[AZ-Observing] Re: Grand Canyon Star Party - DAY SEVEN - The Good Time s ...

  • From: Skylook123@xxxxxxx
  • To: az-observing@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 27 Jun 2011 22:20:29 -0400 (EDT)

You got that right, Wayne; I've been dyin' since we got back last  night.  
Can't seem to win - highs in the 80s, lows in the 40's, winds up to  50, or 
calm like my broiler.
 
Sigh...
Jim  O'Connor
South Rim Coordinator
Grand Canyon Star Party
Grand Canyon  Cell Phone: 520-405-6551
gcsp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

In a message dated 6/25/2011 6:23:57 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,  
mrgalaxy@xxxxxxxx writes:

15480  Empire Rd.
Benson, AZ 85602
hm ph: 520-586-2244

Great daily  reporting on the GCSP event on the South Rim, Jim. What 
happened on the North  Rim? It's been all quiet on the northern front for that 
part of the  event.

All of you would probably like to stay up in the moderate  weather for 
another week. It's been hotter than Heeter in and around the Old  Pueblo area 
and only promises to get worse according to the  forecast...

The nights here have been pleasant: mild and clear with  some good seeing. 
Despite the presence of some smoke from the local fires, the  SN in M51 
stood out wonderfully in my 25-inch last night, easily the brightest  of the 3 
(or 4, depending on your aperture!) stars in a line across the face  of the 
main galaxy. 

Clear skies, 
Wayne (aka Mr.  Galaxy)


---------- Original Message ----------
From:  Skylook123@xxxxxxx
To: az-observing@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject:  [AZ-Observing] Grand Canyon Star Party - DAY SEVEN - The Good 
Times  Continue
Date: Sat, 25 Jun 2011 20:25:50 -0400 (EDT)

Grand Canyon  Star Party - DAY SEVEN - The Good Times Continue 

Location: Grand  Canyon Visitor Center, South Rim of Grand Canyon, AZ, 
about 
340 miles  north of home in Tucson, about 7000 ft elevation 

Weather: Mid 80s in  the afternoon, Low 50s when we quit at Midnight. Clear 
 
skies for  afternoon and evening, with local gusts to 40 and high wind 
warnings.  

Seeing and Transparency: Not perfect, but great for our  purposes.

Equipment: 
18â?? f/5 2286mm Teeter Telescope newtonian  truss dob, Sky  Commander DSCs 
10" Meade SCT on Atlas EQ-G mount  
60mm Lunt LS60THa/B600  on Atlas EQ-G Mount 

Same old warm  days, chill nights.   

No solar today; trying to get away  from the sun before the night  show.  
Went to dinner and made a  salad.  Disaster! No tomatoes, no  black olives. 
 
How will  I get through the night!  

Set up is so easy with Karina and  Jessica.  Jessica did the whole 10"  
this 
time, even the OTA  lift.  The winds seemed to have died down, so I let  
Karina  unwrap and collimate the 18".  While they were doing the hard work, 
  I 
walked around doing some picture taking and other checking in.  I  talked  
with Dr. Mary Turner, who will be doing a talk tonight on  constellation 
lore,  
and we were good to go with the  presentation.

The astronomers are doing quite well at arranging for a  path up the middle 
 
for visitors.  I just wish the wind were  more cooperative this year.

Dr. Turner's talk on several constellations  and the associated lore raises 
 
an interesting thought.  She had  a half dozen different myths about 
Bootes, 
and I know two more.  Any  web search on a topic of astronomical importance 
gives the same results,  from double star data to the meanings of star 
names,  rarely gives a  single description.  One has to recall that the 
nomenclature   and meanings develop and mature over time and across many 
cultures.   
There  often is not "the" story, but "a" story, and when Native  American 
lore, 
the  stories of the sky are quite diverse.

Back  at the scopes it is clear that the wind will be gusting too high for  
 
the 18" to be used.  Karina is trying to show The Ring again, but  this 
late  
in the month it is a two step ladder climb for her to  re-center, and the 
gusts  are pulling the scope and her 100 pound  frame off the ladder.  Time 
for 
the  ScopeCoat.  My wife  Susan and Karina left for the night while Jessica 
and I  stuck around  for the 10".

There was a break in the clouds, so I was able to show how  to do the full  
polar alignment as well as a stellar alignment.   For the first time this  
week we are able to GOTO objects  directly.  Among others, we hopped to 
M13,  
M51 with the  supernova, several others.  Then we had a cluster of visitors 
  
come up so we showed crisp Mizar, which, for some reason, visitors like to  
use  to compare naked eye versus what a telescope does.

With  the night talks and initial visitor arrival coincident, there is not  
 
much of a visitor presence when I get back to the scopes.  But  the  
astronomer community is doing a tremendous job with the  visitors, leaving 
1,000  
people every night with their wonderment  threshold seriously elevated.

With my scope operator staff busy with  her Albireo lecture, I now have 
time 
to do a mini-myths and legends tour,  mixed with real science, for the 
lines at  scopes in my area.   The keystones are The Summer Triangle, with 
Lyra 
as  either The Eye  Of God or the source of creation, depending on the 
culture;  Bootes  herding the bears so that the sun can be in Virgo for a 
good  
harvest;  Scorpius with his claws (Zubeneschamali and Zeubenelgenubi,  Claw 
North 
and Claw  South) clipped to make Libra; and The Milky Way,  River of Life, 
or 
Tree of Life  depending on your cultural  persuasion.  Sometimes a little 
Polaris and  precession thrown  in; some folks say they are waiting the 
12,000 
years for Vega  to be  the pole star.  I suppose if I can't get my hands on 
the  scopes,  this'll do.

Just before packup, Dr. Alan Delman offered  me a view of The Butterfly  
cluster in his Celestron 11" SCT.   What an absolutely gorgeous sight!   
Perfect 
butterfly  definition, with the added benefit that with our great  
observing  
conditions, the fainter members of the cluster make it look more  like  a 
dragonfly.  I will have to add it to my school outreach  list of tasty  
morsels.

Today we had the traditional pot luck,  this time in the campground.  A  
great group of people makes for  a great event.  We had a hoot of a little  
skit 
by Dennis Young,  Kevin LeGore, and George Barber where Dennis is aided by  
Kevin to do  a Dorf on Golf version of a 10 year old Dennis getting a 
FirstScope   as a birthday gift from daddy George Barber.  Luckily, most of 
the food  
had  been consumed.  Really, though, a screamer.

We  finished up with a general thanks to everyone for the quality of 
effort,  
and cooperation this year, and we talked over some things next year we  
could do  better.  Then Marker brought up the annular eclipse on  May 20, 
2012, 
and  the Venus transit in June.  We might do some  quick planning for a 
major 
outreach in the Park for one or both of those  events.  

This week is ending far too soon.

Jim   O'Connor
South Rim Coordinator
Grand Canyon Star Party
Grand  Canyon  Cell Phone:  520-405-6551
gcsp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

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