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I thought the occultation of Jupiter by the Moon a while back was very impressive in binoculars;
when it was half obscured, Jupiter looked like a gigantic artificial dome on the surface of the Moon itself.
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New Orion's Arm Site . The Starlark . Against a Diamond Sky (OA Novella Collection) . OA Flickr set |
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| pulsar4529 |
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This message has been deleted by pulsar4529.
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a full years ago, i was out in my driveway with my telescope (yea i know...driveway..its the only area where i clear that isnt all trees!) and it was a full moon...that was cool ,but next to the moon i saw this star, it looked misshapen, so i aimed my telescope at it. What was it? Why, it was Saturn!! my dad was like..what is that? and i was standing there like....im seeing saturn! The rings gave it away totally! even though it was solid white i dunno why though! :-k
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What does it mean the right one? The love of your life, The concept is absurd, the idea that we can only be complete with another person is ...evil,right? |
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I don't have much time to really think about it, so this is the coolest thing I've seen in the last two days.
Thursday night I was out on my roof doing some binocular observing. I found a sattelite, probably Mag 5 or 6 (not naked eye in my skies), that started up in Aquila, and proceded into Scutum. It passed within a degree of M11 (Wild Duck Cluster) and then proceded into Sagittarius, apparently the "local" for a decent number of the M-objects in that region. While still tracking it the following passed through the field of view:M17, M18, M24, M20, and M8. Quite a pleasant trip. I tried heavens-above but couldn't find a satellite listed that matched that path. |
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Naked eye - 1966 Leonids
Forget meteors/hour. This was meteors/second!!!!!!!!!!!!Binoculars - M33. I've seen it with 7x35s from Minnesota, but have yet to find it from Texas with 10x50s. Telescope - Sirius B. 12" f/15 refractor at 500X
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Any day you wake up on "the right side of the dirt" is a good day. T. Anderson |
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I saw a great fireball, on a parallel course with the ground, across the Texas desert night sky, while driving to the Mardi-gras from Los Angeles. That was really cool. Seeing the really really long tail on Hale-Bopp when we got away from the city lights was a pleasant surprise.
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~~ ><>><> ~~ ><,,> ><,,> ...`;=;p d;=;' /\/\^/\ ^^ ^/\/\_ Democracy Now! - The lost art of investigative news reporting. |
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1) The Milky Way et al. from the Australian outback!
2) Jupiter from a scope "big" enough to see bands and the Great [not so]Red [anymore] Spot.
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"As I lay beneath the Southern Cross, the stars tell more than I could" . . . David Meece |
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The best things I've ever seen would probably be the first time I saw saturn's rings or the first time I saw surface detail on mars or the first time I saw the Milky Way with my naked eye in its best.
skyglow1 |
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The first time I saw Saturn with my small scope, and the first time I saw Jupiter throught an 8-inch scope all fall into my favorite moments.
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We've got a five dollar fine, for whining: Chris Ledoux |
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Definitely Comet Hyakutake
I was following that thing when you still needed a telescope to see it in the early morning sky and then we had a week of bad weather. Finally it was clear again one morning. I grab a small refractor and walk out my back door which faced south, pluncked the tripod on the ground, swung the telescope around to the west where I knew Hyakutake was going to be looked up and reflexively said "Oh - my - god." It was incredible! Bright, long beautiful tail. It's pretty hard to put into words. The only shame of it was that the Moon washed it out as it moved through the northern circumpolar portions of the sky. ![]() |
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A tremendous aurora seen in Maine in the summer of (I think) 1973. It filled more than half of the sky; some of it was actually south of us.
Another nice site from the coast of Maine was Jupiter rising, so bright that it was reflected on the ocean. |
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Our sentimental favorite.
The total eclipse of the moon on September 27, 1996 (evening of September 26 in eastern US), with Saturn nearby. The night we got engaged to be married. And yes, it was a naked eye event. edited to correct year (oops) |
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ahh...i see! i was going to say the same thing Canuck. the one this year isn't until the first week of November. i think it's the 8th if i'm not mistaken.
i'll finally show a picture of myself (ok ok...the real thing. you humans and your technicalities... :roll: in any case i promise a great show. 8) ![]()
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None to speak of |
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Too numerous to count...
"Green rippling silk' aurora...'searchlight beam' white aurora...just plain blue glow aurora...faint red glow aurora...first time viewing rings of Saturn...my first finding of the Andromeda Galaxy...numerous detail-filled views of the Moon...the Owl...the Coat Hanger...the double-double in Lyra...satellite passes, Mk I Mod 0 eyeball or with magnification... It doesn't matter whether it's new, or I've seen it a hundred times...doesn't matter whether naked eye or with magnification...every time I look at the sky, it's always beautiful, and the heavy odds are I'll learn something... Part of my spiel when the public comes by The Big Scope: "What you're seeing didn't just happen. Light takes time to get here. You could be looking back in time at what happened millions of years ago. This is as close to time travel as humanity will ever get, and by looking through the telescope you are now officially Time Travelers." I think this hobby has greater potential for personal satisfaction than any other one I've had.
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"If a tree is cut down in the rainforest, and is used to make paper to print a book, and the book is really bad, and there's nobody that will read it, do you still hear a sucking sound?" Charlie in Dayton, A.AsC. |
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Gethen wrote:
Quote:
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