Globular Clusters And Telescopes?
-
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 1493
- Joined: Sun May 12, 2019 1:05 am
- 5
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
Globular Clusters And Telescopes?
- Bigzmey Online
- Moderator
- Articles: 8
- Posts: 7805
- Joined: Sat May 11, 2019 7:55 pm
- 5
- Location: San Diego, CA USA
- Status:
Online
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Globular Clusters And Telescopes?
Mounts: SW: SkyTee2, AzGTi; iOptron: AZMP; ES: Twilight I; Bresser: EXOS2; UA: MicroStar.
Binos: APM: 100-90 APO; Canon: IS 15x50; Orion: Binoviewer, LG II 15x70, WV 10x50, Nikon: AE 16x50, 10x50, 8x40.
EPs: Pentax: XWs & XFs; TeleVue: Delites, Delos, Panoptic & Plossls; ES: 68, 62; Vixen: SLVs; Baader: BCOs, Aspherics, Mark IV.
Diagonals: Baader: BBHS mirror, Zeiss Spec T2 prism, Clicklock dielectric; TeleVue: Evebrite dielectric; AltairAstro: 2" prism.
Filters: Lumicon: DeepSky, UHC, OIII, H-beta; Baader: Moon & SkyGlow, Contrast Booster, UHC-S, 6-color set; Astronomik: UHC.
Solar: HA: Lunt 50mm single stack, W/L: Meade Herschel wedge.
Observing: DSOs: 3122 (Completed: Messier, Herschel 1, 2, 3. In progress: H2,500: 2196, S110: 77). Doubles: 2461, Comets: 34, Asteroids: 261
- notFritzArgelander
- In Memory
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 14925
- Joined: Fri May 10, 2019 4:13 pm
- 5
- Location: Idaho US
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Globular Clusters And Telescopes?
What he said!
I start to get happy with globs at 8" of
- Bigzmey Online
- Moderator
- Articles: 8
- Posts: 7805
- Joined: Sat May 11, 2019 7:55 pm
- 5
- Location: San Diego, CA USA
- Status:
Online
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Globular Clusters And Telescopes?
But if you have a chance to look at them through several scopes side-by-side the difference is quite clear. Unresolved cotton ball in smaller scopes becomes a giant swarm of stars, resolved to the core. This is were I take larger
Mounts: SW: SkyTee2, AzGTi; iOptron: AZMP; ES: Twilight I; Bresser: EXOS2; UA: MicroStar.
Binos: APM: 100-90 APO; Canon: IS 15x50; Orion: Binoviewer, LG II 15x70, WV 10x50, Nikon: AE 16x50, 10x50, 8x40.
EPs: Pentax: XWs & XFs; TeleVue: Delites, Delos, Panoptic & Plossls; ES: 68, 62; Vixen: SLVs; Baader: BCOs, Aspherics, Mark IV.
Diagonals: Baader: BBHS mirror, Zeiss Spec T2 prism, Clicklock dielectric; TeleVue: Evebrite dielectric; AltairAstro: 2" prism.
Filters: Lumicon: DeepSky, UHC, OIII, H-beta; Baader: Moon & SkyGlow, Contrast Booster, UHC-S, 6-color set; Astronomik: UHC.
Solar: HA: Lunt 50mm single stack, W/L: Meade Herschel wedge.
Observing: DSOs: 3122 (Completed: Messier, Herschel 1, 2, 3. In progress: H2,500: 2196, S110: 77). Doubles: 2461, Comets: 34, Asteroids: 261
-
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 1493
- Joined: Sun May 12, 2019 1:05 am
- 5
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
- Bigzmey Online
- Moderator
- Articles: 8
- Posts: 7805
- Joined: Sat May 11, 2019 7:55 pm
- 5
- Location: San Diego, CA USA
- Status:
Online
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Globular Clusters And Telescopes?
Mounts: SW: SkyTee2, AzGTi; iOptron: AZMP; ES: Twilight I; Bresser: EXOS2; UA: MicroStar.
Binos: APM: 100-90 APO; Canon: IS 15x50; Orion: Binoviewer, LG II 15x70, WV 10x50, Nikon: AE 16x50, 10x50, 8x40.
EPs: Pentax: XWs & XFs; TeleVue: Delites, Delos, Panoptic & Plossls; ES: 68, 62; Vixen: SLVs; Baader: BCOs, Aspherics, Mark IV.
Diagonals: Baader: BBHS mirror, Zeiss Spec T2 prism, Clicklock dielectric; TeleVue: Evebrite dielectric; AltairAstro: 2" prism.
Filters: Lumicon: DeepSky, UHC, OIII, H-beta; Baader: Moon & SkyGlow, Contrast Booster, UHC-S, 6-color set; Astronomik: UHC.
Solar: HA: Lunt 50mm single stack, W/L: Meade Herschel wedge.
Observing: DSOs: 3122 (Completed: Messier, Herschel 1, 2, 3. In progress: H2,500: 2196, S110: 77). Doubles: 2461, Comets: 34, Asteroids: 261
- avid.astronomer
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 153
- Joined: Thu Apr 25, 2019 2:55 am
- 5
- Location: College Station, TX
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
TSS Photo of the Day
Re: Globular Clusters And Telescopes?
SCOPES: Sky-Watcher 300p f/4.9, Discovery DHQ-8 f/6, Meade DS-2080AT 80 f/10, Meade AS80 f/5
BINOS: 10x50, 16x50, 10x70
1,124 Observations, 603 Objects (97 Glxy, 185 OC, 58 GC, 17 Neb, 39 PN, 171 Dbl)
AL Awards: Messier, Double Star, Bino Messier, Planetary Transit
- pakarinen
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 4049
- Joined: Fri Jun 14, 2019 3:33 pm
- 4
- Location: NE Illinois
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Globular Clusters And Telescopes?
Hmmm. Methinks somebody co-opted the 1-m at LARC...notFritzArgelander wrote: ↑Fri Jun 05, 2020 10:36 pm However one of the most stunning visual astronomy experiences I had was with a 1 meter RC at 600x.
Man... That's some icky-tasting stuff!
=============================================================================
AT50, AT72EDII, ST80, ST102; Scopetech Zero, AZ-GTi, AZ Pronto; Innorel RT90C, Oberwerk 5000; Orion Giantview 15x70s, Vortex 8x42s, Navy surplus 7x50s, Nikon 10x50s
- pakarinen
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 4049
- Joined: Fri Jun 14, 2019 3:33 pm
- 4
- Location: NE Illinois
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Globular Clusters And Telescopes?
Why would you want an old Volvo?
Man... That's some icky-tasting stuff!
=============================================================================
AT50, AT72EDII, ST80, ST102; Scopetech Zero, AZ-GTi, AZ Pronto; Innorel RT90C, Oberwerk 5000; Orion Giantview 15x70s, Vortex 8x42s, Navy surplus 7x50s, Nikon 10x50s
- notFritzArgelander
- In Memory
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 14925
- Joined: Fri May 10, 2019 4:13 pm
- 5
- Location: Idaho US
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Globular Clusters And Telescopes?
I was asked to perform observations that evening by Hynek. He had a social function and so did other more senior students. So I was it. The image intensifying eyepiece that showed green phosphors was, by my great good fortune, OFF the Cassegrain spectrograph. A regular eyepiece was in place. So in between taking spectra of the designated research target according to the required schedule I took breaks looking at pretty things, It was the most satisfactory visual astronomy experience I had. M13, M57 and Saturn in the intervals. Talk about color saturation!pakarinen wrote: ↑Sat Jun 06, 2020 10:03 pmHmmm. Methinks somebody co-opted the 1-m at LARC...notFritzArgelander wrote: ↑Fri Jun 05, 2020 10:36 pm However one of the most stunning visual astronomy experiences I had was with a 1 meter RC at 600x.
Create an account or sign in to join the discussion
You need to be a member in order to post a reply
Create an account
Not a member? register to join our community
Members can start their own topics & subscribe to topics
It’s free and only takes a minute