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A City Dweller Report

Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2021 10:01 pm
by The Wave Catcher
I always take notes during my observing sessions and I don’t often share them here figuring too many city reports will bore people. I’m in Fort Worth, Texas a few blocks from a bright 24 hour pipe factory and a few miles from Amazon warehouses. All that said, I still enjoy my observing time immensely

Time: CDT (UTC-5)

2021-10-21
20:00-23:21

I brought my telescope out to take a look at Venus before it set. It was just above my neighbor’s shed. It was at 0.53 phase, gibbous but nearly a half phase, and about 10 degrees above the horizon, larger in apparent size than the last time I looked at it a few weeks ago. Atmospheric turbulence that low in the sky causes lots of color variations but overall it was sharp. With my small telescope unstable air tends to make entire planets move around instead distorting the planet itself.

I decided then to do some star hopping. I noted that Gaff’s Cluster should be in view and I don’t believe I’ve viewed it before so I decided to hop my way to it. I started with Altair since it was nice and bright and one of the few stars visible by eye in my Bortle 8 skies. From there I went to u Aquilae. I had two faint satellites cross my field of view from west to east. Then I hopped down to Deneb Okab while my neighbor turned on a blinding porch light 😞. Just above this star was an interesting string of faint magnitude ~8 stars, one of which is the eclipsing binary star system V1454 Aquilae. Though I looked at it very carefully, I could not detect a companion star. I went on down to the double star 23 Aquilae. Once again I could not split the stars even with the 5 mm eyepiece (91.8x). I moved west to 21 Aquilae and another satellite, NOAA 19, crossed my view. Went down to the globular cluster NGC 6760 and a bright, unknown satellite crossed my field of view. Unfortunately, with my city lights the cluster was at the “ESP” level of detection. In other words, I could only imagine it was there. I temporarily got lost in space after that but soon found myself at the double star HIP 94331. At magnitude 7.5, it got pretty faint with the 5 mm eyepiece and I could not see a companion. I then star hopped my way over to the beautiful triple star system Alya (Theta Serpentis). Two main stars were clearly visible even with my 25 mm eyepiece (18.36x). Both stars were white but the more easterly star was slightly bluer and just a very little bit dimmer. Before leaving the pair another satellite zoomed past the pair. I left Alya and hopped to another double star HIP 92027. These were a much fainter pair and very close though I could split them clearly with my 5 mm. Both were white/blue with the northern star being the brightest. I hopped from there to Graff’s cluster, which was the main target for the evening just in time before it went behind the trees! It was quite beautiful even my bright skies though i can only imagine how great it looks in dark skies.

Jupiter and Saturn had now moved out from behind the trees. I was able to see the usual multiple bands on Jupiter though no storms. 3 of the 4 Galilean moons were visible with Europa being hidden in front of Jupiter.

Saturn was nice and sharp with the moon Titan just above it. Saturn’s shadow was distinct against the rings. The Cassini Gap was just discernible as was a faint cloud band on Saturn’s surface.

I moved west from Saturn to the double star Alpha Capricorni. The pair were easily split and both were bluish white with the more westerly star about half as bright as the other.

Hopped over to the double stars, Omicron Capricorni (ο Capricorni), p Cap, and Okul (n Cap) and I couldn’t split any of them at maximum power (5 mm and 2X Barlow). The companions were likely within my telescope’s diffraction rings.

Turned to my east over my roof top and came across the double star HIP 10680. I could split it with low power at 25 mm and with the 5 mm I could tell that the more northern star was slightly brighter than the other. The colors were similar and mostly white. I would get a hint that one was bluer than the other but then my perception would switch. So the colors are inconclusive.

While scanning the eastern sky I came across the brilliant double star Mesarthim (Gamma Arietis) in the constellation Aries by accident with the 12 mm (38.25x) eyepiece. These are two identical white stars that with the 5 mm eyepiece look like a pair of eyes in the dark looking back at me.

The one day past full Moon came up over my rooftop. I took some good looks at it with my 12 and 5 mm eyepieces and decided then to call it a night.

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2021 10:20 pm
by John Donne
Thank you Steve for this excellent report.
👍👍👍
No problem with "city" reports on my account. 😊

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2021 10:23 pm
by notFritzArgelander
Thanks for your report. I didn't recognize Graff's cluster so I looked it up. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IC_4756

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2021 11:07 pm
by Thefatkitty
Nice Steve, and I hear you on the LP! You made some great observations; good for you :D

Thanks again and all the best,

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Fri Oct 22, 2021 11:19 pm
by Bigzmey
Nice binary/planetary session Steve! If anything we need more reports, so bring them on! :)

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Sat Oct 23, 2021 11:47 am
by John Baars
Excellent city dweller report!
As a fellow city dweller, I recommend your report for VROD!

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Sat Oct 23, 2021 1:42 pm
by helicon
Great report Steve and you achieved some wonderful views in a Bortle 8 zone. Just goes to show that there are more items to view than just planets and the moon from the city backyard. Congratulations on the well-deserved VROD for the day!

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Sat Oct 23, 2021 2:41 pm
by John Baars
Congratulations on the VROD!

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Sat Oct 23, 2021 3:46 pm
by Makuser
Hi Steve. A very nice observing report from you. And you are not alone as LP is a curse for most of us. You still managed some nice targets including planets, doubles, and the moon. Thanks for your well written report Steve and congratulations on receiving the TSS VROD Award today.

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Sat Oct 23, 2021 7:05 pm
by Ylem
Great report Steve and congratulations on the VROD!

I used observe from the top of a building in NYC, so I know what it's like.

I actually enjoy urban astronomy, it's fun pulling stuff out of the soup :)

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Sat Oct 23, 2021 10:11 pm
by John Donne
👍👍👍 VROD YESSS!
Congratulations.

Re: A City Dweller Report

Posted: Sun Oct 24, 2021 9:55 am
by Unitron48
Great session....and great star hopping! Thoroughly enjoyed the read. Congrats on the VROD!

Dave