Bode’s
Nebulae, Cigar Galaxy and NGC3077
Edited by Jennifer Steinberg (editor in chief)
There was
a long, long period since my last observation and evenmore since my last entry.
I guess work has just been sucking my
time and energy and also other miscellaneous stuff got me busy. Generally
speaking is just a matter of adjusting priorities and catching up with the
speed of this new pace of living.
A couple
of days ago, the sky was begging to see the telescope (even better, the scope
was begging to see some light). On a clear, moonless and semi-dark night, Ursa
Major was near the zenith and just in the middle of my little piece of sky. My
expectations to see something new were few so I aimed the scope at M81/M82. I
thought that the sky would not be dark enough to try a fainter galaxy. I first
scanned the area to get to M81/M82 with the finderscope. It was not too hard to
reach the spot, but I noticed I was out of practice. Anyways, once I got there,
I switched to my 40mm eyepiece (37.5x) and for a while enjoyed the view of this
amazing galactic couple.
I checked in my
tablet to see if there was something around to try for luck and a very close
galaxy was near by: NGC3077. I got tired fetching for NGC3077 and then decided
to pop up on magnification with my 15mm eyepiece (100x). M81 was more prominent
now and the Cigar showed a little more of thread inside the sticky shape. After
enjoying those two, I hopped to the triangle formed by the 8th magnitude stars HIP49121A,
HIP 49230 and HIP49193. Suddenly, a ghost appeared near by. It was an obvious, but
shy nebular patch: NGC3077, part of the several galaxies of the M81 group and I
guess one of the very few I could see with my 6” scope under these conditions. Not
so much to say about it, but I rather decided it was time to sketch it. Of
course, by that time, the area had reached the trees. Yes, I have a small
window of sky, so to speak. Well, I have to wait two nights more to complete
the sketch using a pre-elaborated stellar “grid” with the brightest stars in
the area to save me some time. It worked quite well, despite the curvature that
distorts the distances at the eyepiece.
So here
is the result, and my first sketch of 2018. Still looking for a spot with more
sky available and we will see, what else I can get this summer.
Clear
skies,
LG
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