Today is 15th of June and in exactly 3 months the
spacecraft Cassini will finish its 20 year mission, crashing into Saturn’s
atmosphere. As the mission continues it’s diving while orbiting Saturn, it is giving
us the best images we have ever seen and providing unique and new information
of the ringed planet. This is how I ended up wanting to share my first
observation of the Cassini Division, the biggest gap between the rings A and B.
This is also my last entry from China because in exactly one week we will be
moving to US and looking for new adventures, new skies and more fun.
I usually try to share a sketch that shows a realistic
eyepiece view, but this time I am going to share the original raw sketch made
in the field, while I was observing through the eyepiece. To have a reference
of the equipment, I was using my Celestron 6SE tube with my most powerful
eyepiece, a 9mm Celestron X-Cel LX (166x).
This observation was made on the 21st of March 2016,
more than 3 months after I got my telescope in China. I had seen Saturn before,
but honestly I was a little dissapointed because I could not see much detail compared
with what I had seen in the beginnings with my Celestron Astromaster 130EQ from
Bogota, Colombia.
That night was special, though. The seeing was good
enough that I could throw into the focuser the eyepiece and have a sharp view
of Saturn. I kept staring at Saturn for some time and then magically it appears,
what I though it was, the Cassini division. It was not very evident, but using
averted vision and concentration I could notice a detached piece of ring on
both of the edges. I can compare the resolution of the image with a small
fracture (or crack) in an X-ray. Doctors could see it easy, but as a patient,
one has to know where it is and also what to look for. This skill is giving by knowledge and
experience.
I sketched it with the most detail I could, adding
notes and all kind of stuff that would help me to check later on my computer.
When I finished the session and headed back home, I researched for it. It was
in fact the Cassini Division, the gap of 4800 kms that was just an small crack
in the rings as seen in my telescope and I was seeing it for the first time in
live view mode! Funny fact is that it was discovered more than 3 centuries
before with a much smaller (only 2.5”) eyepiece but no body could take away my
excitement.
Now, you can use a smaller telescope, trying to get it
and let the world you replicated Giovanni Cassini’s achievement, but also you
can choose to enjoy those amazing images and videos that Cassini's mission has
prepared for us. Here is the link: Grand-finale-orbit-guide.
For
now I have to say good bye to my wonderful skies in Lijiang and hope US bring us
plenty of clear and dark skies.
LG
Edited
by Jennifer Steinberg (editor in chief).
No comments:
Post a Comment