Friday, September 14, 2007

Orion Surprise


I left for work early today, around 6:30AM. The sun hadn't come up yet, but most of the sky was covered in a thin layer of clouds. As I went to my car, I happened to glance up at the southern sky. There was Orion, perfectly placed in my view. Orion is my favorite constellation - easy to find, bright stars of various colors, and nebulas visible to the naked eye. I happened to have my 10x50s handy in the car, so I picked them up for a quick look at the sword and M42. Great stuff!

As I drove into Pittsburgh, the sun started to rise, and the colors of the sky were amazing. I love fall in PA.

Can't wait for winter, when the hunter is more visible and skies are more dry and calm (I hope!)

Clear skies,
Todd

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Training at Mingo Creek Observatory

I was very excited and honored to be part of the first training class at the Mingo Creek Observatory over the weekend. Who knew the hobby would bite me so hard? :)

During the training, I learned the ins and outs of opening and using the observatory, and got some hands on training with the two massive scopes there (24" GoTo reflector, 10" refractor). The 24 has the new StellaCam3, a CCD camera which offers some pretty dang impressive views of DSOs through just the attached 5" refractor. I can only imagine what a larger scope can do. The 10" is a beauty - just a massive scope on an equally massive steel and aluminum EQ mount, all set on a pier. You have to really shove it to get it moving...it's fun :)

I stayed over the dinner break and watched part of the new Timothy Ferris PBS special "Seeing in the Dark". I will TiVo it later this month when it comes on. Great stuff for amateurs like myself. Who knew former Viking's running back Robert Smith was an avid skywatcher? Cool!

After dinner I did some more hands-on stuff and watched as the StellaCam3 was put into action. With a 30-second exposure we were able to see the central star in the Ring Nebula, and the nebula itself was bright and well formed.

I called it a night at 9PM so that I could spend some time with my wife - I'd been out for almost 6 hours at that point. The night was mostly cloudy, and the south was a complete washout with clouds and smoke from some concert's fireworks. I'll go back next week (now that I'm cleared to use the Observatory!) when my brother is in town.

Thanks to all of the AAAP members who helped with the training - it was a blast, and again, I am honored to be a part of the keyholder team. The picture below, from member Al Paslow's site, is the newly trained team. I'm the goof in the jeans, sunglasses and Firefly "Blue Sun" t-shirt.



Best,
Todd