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June 23, 2009 Trip to Tierra del Sol with Tom Youngholm. Warm, seeing was 3/5 from the Clear Sky Clock. Equipment worked well, got dewed at around 12:30am. I'm pretty sure I've been dark with the big scope (N11) at least twice, once to TDS and once to the Yent's ranch, but possibly no more than that. I know experience observers frown on folks who just slew from one object to another, but I hadn't been out in a dark site in forever and I had a guest... My primary target goals for the night were the Omega Cluster, the Hercules Cluster, the Whirlpool Galaxy, the Sombrero Galaxy and Titan entering Saturn's shadow. We arrived, as usual, fifteen minutes later than I prefer, but always winds up being good timing. I hadn't expected anyone there on a Tuesday, but there were a couple of guys, Richard and Art set up on the pads, a shed's roof was open, and a Michael wandered by before doing some astrophotography at his private pad. Set up went smooth, managed to see the thin crescent moon (1-day?) prior to it settling into the murk. Next up was Saturn. Didn't linger since we expected to be back to it later during the shadow ingress. The Omega Cluster is only visible in the evening for short periods, so I wanted to see that. I'd only seen it once or twice before. At first it was too bright to resolve, but later views were pretty awesome.
Now we're getting to the part where astronomy requires imagination. Click on the links to get the amazing astrophotographs. I tried to doctor the photos below to look similar to how the object looks in the eyepiece (generally by lowering the brightness and contrast).
Had some coffee in the warming hut (yum). And the basically just went all over. Saw some planetary nebula including the Eskimo and Cat's Eye, which weren't that interesting.
The Ring Nebula looked like a ring and the Dumbbell Nebula looked big by comparison . I looked at the Blackeye Galaxy and the Sunflower Galaxy, but they didn't resolve much other than core fuzz. We did slew over to somewhere in the Virgo galaxy cluster, where there were two galaxies in the field of view, but when you slewed up you could see two more. Four galaxies right next to each other. When Jupiter rose I was getting dewed and it was late, so we packed up. |