[sac-forum] Re: Leo
- From: <jimmy_ray@xxxxxxx>
- To: sac-forum@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Fri, 11 May 2007 14:06:51 -0700
... and it was published in a fairly obscure catalog that Mr. "M" had ask AJ to
proof read for him. This catalog was forgotten until AJ pulled it of the shelf
for Junes "Call". Execellent!!! Another SAC first!
Jimmy Ray
---- Bob Christ <bchrist@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Between M149 and M151.
>
> Sorry, the devil compelled to do this.
>
> Bob
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: sac-forum-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> [mailto:sac-forum-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Joseph R. Goss
> Sent: Friday, May 11, 2007 1:39 PM
> To: sac-forum@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: [sac-forum] Re: Leo
>
>
>
> AJ
> When did Messier find M150??
> Joe
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: AJ Crayon
> To: SAC Forum
> Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2007 3:45 PM
> Subject: [sac-forum] Leo
>
>
> As you prepare for observing runs this weekend and next here's a
> reminder for the list in Call for Observations.
>
> For June I have scheduled Leo and will pick some of its brighter
> galaxies, staying towards the western part. This way the eastern part is
> saved for another clear night. This list will be quite different than ones
> in the past and I'm not sure how it will work. But SAC observers have a
> habit of surprising me. So, surprise me! First start with NGC2903, a nice
> multi-armed barred spiral up near the blade part of the Lion's head. The
> next selections field of view contains two or three galaxies, depending on
> telescope size. The two easy ones are NGC3226 and NGC3227 at magnitude 12.4
> and 11.3 respectively. Don't let this fool you, as the latter of the two is
> the larger. Give us a good, detailed description of what you see. The next
> field to view also contains two galaxies and they are M95 and M96, both
> being barred spirals. Compare and contrast the two. From this field we can
> hop a mere 50 arc-minutes northeast to the next 3, count them three,
> galaxies. They are M150, NGC3371 and NGC3389 all ellipticals. The NGC
> galaxies have other names; look them up and include with your observations.
> The final galaxy is NGC3377, another elliptical. If you center this in a
> one-degree field there are other things to see and distract you. Identify
> those and include with observation.
>
> Please make every opportunity to put these on your observing list and
> send them in to me for inclusion.
>
> Clear skies,
> aj
>
>
>
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