How To Observe Sirius B
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
Tony.
Smart Scope: Dwarf II - Club and outreach work.
AP Refractor: Altair 72EDF Deluxe F6;1x & 0.8 Flatteners; Antares Versascope 60mm finder. ASIAir Pro.Li battery pack for grab & go.
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Latitude: 52.219853
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- Lady Fraktor Online
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
https://www.dropbox.com/s/uhzf3p00xsfou ... b.jpg?dl=0
See Far Sticks: Elita 103/1575, AOM FLT 105/1000, Bresser 127/1200 BV, Nočný stopár 152/1200, Vyrobené doma 70/700, Stellarvue NHNG DX 80/552, TAL RS 100/1000, Vixen SD115s/885
EQ: TAL MT-1, Vixen SXP, SXP2, AXJ, AXD
Az/Alt: AYO Digi II, Stellarvue M2C, Argo Navis encoders on both
Tripods: Berlebach Planet (2), Uni 28 Astro, Report 372, TAL factory maple, Vixen ASG-CB90, Vixen AXD-TR102
Diagonals: Astro-Physics, Baader Amici, Baader Herschel, iStar Blue, Stellarvue DX, Tak prism, TAL, Vixen
Eyepieces: Antares to Zeiss (1000101)
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- dagadget
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
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Home Made 8 inch Newtonian Reflector on Rocker Box AKA Scopezilla
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
No good deed goes unpunished.
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
Refractors: ES AR152 f/6.5 Achromat on Twilight II, Celestron 102mm XLT f/9.8 on Celestron Heavy Duty Alt Az mount, KOWA 90mm spotting scope
Binoculars: Celestron SkyMaster 15x70, Bushnell 10x50
Eyepieces: Various, GSO Superview, 9mm Plossl, Celestron 25mm Plossl
Camera: ZWO ASI 120
Naked Eye: Two Eyeballs
Latitude: 48.7229° N
- Arctic
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
Scopes: Meade LX10 8" SCT, Explore Scientific AR102 Refractor on ES Twilight 1 Mount, Oberwerks 15X70 Binos, Nikon Action Extreme 10X50 Binos.
Eyepieces: ES 68* 24mm, ES 68* 20mm, ES 82* 11mm, ES 82* 8.8mm
Observing: Messier Objects--110/110, H1 Objects-- 400/400. Hundreds of additional NGC Objects. Significant Comets: Kohoutek, West, Halley, Hyakatake, Hale-Bopp, McNair, Neowise. Transits of Mercury and Venus.
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
Its ENE? (Upper left)
In a reflector it’s WSW? (Lower right)
And of course really close to main star.
Dad Joke King (ask my kids); Cereal killer
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- Lady Fraktor Online
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
I am at 48.25N and can see it, give a try
See Far Sticks: Elita 103/1575, AOM FLT 105/1000, Bresser 127/1200 BV, Nočný stopár 152/1200, Vyrobené doma 70/700, Stellarvue NHNG DX 80/552, TAL RS 100/1000, Vixen SD115s/885
EQ: TAL MT-1, Vixen SXP, SXP2, AXJ, AXD
Az/Alt: AYO Digi II, Stellarvue M2C, Argo Navis encoders on both
Tripods: Berlebach Planet (2), Uni 28 Astro, Report 372, TAL factory maple, Vixen ASG-CB90, Vixen AXD-TR102
Diagonals: Astro-Physics, Baader Amici, Baader Herschel, iStar Blue, Stellarvue DX, Tak prism, TAL, Vixen
Eyepieces: Antares to Zeiss (1000101)
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- John Baars Online
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
Yes, look at #8 and #22, where it is sketched and mapped in the right position.
GrabnGo on Alt/AZ : *SW Startravel 102 F/5 refractor( widefield, Sun, push-to), *OMC140 Maksutov F/14.3 ( planets).
Most used Eyepieces: *Panoptic 24, *Morpheus 14, *Leica ASPH zoom, *Zeiss barlow, *Pentax XO5.
Commonly used bino's : *Jena 10X50 , * Canon 10X30 IS, *Swarovski Habicht 7X42, * Celestron 15X70, *Kasai 2.3X40
Rijswijk Public Observatory: * Astro-Physics Starfire 130 f/8, * 6 inch Newton, * C9.25, * Meade 14 inch LX600 ACF, *Lunt.
Amateur astronomer since 1970.
- John Baars Online
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
I am afraid that just a single try won't be enough. A persistent pursuit is more likely to be succesfull. :smile: At least in my case it was.
From my 52N location I have seen it only several times in 9 years time. But I always kept remembering myself I did it for fun, though.
Maybe you are more lucky!
GrabnGo on Alt/AZ : *SW Startravel 102 F/5 refractor( widefield, Sun, push-to), *OMC140 Maksutov F/14.3 ( planets).
Most used Eyepieces: *Panoptic 24, *Morpheus 14, *Leica ASPH zoom, *Zeiss barlow, *Pentax XO5.
Commonly used bino's : *Jena 10X50 , * Canon 10X30 IS, *Swarovski Habicht 7X42, * Celestron 15X70, *Kasai 2.3X40
Rijswijk Public Observatory: * Astro-Physics Starfire 130 f/8, * 6 inch Newton, * C9.25, * Meade 14 inch LX600 ACF, *Lunt.
Amateur astronomer since 1970.
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
- notFritzArgelander
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
https://skyandtelescope.org/observing/c ... in-200708/
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
Very, very interesting...notFritzArgelander wrote: ↑Thu Dec 03, 2020 10:32 pm If you are having trouble, try this trick, an occulting bar eyepiece.
https://skyandtelescope.org/observing/c ... in-200708/
Dad Joke King (ask my kids); Cereal killer
Orion Skyview pro 8 f5.
Binos: Polaris/wingspan 8x42 Ed/HD
- notFritzArgelander
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
The only time I saw Sirius B was about 50 years ago using an occulting bar eyepiece and on the instrument that discovered it, an 18.5” Clark refractor. I’m likely to try again ASAP.Shabadoo wrote: ↑Fri Dec 04, 2020 3:29 pmVery, very interesting...notFritzArgelander wrote: ↑Thu Dec 03, 2020 10:32 pm If you are having trouble, try this trick, an occulting bar eyepiece.
https://skyandtelescope.org/observing/c ... in-200708/
- notFritzArgelander
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
notFritzArgelander wrote: ↑Thu Dec 03, 2020 10:32 pm If you are having trouble, try this trick, an occulting bar eyepiece.
https://skyandtelescope.org/observing/c ... in-200708/
- dagadget
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
Celestron C11 Carbon Fiber CGEM II Mount AKA Cloudzilla
Sky Watcher Mak Cas 180 Ioptron IEQ 30 AKA MoonZilla
AT 92 on IEQ 30 Pro AKA ClusterZilla
Home Made 8 inch Newtonian Reflector on Rocker Box AKA Scopezilla
Celestron 4 1/2 114 mm Newtonian Telescope 910 F/L GT Mount AKA Frankenscope.
David
- John Baars Online
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Re: How To Observe Sirius B
Furthermore excellent seeing, excellent transparency, which means extreme much luck.
And excellent patience
GrabnGo on Alt/AZ : *SW Startravel 102 F/5 refractor( widefield, Sun, push-to), *OMC140 Maksutov F/14.3 ( planets).
Most used Eyepieces: *Panoptic 24, *Morpheus 14, *Leica ASPH zoom, *Zeiss barlow, *Pentax XO5.
Commonly used bino's : *Jena 10X50 , * Canon 10X30 IS, *Swarovski Habicht 7X42, * Celestron 15X70, *Kasai 2.3X40
Rijswijk Public Observatory: * Astro-Physics Starfire 130 f/8, * 6 inch Newton, * C9.25, * Meade 14 inch LX600 ACF, *Lunt.
Amateur astronomer since 1970.
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