Beauty to the Third Degree

Object Name: NGC 6514
Also Known As: Messier 20, C 1759-230, Collinder 360, LBN 27, Trifid Nebula
Object Type: Emission + Reflection Nebula and Open Cluster
Constellation: Sagittarius
Right Ascension (2000.0): 18h 02m 42.1s
Declination (2000.0): –22° 58′ 19″
Magnitude: 6.3
Dimensions: 20′ x 20′
Distance: 5,000 light years
Discovery: Guillaume Le Gentil c. 1747, Charles Messier on 5 June 1764 with 3.3-inch refractor
NGC Description: !!! vB, vL, trifid, D* inv

Telescope: Parks Astrolight EQ6 • 6″ f/6 Newtonian Reflector
Eyepiece/Magnification: 20mm Parks Gold Series Plössl + 2x Barlow • 90x • 35′ Field of View
Filter: Lumicon UHC
Date/Time: 4 September 2010 • 03:15-05:15 UT
Observing Location: Oakzanita Springs, Descanso, San Diego Co., California, USA
Transparency: NELM 6.3; TLM 12.2 (with filter)
Seeing: Pickering 8
Conditions: Clear, calm
Media: #2 pencil, cartridge paper, artists’ chamois, blending stumps; scanned and processed in Microsoft Picture It!

One of the four “Great Nebulae” of the Summer Sky (the others being M8, M16, and M17, of course), Messier 20 is faintly visible to the naked eye from a dark site (and easily visible in binoculars from most anywhere). Look for it about 1½° NNW of larger and brighter M8, above the spout of Sagittarius’ Teapot asterism. Famously photogenic, M20’s contrasting pink (emission) and blue (reflection) components, each with their own illuminating central stars (and distinctive dark lanes in the former) are familiar to all astronomy enthusiasts and recognizable as one of the icons of the night sky even by those with only a casual or passing interest in things astronomical.

Through the eyepiece, our view of M20 is less spectacular than the photographs we are all familiar with, but the view is exquisite nonetheless. M20 stands out even at low magnifications as a silver mist in two lobes surrounding a pair of 7th magnitude stars; the southern lobe is slightly larger and brighter than the northern. Increasing the magnification to moderate levels (60x-90x) reveals the intricate web of dark nebulosity running through the southern lobe, dividing the HII region into the segments responsible for its popular name, the Trifid Nebula. The bright central star is resolved into two blue-white components known as Herschel 40 (7.5, 8.9; 10.7″; 212°); a 10th magnitude companion found between these two stars is best seen at high magnifications. Numerous faint stars are superimposed on the face of the nebulosity – this scattered grouping is presumably the open cluster component of our target and is also designated Collinder 360. The tendrils of dark nebulosity across the face of M20 are part of a larger cloud of interstellar dust which isolates the bright nebulosity from the surrounding star fields; this dark cloud is designated Barnard 85, it’s most prominent patch drives a blunt wedge between the emission and reflection portions of the nebula from the NW.

Eric Graff

The Galactic Center

Object Name: The Galactic Center
Object Type: Center of the Milky Way
Location: , , the
Date: August 2010
Media: pencils and fineliner on white paper, photographed with Sony A200, edited with The Gimp
Telescope: Bynostar SPN 130/900
Observer: Rutger Teule
Information:
Aim your telescope on a clear night to the , and you’ll see a countless amount of stars. Each star tells a different story and many of them have planets that orbits around them. It’s very good possible that there is life on one or more of those planets. When I look at all those stars on a clear night, I always dream about the wonders that are out there. And that dreaming, makes astronomy so special.

Clear Skies!

Rutger|Teule
www.rutgerteule.com

M104: The Sombrero Galaxy Through a 25″ Reflector

Needless to describe a so well known object, despite the observation has been made with a large scope: 25” dobson Obsession.

The interesting features are, according to me,
– the upper halo which points out easely,
– and the very small twin galaxies at the lower left, seen only in adverted vision, hardly, and not separated. It is not suprising: they are at about 18th magnitude! Both have been imaged by the HST, and can be detailed in several APOD photos.

My picture, as usual, is drawn on a Canson paper, sheet of 200 gr/cm2 and 21 x 29.7 cm, with graphite, stump-drawing, and ink of China.
Then scanned, turned in negative, and finally legend, scale and compass added.

Complete observation report at www.deepsky-drawings.com

Bertrand Laville

Backyard Jupiter

Object Name: Jupiter
Object Type: planet
Location: Itajobi – SP – Brazil
Date: 2010, July 20th
Time: 04h30min – U.T.
Media: colored pencil on white paper, photographed with Sony Cybershot 4.1MP (Carls Zeiss lens), edited with Paint.
Telescope: reflecting 180mm f/D=6 (dobsonian)
Eyepieces: SP 32mm (34x); Plossl 10mm (108x); SP 6mm (180x)
Observer: Rodrigo Pasiani Costa
Extra information:
That was a cloudy, cold night – for us, Brazilian people – around 12ºC. I had just aligned my mirrors and wanted to test the collimation. After one hour observing the moon through dark clouds, I saw the best picture of Jupiter ever (through my telescope) that night. Even through the 32mm eyepiece I could see two dark stripes crossing the giant planet, which was surrounded by its four brighest moons. Through the 10mm I got my best view, like the sketch. The 6mm eyepiece showed a low-resolution, distorted image. No filter used. I’d like to thank to Gabriel Piani Luna da Silva, that helped me with the telescope that afternoon, and also lent his backyard that night. It was his first time observing Jupiter, and he got impressed. I couldn’t forget to thank his mother, who gave us a delicious cake that afternoon, while we were fixing the telescope mounting. This is my first Jupiter sketch, I hope you enjoy it.

Best regards and clear skies to everybody,

Rodrigo Pasiani Costa

Cassiopeia’s Twin

Hi!
This is the sketch of nice, bright asterism called “W”. Nice object to observe with low power eyepiece or binoculars.

Object: “W” asterism in Dragon
Scope: Schmidt-Cassegrain 5″ with SWAN 20mm
Filter: Moon&Skyglow
Date: August 20th, 2010.
Place: Wrocław, Poland
Weather: Good. Seeing 3/5. Transparency 3/5
Technique: Graphite pencil.
Tooling: GIMP 2
Observer: Aleksander Cieśla (Wimmer)

M 22: A Jewel of the Summer

Object Name: M 22 (NGC 6656)
Object Type: Globular Cluster
Constellation of Sagitarius
Location: Talaveruela de la Vera-Cáceres;SPAIN
Date: 17/07/2010
Media: graphite pencil, white paper, inverted GIMP 2
Telescope: SCT 8″
Eyepiece: 31 mm Hyperion-Aspheric
Mag.: 65X

Spanish-English translation using Google Language Tools:
M22 is an impressive globular cluster in the constellation Sagittarius. It
is located at a distance of approximately 10,000 years light. The cluster is
brighter than an observer can see the northern hemisphere and only than
Omega Centauri and 47 Tucanae.
The picture at the bottom is an extension of M 22 scanned at higher
resolution.

Mariano Gibaja

Inside M13: A River in Darkness

Hello friends, I want to share with everyone an unforgettable experience, a journey inside the globular cluster M13.

Object Name: M13 (NGC 6205) Globular Cluster
Location: Benacebada, Granada (Spain)
Date: 2010.07.09
Media: graphite pencil, white paper.

Telescope: 16″ Dob. The observing conditions: with new moon, the seeing and transparency excellent.
For details inside of M13 I used maximum magnifications 523X (3,5 Hyperion eyepiece):It shows well defines bands of stars.The most spectacular was the dark zone or region near the center. Like a river of darkness.

I hope you enjoy it!
Leonor

www.astronomadas.com

L’Croissant

Object Name : NGC 6888
Object Type: emission nebula
Location : Villard-de-Lans, France
Date : 08/07/10
Media : graphite pencil on white paper

This sketch was made with a 250/1200 Dobsonian telescope, using a 24mm
wide-angle eyepiece and a UHC filter, in the courtyard of a pretty
mountain farm in the French Prealps.

Thank you for running this great webpage !

best regards,

Dan

Hickson 10

Dzień Dobry 🙂

Sketch information:

Obiect name: Hickson 10
-NGC 536 (12,4 M – 3,0×1,1 size)
-NGC 529 (12,1M – 2,4×2,1 size)
-NGC 531 (13,8M – 1,9×0,5 size)

Scope: Sky-Watcher 254/1200

Eyepieces: LVW 8 (150x)

Place: Poland, Zielona Góra (A few kilometers from city)

Seeing: Very Good. 5/5

Date: 24/25.08.2009r

Technique:Pencil,graphics GIMP2

Amateur astronomer: Przemysław Horoszkiewicz (Poland)