[AZ-Observing] Re: Fred Lawrence Whipple Astronomy Day Star Party

  • From: "Jon Christensen" <jonc97@xxxxxxx>
  • To: <az-observing@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 20 Apr 2010 20:06:55 -0700

I was at the Overland Expo in Amado last weekend.  I would have liked to 
stop by if I had known about it.



Jon Christensen


----- Original Message ----- 
From: <Skylook123@xxxxxxx>
To: <az-observing@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, April 18, 2010 10:46 AM
Subject: [AZ-Observing] Fred Lawrence Whipple Astronomy Day Star Party


An observing report I also posted on the Cloudy Nights and TAAA astronomy
forums.
There was quite a large group of Tucson Amateur Astronomy  Association
(Tucson) and Sonora Astronomical Society (Green Valley) volunteers  gathered
last night at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory Visitor Center in 
Amado,
AZ at the base of Mt. Hopkins. The Smithsonian Institution'There was quite a
large group of Tucson Amateur Astronomy  As

_http://www.cfa.http://www.chttp://www.http://www.cfa.http_
(http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/facilities/flwo/starparty.html)

with  an open house, exhibits, planetarium shows, and lectures, and both
daytime and  night time observing.

I was supporting the evening activities. As the  afternoon progressed, the
weather looked mighty ugly, with white stratus  seemingly everywhere around
my Marana home. The telephone information number was  declaring that the
show was on, so I headed down about 4:30 even though the IR  satellite 
showed
white junk all the way to San Diego.

All the way down,  the sky was threatening to clear a bit, but still was a
bowl of milk when I got  to the visitor center. About a dozen daytime
volunteers had a variety of scopes  set up on the sun, a dim ball 
progressing
westward. I slowly set up the Atlas  near Jerry Farrar, and just did the 
social
thing without much hope of  clearing.

The social gathering with the Sonora club is always fun, as  with all
Arizona astronomy groups. Great group of people to circle up with. Just  for 
that
gathering I was glad I went down. At sunset, the Moon and Venus started
burning through, but dimly. I set my 10" on the Moon at about 100X, and it 
was
 nicely subdued. The three day moon was just enough to show the terminator
effects on the elevations and a nice contrast with one half showing a
couple of  very large, lava filled craters and the other half a collection 
of
small meteor  impacts and lunar mountains, like bubbling oatmeal. The 
passing
visitors (many  came for the lectures and planetarium shows) were all
interested in the  view.

I was getting crabby about the total lack of alignment stars in the  murky
sky when Sirius and Procyon started to peek through. Still nothing in the
rest of the sky until Saturn and Mars came dimly into view. I stayed on the
moon. Suddenly, about 7:45 PM, the sky magically opened up. In about 10
minutes  the total overcast disappeared! I went over to the Orion Nebula and 
had
a great  time with the visitors. There was a gap in the crowd so I did an
iterative polar  alignment and then a 2-star alignment. Made a mistake there
and used Sirius as  the second star. It was too low for accuracy and the
GOTOs were off for the rest  of the night.

When I was done with the alignment I went over to M51, The  Whirlpool,
which was a nice addition to the visitors' experience after the other
volunteers' views of the Moon, Saturn, and a variety of open clusters and 
other
items. It was fairly dim, but the spiral character of the main galaxy was
detectable. The 23 million light year distance impressed some folks as well. 
I
wasn't really happy with the dim view, however, so I went over to NGC3242,
The  Ghost of Jupiter. It was a nice, bright disk of a planetary nebula. I
spent the  rest of the session doing the stellar evolution story. The 9:30 
PM
shut down  time came far too soon!

So glad I changed my mind about staying home. It  only took about 10
minutes for the sky to go from totally obscured to clear. And  the crowd at 
the
FLWO open houses are always great to work with, very interested  in what 
they
see and in discussing the cosmology of the day. FLWO does a great  job with
the planetarium shows and outdoor lectures. And the TAAA and SAS  volunteers
are such an enjoyable gang to hang out with. All in all, a good time  was
had by all.

Jim O'Connor
South Rim Coordinator
Grand Canyon  Star Party


--
See message header for info on list archives or unsubscribing, and please
send personal replies to the author, not the list.

--
See message header for info on list archives or unsubscribing, and please 
send personal replies to the author, not the list.

Other related posts: