by alcor » Tue Mar 15, 2016 3:09 am
Nitpicker wrote:Ann wrote:Nitpicker wrote:Very impressive image of what I might otherwise have called an unremarkable little patch of sky. Indeed, I found it a bit tricky to locate and orient on a star map. North is to the right. The APOD is nestled North of the Hyades (off image to the left) and East of the Pleiades (off image below). The California nebula is roughly twice as far off image, to the North-West (below-right).
The brightest stars visible in the APOD are magnitude 4 to 5.
Teh California Nebula and the Pleiades.
Photo: Dick Locke.
Thanks, Nit.
The image at left shows both the Pleiades and the California Nebula, as well as a lot of dark nebulosity. Is the field imaged in today's APOD visible in the image by Dick Locke?
Ann
Edit: I take it back.
Here it is, quite close to Aldebaran in the Hyades, in an image by Rogelio Bernal Andreo which was the APOD of November 17, 2011.
Well, the APOD frame is just within the Locke image, but just outside the Andreo image. Here is my approximation of the APOD frame position, using Stellarium, with North up:
location_apod160314.PNG
You got it as right as it could be, as the first link in the explanation
http://www.astrobin.com/238942/ identifies three of the stars. The two bright stars half way down the left side is 72Tauri and Upsilon Tauri, while the bright star near lower right corner is Chi Tauri. North is thus toward right.
[quote="Nitpicker"][quote="Ann"][quote="Nitpicker"]Very impressive image of what I might otherwise have called an unremarkable little patch of sky. Indeed, I found it a bit tricky to locate and orient on a star map. North is to the right. The APOD is nestled North of the Hyades (off image to the left) and East of the Pleiades (off image below). The California nebula is roughly twice as far off image, to the North-West (below-right).
The brightest stars visible in the APOD are magnitude 4 to 5.[/quote]
[float=left][img2]http://www.dl-digital.com/images/Astronomy/Wide/M45California-Cropv2-30frames.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]Teh California Nebula and the Pleiades.
Photo: Dick Locke.[/size][/c][/float] Thanks, Nit.
The image at left shows both the Pleiades and the California Nebula, as well as a lot of dark nebulosity. Is the field imaged in today's APOD visible in the image by Dick Locke?
Ann
Edit: I take it back. [url=http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap111117.html]Here[/url] it is, quite close to Aldebaran in the Hyades, in an image by Rogelio Bernal Andreo which was the APOD of November 17, 2011.[/quote]
Well, the APOD frame is just within the Locke image, but just outside the Andreo image. Here is my approximation of the APOD frame position, using Stellarium, with North up:
[attachment=0]location_apod160314.PNG[/attachment][/quote]
You got it as right as it could be, as the first link in the explanation [url]http://www.astrobin.com/238942/[/url] identifies three of the stars. The two bright stars half way down the left side is 72Tauri and Upsilon Tauri, while the bright star near lower right corner is Chi Tauri. North is thus toward right.