Ursa Major, The Big Dipper, The Plough

On a clear night over my head in my garden I can clearly make out one of the major and probably most well known constellations, Ursa Major, one section of this is The Big Dipper or in the UK it’s also called The Plough.

Seven of the brightest stars, which are located in Ursa Major or the The Great Bear’s hindquarters and tail, form the big dipper.

I took the following photo last night using just my simple Canon IXUS500 camera with a setting of landscape/infinity focus together with a high ISO and a tungsten effect. I then had to import the image into Macromedia Fireworks in order to alter the brightness and contrast settings in order to get any sort of image out.

Big Dipper, The Plough

The image is not brilliant but if in the following image I overlay a line between the stars you can more clearly see the big dipper, or click on the image to see the full size.

Line Drawing Overlay of Big Dipper

I am looking forward to perhaps purchasing a decent SLR camera and trying that on the nights sky, perhaps a Canon EOS 350D, we will have to see.

After looking up Ursa Major I was amazed to find that M97, M108 and M109 are very close by, so next time I am out I shall have to remember to look out for them and report back.

Astrophysicists find coldest solitary brown dwarf

Astrophysicists have found a star-like object with a surface temperature just one tenth that of the Sun.

The cold object is known as a brown dwarf: a “failed” star that never achieved the mass required to begin nuclear fusion reactions in its core.

Artist's impression of a brown dwarf (Nasa)

This one – called J0034-00 – is thought to have a surface temperature of just 600-700 Kelvin (up to 430C/800F).

It is the coldest solitary brown dwarf ever seen, according to the British team that discovered it.

This find further tests the boundary between high-mass gas planets, like Jupiter, and the smallest brown dwarfs.

‘Needle in a haystack’

“Physically, stars, brown dwarfs and the gas planets are all the same thing – they’re just blobs of gas with different mass,” said Dr Steve Warren, of Imperial College London, who led the project.

“And as this work progresses, we’re going to start finding things between the stars which have the masses of planets, and what are we going to call them?”

The brown dwarf was first spotted by his colleague Dr Daniel Mortlock.

“Identifying an object like J0034-00 is a more challenging version of finding a needle in a haystack,” he said.

“In this case it was like looking for a piece of slightly reddish straw rather than a nice shiny needle.”

J0034-00

J0034-00 is the greenish object near the bottom

J0034-00, found in the constellation of Cetus, is a relative lightweight.

It has a mass of just 15-30 times that of Jupiter and a similar diameter.

It was spotted in the early stages of the world’s deepest ever near-infrared sky survey – using the UKIRT telescope in Hawaii.

Using four filters, the telescope produces 2,000 images a night – a vast amount of material to sift through.

The reason for the filters is to get an idea of the colour of objects in the sky.

‘Billion times nearer’

Dr Mortlock had been looking for distant quasars when he found the brown dwarf.

“One of the interesting objects that turned up there didn’t have quite the right colours for a quasar, and that was J0034-00,” he said.

“The peculiar thing was it was a billion times nearer than the quasars we were actually looking for, and it looks almost identical in terms of the colours,” added Dr Warren.

More observations, made at the Gemini South Telescope in Chile, were needed to work out its temperature and likely mass.

It is still too early to say exactly how far away it is from Earth, but the research team believes it could be about 50 light-years.

And that is not so far, compared with the distance from some of the stars that can be seen with the naked eye.

Jupiter My First Sighting

Due to the number of houses around my small garden it has been hard to find some of the planets which only rise a little over the horizon, as a lot of the time I just cannot see them. But on Friday 1st June I actually managed to get my first sighting of Jupiter.

Using my K9 lens I could just make out the markings and bandings across the planet, I also tried then using my 2x barlow lens with it, but I could not make out much more detail. I think my next pruchase will have to be a good quality barlow lens and a 4x or 5x lens to try and improve my night viewings.

Jupiter

Anyway, I was also amazed to make out three stars in a horizontal line around Jupiter, after looking this up in the Collins Skywatching Book (ISBN 0002200287) they are in fact the Galilean Moons of Jupiter, of which there are actually four moons, but sometimes you cannot make out all four moons as one may be in front of Jupiter.

Jupiters Moons

My First Saturn & YouTube Video

Having failed to get any decent pictures of Saturn so far, I decided to try and take video of it instead. I ended up using my Nokia 6320 phone to take the video, which is not the best gadget to use for video admittedly, plus I was indoors, again not a good idea as I think some of the focus may have been on the actual window.

I then decided to add it to YouTube, I already have a YouTube account, so I uploaded my first video. The video files comes off of my Nokia in 3gpp files, I used Apples QuickTime Pro 7 in order to cut he video and re-save it as a .mov file, which was then uploaded to YouTube.

It’s only after I uploaded my not so great video that I saw a whole host of really good images and videos on YouTube by other astronomers, and I hope to put some of my favourite astronomy videos from YouTube on the blog soon.

Full Moon in May

At last I managed to get outside last night, after what seems like weeks of constant rain and cloudy skies.

I managed to take some more photos of the full moon, my first visible in my telescope. I was amazed at the sharpness and crispness of the view of the moon through my Meade Bresser 130N telescope. The most interesting sight was the crusty type of craters at the edges of the moon, which made the moon look really 3D through the eyepiece.

Full Moon 1

I am still getting blurry images of the moon, but that must be due to the constant movement, or just because I am holding the camera up to the lens as opposed to having it fixed to the telescope.

I included the image below as I liked the colour it gave the moon, the image was really a mistake as I took the photo on auto on the camera and it left the flash on.

Full Moon in May 2

Blurry Saturn

The first night I ever used my telescope I found Saturn without any help at all and the feeling was amazing, so was finding out how fast that it went out of view.

I tried taking a photo of it, but below is all I got, a blurry picture. I shall have to try again the next time the conditions are improved.

Blurry Saturn

You can just about make out the rings, but I was expecting some more magnification and some clearer pictures, hopefully as I learn more I should get some better pictures – watch this space.

Shooting the Moon 22/05/2007

I am trying to conquer taking pictures of the moon first. I have tried taking pictures using my Canon IXUS 500 by just positioning the camera up against the lens of the telescope. I have also tried using my 2 megapixel Nokia mobile with a little less success. But hey it’s a cheap way of taking photos!

Moon Moon

The first photo above shows a greater shadow, with more grey and more definition, I think that is coming from not lining up the camera lens exactly with the telescope lens, whereas the second photo is an exact shot.

I am looking forward to trying a webcam adaptor with my logitech webcam if it will fit and then taking some video and trying out some of the astronomy freeware software to manipulate the images.

I am finding the moon amazing, especially the way that as the moon gets fuller how much brighter it becomes, nearly blinding! I think I also need to get myself a moon filter to take away the brightness.

Shooting The Moon 20/05/2007

These are my first ever photos of the moon, which appears to be in one of it’s early phases.

What an amazing site, seeing the moon for the first time up close from your own telescope. The clarity of the moon in the eyepiece is very good. I could stare at it for ages and ages.

Moon Moon

Meade Bresser Messier 130N

After many months of being interested in telescopes and looking at various websites including ebay and other telescope retailers, I discovered that I live very close to the new location of Scopes N Skies showroom and warehouse.

After a couple of hours discussion with the team I decided to purchase a Meade Bresser Messier 130N Telescope. I originally thought I would come home with a Meade ETX80 with the autostar system, where the computer does all the work, but after finding out more, I instead went for a manual telescope.

When collecting the Meade Bresser Messier 130N I could not believe that it came in two boxes, one for the mount and one for the telescope itself. Now my girlfriend was going to be shocked that I had purchased another hobby item that is very large and takes up a lot of room, especially as one of my other hobbies is playing the drums.

Anyway it’s my first telescope and taking some time to get used to, but as the weather has been so bad lately I have only been outside once, but have decided in the last few nights to use it from a spare bedroom window on the moon.

Welcome to my Astronomy Blog

This is my new blog about Astronomy, a subject which is now one of my many new hobbies. I hope to update this blog on at least a monthly basis, but that depends upon the weather.

I hope to review some equipment, show off my telescope images, review astronomy books and much more and generally keep my own digital astronomy log/diary.

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