Difference between revisions of "April 9, 2011"

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<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[April 10, 2011|Sweet Rings]] </p>
 
<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[April 10, 2011|Sweet Rings]] </p>
 
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Revision as of 14:34, 8 February 2015

Panorama

LPOD-Apr9-11.jpg
image by Jocelyn Sérot

Have you had a chance to observe yet this lunation? I did Wednesday night, when it was clear and warm, and
the terminator was a little to the east of where it is in Jocelyn's image. I was trying out a 4.5" Orion Starblast
telescope to see if we should recommend it for schools that want to participate in our MoonGazers after
school activities. The telescope is cheap ($199) and has a dobsonian tabletop mount. My view was not quite
as sharp as this but was dramatic with Crisium appearing as a giant smooth patch interrupting the more rugged
terrain to either side. Cleomedes was visible as a smaller version of Crisium, suggesting that the two were the
same kind of feature. With a simple map it would be easy for a beginner to identify Endymion, Langrenus, and
the odd shaped Vendelinus. But the treat was Petavius, whose dark trench was just visible, but I don't think I
would have noticed it if I didn't know it was there. I like the view with this small telescope - it would offer many
opportunities for exploring the lunar surface for many months. And it is a great pick up and go scope for when
threatening clouds, shortness of time, or just laziness preclude setting up a more capable instrument. But in
fact, the Moon is captivating with almost any optical aid from opera glasses to Hubble Space Telescope.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details
Apr 7, 2011, 17h55 to 18h TU. Intes 6" MCT, prime focus, IR-pass filter, DMK 31. Processing: Registax V6 + Gimp. mosaic of 5 images.

Yesterday's LPOD: Stars & Moon

Tomorrow's LPOD: Sweet Rings



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