiny flat orange disc so there was nothing to get excited about. It served as a handy target for practicing with the manual RA and Dec adjusters (leccy computerised set on order).

Next up was the Moon. It's just past full, so there was much detail on the terminator, where there were shadows which added depth to the view. Chris was really impressed when she eventually got a chance to have a look-see. I grabbed the D50 and took some hand-held snaps through the eyepiece. I really need to get a T-ring to fit the camera directly to the scope.

 

 

Finally, Saturn was visible to the left of the Moon, so I slewed around to that and got a decent view. Titan was obvious, and two other moons were just visible. Anna was still awake so I let her have a look, she was really wowed by the view. Her class is studying the planets, she's so chuffed now that she can tell all her classmates that she's really seen another planet and another moon! I took a few snaps but they're rubbish and don't show any moons, so I'll not post them here.