¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

ctrl + shift + ? for shortcuts
© 2025 Groups.io

A cold night

 
Edited

24¡ã might not seem cold to some of you but it¡¯s chilly for us in Virginia Beach, VA. Nevertheless, I couldn¡¯t resist a short night of observing.


Fw: 2025 February sky materials from the Astronomical League

 

Forwarding materials for you from the Astronomical League.


George Reynolds

"Solar System Ambassador" for South Hampton Roads, Virginia
Back Bay Amateur Astronomers (BBAA)?


?


----- Forwarded Message -----

From: "dknabb01@..." <dknabb01@...>
To: Don 01 account <dknabb01@...>
Sent: Monday, January 20, 2025 at 08:24:04 PM EST
Subject: FW: 2025 February sky materials from the Astronomical League

Greetings MERAL Presidents, ALCors, editors, officers, and others,

?

I am forwarding you the February sky maps and other graphics from the Astronomical League, courtesy of John Goss.

?

Please share these with your club members, use them in your newsletters, and post them to your websites and social media sites.

?

Clear skies,

?

Don Knabb

MERAL Chair

?

?

?

From: John Goss <goss.john@...>
Sent: Saturday, January 11, 2025 12:30 PM
To: John Goss <goss.john@...>
Subject: 2025 February sky materials from the Astronomical League

?

Attached are the February sky materials from the Astronomical League.

Yes, there are a bunch!

?

Clear skies,

?

John Goss

?

?


Re: The Mushroom Nebula

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Awesome image Ian.

?

This complex is otherwise known as the ¡°Double Nebula¡± IC 2162 ( Sh 2-255 is IC 2162 West and Sh 2-257 is IC 2162 east). ?They are listed on the Astronomical League¡¯s Bright Nebula Observing Program and I first ¡°saw¡± them in the 30-inch and an UHC filter in October 2013 while doing that program. I described them as ¡°fog¡± surrounding two stars (10.7 and 11.6 magnitude). The larger Sh-254 was barely detectable about half the time. ?

?

But since then, I¡¯ve viewed this complex 3 more times with the 18-inch Dob equipped with the PVS-14 night vision device and an h-alpha filter. With that device they are remarkable: three objects, ?big, bright, textured, and round. This is one of those objects that, in my opinion, justifies the not inconsiderable cost of the device! ?It really excels in converting ¡°ain¡¯t no¡¯s¡± into ¡°oh wows¡±.

?

Ted

BBAA southwest

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of jimcoble2000 via groups.io
Sent: Saturday, January 18, 2025 7:33 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [BackBayAstro] The Mushroom Nebula

?

Never have seen these Ian. Nice. Mushrooms do wonders for you as an astral propellant.? Emoji

?

On Saturday, January 18, 2025 at 09:30:03 AM EST, Ian Stewart via groups.io <swampcolliecoffee@...> wrote:

?

?

One from last night. This is a cool star forming region located in the GEM OB1 molecular cloud. It is sometimes referred to as the Mushroom Nebula by more imaginative people than me.

Cheers

Ian


Re: The Mushroom Nebula

 

Nice!


George Reynolds

"Solar System Ambassador" for South Hampton Roads, Virginia
Back Bay Amateur Astronomers (BBAA)?


?


On Saturday, January 18, 2025 at 09:30:03 AM EST, Ian Stewart via groups.io <swampcolliecoffee@...> wrote:


One from last night. This is a cool star forming region located in the GEM OB1 molecular cloud. It is sometimes referred to as the Mushroom Nebula by more imaginative people than me.
Cheers
Ian


Re: The Mushroom Nebula

 

Never have seen these Ian. Nice. Mushrooms do wonders for you as an astral propellant.? Emoji

On Saturday, January 18, 2025 at 09:30:03 AM EST, Ian Stewart via groups.io <swampcolliecoffee@...> wrote:


One from last night. This is a cool star forming region located in the GEM OB1 molecular cloud. It is sometimes referred to as the Mushroom Nebula by more imaginative people than me.
Cheers
Ian


The Mushroom Nebula

 

One from last night. This is a cool star forming region located in the GEM OB1 molecular cloud. It is sometimes referred to as the Mushroom Nebula by more imaginative people than me.
Cheers
Ian


887 Alinda Asteroid motion last night. Dots are stars and asteroid. Two dots to left are a double star

 

1926:??????? .? (double star) ????????????????????????? . (887 Alinda)
???????????????? .????????????????????????????????????????? . (HD55357)


2000:??????? .?????????????????????????????????????????? . (887 Alinda)
??????????????? .?????????????????????????????????????? ?? ? . (HD55357)

2015:??????? .?????????????????????????????? ? ? ????????????????? . (887 Alinda)
???????????????? .?????????????????????????????????????????? . (HD 55357)


2045:??????? .??
?????????????? ? . ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????? . (HD55357) ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?? . (887 Alinda) ?


Re: One for the books tonight

 

I have to confess I forgot to note where on the moon the planet entered so had to guess where it was going to exit. Fortunately Willam spotted it quickly and I got over in a second to see Mars rise. Kent got an excellent picture also.

On Tuesday, January 14, 2025 at 07:22:23 AM EST, Ian Stewart via groups.io <swampcolliecoffee@...> wrote:


Yep a great evening. i did get a quick snap of Mars just before it was hidden by the moon.


Re: One for the books tonight

 

Yep a great evening. i did get a quick snap of Mars just before it was hidden by the moon.


One for the books tonight

 

Frankly that was a marvelous night of observation. A classic. Snow on the ground and it was cold and clear.

First up was a fine observation of 887 Alinda, a close pass asteroid in Gemini. This asteroid is cooking. I was able to navigate to the area fairly quickly but the SAO numbers for reference stars in Sky Tools were incorrect. Fortunately I had the Henry Draper number of the star that the asteroid was going to pass. It took about 15 minutes of observing to see which 9th magnitude "star" was moving against the background. Both Kent and I found it fairly fast. It is moving! Within 10 minutes you can see a change in position easily. The mountain size rock is 7.6 million miles away and that is close by asteroid standards, hence the rapid movement against the night sky. Fun observation. Did I mention how fast it moves?

Mars...............What can I say? The occultation was just magnificent. I settled on a combination of 12mm Brandon and then switched to an 8mm Brandon as Mars came on to the limb of the full moon. The high contrast of the Brandon eyepieces gave a black background against the bright full moon. There were several unexpected observation both telescopic and naked eye. As the Moon approached Mars the planet seemed to become dimmer comparatively, when viewed with the naked eye. If you covered the full moon with your thumb, blocking it out, Mars seemed to increase in brightness and resume it's red color. Amazing visual effect. At 100x telescopically,? the disc of Mars was fair size so its ingress into the moon was quite a sight but the best was yet to come.

Waiting for Mars rise on the Moon, one hour later, watching the limb of the moon at power, was a nerve wracking experience. But as Mars rose over the lunar horizon it was like standing on the moon yourself, looking at the horizon, and seeing a magnificent Mars rise over the hills. No kidding. The color of Mars cannot be accurately described against the white surface of the moon. It was a burnt orange not to be forgotten. Additionally, the detail that was available on Mars was amazing. Due to the contrast of brightness of the moon it made everything on the red planet stand out clearly. I have never seen this effect before. I saw Mars as clearly as with a filter. This was totally unexpected. I must say it was profound and perhaps the finest experience in my half century of observing. That one you take to your grave. It was as if you were on the moon yourself at Mars rise. No camera can ever capture or do justice to the sight. Just can't be done. You had to be there.

We quit at 2230 after spending about three hours in the unmelted snow of Kent's back yard. Several others were over there to join us and share in a splendid night. The cold made it much like an expedition to another planet and added to the adventure. One for the books.


Tonight, along with the occultation of Mars by the Moon, it is a good chance to see a fast moving asteroid 887 Alinda

 

887 Alinda is currently making a close pass to earth. Normally 13th magnitude it is 9th during it's close pass. It moves quite quickly so motion should be obvious over a short period of time and it does not interfere with the Mars / Moon encounter.

Coordinates for the asteroid:

Time: 1931
Constellation Gemini
07 13 45 RA
+28 59 15 DEC

Time: 2051
Constellation Gemini
07 14 19 RA
+ 28 05 38

A good reference 9th magnitude star is HD55357 (SAO 1466777). Alinda is moving away from the star over time.


Re: Occultation of Mars

 

I am waiting for the Mars to be as big as the moon. That's the one I want to see. :)

On Monday, January 13, 2025 at 09:16:01 AM EST, Kent Blackwell via groups.io <kent@...> wrote:


Don't forget to look at the moon occult Mars tonight. There's quite a difference in size of the two. Not to mention the moon is some 12,000 time brighter. Here are a couple of rather crude, quick shots I took last night using a 120mm f/8 telescope and a simple DLSR.


Occultation of Mars

 

Don't forget to look at the moon occult Mars tonight. There's quite a difference in size of the two. Not to mention the moon is some 12,000 time brighter. Here are a couple of rather crude, quick shots I took last night using a 120mm f/8 telescope and a simple DLSR.


ALPO-JUPITER NTB bright spot

 

Clyde Foster and Manos Kardasis have just (Jan 10UT) imaged a bright spot in the NTBs jet region. This is likely the beginning of a major outbreak. John Rogers of the B.A.A. says, "We can expect it to become spectacular!"
?
It is brightest in the methane band, but should brighten in other wavelengths as it develops. It should create a dark turbulent wake in the next few days.
?
Initial position is SYS 1 longitude of 168 with a drift of around -5 degrees per day. (Note: the fast current travels at SYS 1 speed despite being at a latitude of around +26.)
?
All observers are encouraged to monitor Jupiter as much as possible. There should be several more outbreaks at other latitudes in the coming days.
?


Night Sky Network is back up

 

After being offline yesterday due to the California fire threat, the?Night Sky Network is back up and running.

George


George Reynolds

"Solar System Ambassador" for South Hampton Roads, Virginia
Back Bay Amateur Astronomers (BBAA)?


?


All these occultations this week would have been bad if we were in the 1100s

 

This many occultations in a week would have had us tied to the stake if we were in the 1100s.Emoji


Re: Moon in Pleiades

 

The only thing harder is correctly spelling the name of M-45!Emoji

On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 11:14:04 AM EST, jimcoble2000 via groups.io <jimcoble2000@...> wrote:


Ian that's a great shot. I doubt many know how hard it is to get both exposures anywhere in the ball park

On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 08:57:50 AM EST, Ian Stewart via groups.io <swampcolliecoffee@...> wrote:


Well a tough target with a bright moon and dim stars. Anyways here's my take at it.
Cheers
Ian


Occultation of the Pleiades

 

We had a cold but fun night with the moon going through the Pleiades giving us a life time of lunar stellar occultations. ? The first star, Electra,? was covered by the moon around 1947 or so. At 3.7 magnitude it was fairly easy to see against the bright moon. The limb of the moon could not be easily seen due to the moon phase. Only a thin strip of the lunar surface was in the dark. The best occultation was Maia at 3.9 magnitude. That was a grazing occultation that was the most spectacular. It rode the limb of the moon so close I could see it through the peaks. Every time I thought it would be gone it would peak out Just visible on the illuminated horizon of the north region on the moon. That was the best graze I have ever seen. A real cliff hanger.?
Alcyone was the last we watched as the moon went through the center of the cluster.

I used my 120 Stellarvue LOMO Doublet as it has incredible contrast. It is amazing how the human eye can handle contrast in light intensity far beyond what a camera can do as Kent said in his post. The choice of EP was the 40 mm Pentax giving quite a wide field at a bit less the 20 power. The entire cluster could be seen in one fov.? Big binoculars would have done well also. One nice thing was I was able to reverse my sliding counterweight to perfectly compensate for the heavy eyepiece and was able to balance the scope for effortless movement. Those huge eyepieces can be a problem there due to weight.?

We switched to Jupiter to see a shadow transit of Io and the moon Ganymede going behind the planet high in the polar region. That was quite good as a bonus.

Mars showed better surface albedo features than the past month but seeing somewhat hampered the steady view. Mare Boreum was obvious as was Acidalium, a dark feature hanging off Boreum. Detail though was a bit obscured by seeing.

34 degree temps did not dampen the spirits but did make the fingers pretty cold during assembly and disassembly of equipment. A really fun evening.


Re: Moon in Pleiades

 

Ian that's a great shot. I doubt many know how hard it is to get both exposures anywhere in the ball park

On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 08:57:50 AM EST, Ian Stewart via groups.io <swampcolliecoffee@...> wrote:


Well a tough target with a bright moon and dim stars. Anyways here's my take at it.
Cheers
Ian


Moon in Pleiades

 

Well a tough target with a bright moon and dim stars. Anyways here's my take at it.
Cheers
Ian