by Case » Sun Oct 14, 2007 4:55 pm
Phil G wrote:If I could see them through my scope, where would I see 47Tuc?
You would have to travel far south (like Chile) to even see it, because the SMC stays below the horizon from Florida.
There is no correct position,
as the night sky rotates. "A bit
above this nebula" just after sunset, becomes "a bit
below this nebula" just before sunrise.
However, in
Chile in October, the SMC is at it highest point in the sky around 1 a.m., and then 47 Tuc would be to the right.
[quote="Phil G"]If I could see them through my scope, where would I see 47Tuc?[/quote]
You would have to travel far south (like Chile) to even see it, because the SMC stays below the horizon from Florida.
There is no correct position, [url=http://img164.imageshack.us/img164/8515/rotatingnightskysj6.jpg]as the night sky rotates.[/url] "A bit [i]above[/i] this nebula" just after sunset, becomes "a bit [i]below[/i] this nebula" just before sunrise.
However, in [url=http://tinyurl.com/2s6zgb]Chile[/url] in October, the SMC is at it highest point in the sky around 1 a.m., and then 47 Tuc would be to the right.
[img]http://img228.imageshack.us/img228/3262/smcphotoorientationhb6.png[/img]