by Case » Sat May 10, 2008 12:50 pm
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080510.html
Thanks to attending a public viewing night at a local community observatory yesterday, I could recognize today's APOD before reading the caption. Yesterday, Mars was a bit further away from Pollux and the waxing crescent Moon was close by.
While daily astro photos online are great, it doesn't beat stargazing from a rural location. Even if the air is a bit turbulent, blurring a telescopic image from time to time. Various amateurs brought their scopes with them, so attendants could see beyond their own binoculars, while waiting for a view through the bigger, fixed scope of the observatory.
I got to see phased Mercury before it went below the tree line, small and far away Mars, glorious Saturn, the M13 globular cluster, galaxy pair M65-M66 in the same view, the Ring Nebula, the double-double Epsilon Lyrae, magnified craters on the Moon near the shadow line, and a few more.
The local high pressure weather made last week cloudless, which doesn't happen here that often. I'm glad I did go, as I had a great time.
Sorry for being slightly off-topic, but an image like today's APOD fuels my enthusiasm for looking with my own eyes through a telescope, even if I don't own one myself.
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080510.html
Thanks to attending a public viewing night at a local community observatory yesterday, I could recognize today's APOD before reading the caption. Yesterday, Mars was a bit further away from Pollux and the waxing crescent Moon was close by.
While daily astro photos online are great, it doesn't beat stargazing from a rural location. Even if the air is a bit turbulent, blurring a telescopic image from time to time. Various amateurs brought their scopes with them, so attendants could see beyond their own binoculars, while waiting for a view through the bigger, fixed scope of the observatory.
I got to see phased Mercury before it went below the tree line, small and far away Mars, glorious Saturn, the M13 globular cluster, galaxy pair M65-M66 in the same view, the Ring Nebula, the double-double Epsilon Lyrae, magnified craters on the Moon near the shadow line, and a few more.
The local high pressure weather made last week cloudless, which doesn't happen here that often. I'm glad I did go, as I had a great time.
Sorry for being slightly off-topic, but an image like today's APOD fuels my enthusiasm for looking with my own eyes through a telescope, even if I don't own one myself.