Treasures of Uru-anna

Uru-anna

Ancient Sumerian Constellation Uru-anna
Sketch and Details by Rony De Laet

Some 5000 to 6000 years ago, one of the most ancient civilisations, Sumer, was based in southern Iraq. The Sumerians invented their own written language. Many Sumerian texts have been found on clay tablets. The Sumerians also practiced astronomy and gave names to the constellations.
The constellation of the Hunter, Orion, was known to the Sumerians as Uru-anna or The Light of Heaven. It has been suggested that Orion is named from Uru-anna.

Uru-anna or Orion is indeed a bright constellation. Most of its stars belong to the Orion OB1 association. Such is the case with the ‘Sword’ of Orion, a part of the sky which can be seen with the naked eye as a line of four fuzzy stars hanging under the Belt of Orion.

This region of the Orion OB1 association is filled with very bright stars. Many of these stars are very young giants or supergiants. The brightest star of the scene is Iota. Just a few minutes S of Iota is the double star Struve 747. Its components are only 36” apart, but clearly split at 7x. Struve 747 may look a little elongated in the sketch, due to the lower resolution of the rendering. It appears to me that Iota could be the lucida of a little poor open cluster, of which Struve 747 is also a member. The showpiece of the scene is M42, the Orion nebula. My 8×56 binoculars reveal two stars in the middle of M42 : Theta 1 and Theta 2. The latter is accompanied by two fainter stars to the E. The heart of the Orion Nebula is extremely bright. It can be seen with direct vision, also from an urban location. With patience and averted vision, a larger part of the nebula can be witnessed. Several faint stars can be discovered in the fading glow too. The western part of the nebula is the largest and the most obvious ‘wing’ of M42. Its northern border seems to be sharply cut away. As if a dark nebula separates M42 from the fainter M43 a few minutes to the N. M43 looks like a faint star embedded in a misty glow. The dark nebula also curves S as if it wants to separate the Theta stars as well. The southern ‘wing’ is a very diffuse feature. It is the thick and long filament know from the photos, that point towards Iota. With averted vision, this filament can be seen with 8×56 binoculars.
At 30’ N of M42, the faint glow of the reflection nebula NGC 1977 shows up around 42 and 45 Orionis. A total of 3 stars can be seen within the nebula.
The final object is the loose open cluster NGC 1981, N of NGC 1977. My 8×56 binoculars show a total of about 10 medium to faint cluster members.
The above mentioned objects are all members of the OB1 association, at a distance of about 1600 l-y.

A second observation of this region with the 15×70 binoculars will be posted later.

Site : Bekkevoort, Belgium ( 51° N )
Date : January 18, 2008
Time : around 20.30UT
Binoculars : Bresser Spezial-Jagd 8×56
FOV: 5.9°
Filter : none
Mount : Trico Machine Sky Window
Seeing : 2/5
Transp. : 3/5
Sky brightness : 19.86 magnitudes per square arc second near zenith (SQM reading).
Nelm: 5.4
Sketch Orientation: N up, W right.
Digital sketch made with Corel Paint Shop Pro X2, based on a raw pencil sketch.

(Note: if the sketch does look too dark on your monitor, try to darken the room.)

A Globular with a Tail

M71

M71, A Globular Cluster with a Tail
Sketch and Details by Per-Jonny Bremseth

Hey!

Sending you “M71, Globular with tail”.
This observation is from nearby Trondheim, Norway.
The drawing is made with water based crayons on black paper,
not inverted.
I observe deep sky objects only when the sky is clean and
transparent!
Look at info on my drawing!!

Best wishes from Per-Jonny Bremseth.

The Young, Blue Pleiades

The Pleiades

Messier 45 – The Pleiades
Sketch and Details by Aleksander Cieśla

Sketch information:
Object: Messier 45 – The Pleiades
Scope: Binoculars 10×50
Place: Poland, Wroclaw – near city center
Weather: Good. Seeing 6/10. Light Pollution. Moon low over horizon.
Date: 6 February 2009.
Technique: Colored pastels on the navy blue paper
Tooling: N/A

Lulin Spooks the Hive

Comet Lulin

Conjunction of Comet C/2007 N3 (Lulin) with M44, The Bee Hive
Sketch and Details by Jeff Young

The moon is taking a massive toll on Lulin’s visibility (and particularly its tail), but it still made for a nice composition with the Beehive.

C/2007 N3 (Lulin) and M44 (Praesepe or the Beehive)

Sketched Mar 5, 2009 from County Louth, Ireland,

as viewed through Nikon 18×70 binoculars; NELM 4

Daler-Rowney HB Graphic pencil on white cartridge paper. Scanned and inverted in Photoshop.

— Jeff.

Double The Pleasure

NGC 869 and NGC 884

NGC 869 and NGC 884, The Double Cluster in Perseus
Sketch and Details by Daniel Stępniak

Wonderful Double Cluster

This double cluster is one of my favourite objects. It’s visible with
every equipment, even naked eye. The view is really impressive so I made
a decision to sketch it.

Something about the sketch:
Obiect name: NGC869 & NGC884 in Perseus
Equipment: Dobsonian 6″, Kellner 25 (48x)
Location: Sochaczew, Poland
Time: 17 January 2009
Technique: Graphite pencil

A Dense But Open Cluster In Monocerus

M50

M50 in the constellation of Monocerus
Sketch and Details by Ferenc Lovró

M-50 of Monoceros

This rarely mentioned Messier object looks like a diffuse, large spot even through the finderscope. On a low/moderate magnification a view of solid, dense open cluster appears in front of our eyes. A very nice member of the cluster can be found around 9′ north from the middle of the cluster: a red giant of a color-index of 1.7, catalogued as HD 52938. With its 7.82 magnitude luminosity its also the brightest star of the cluster. Interestingly, because of its shiny red color, I wouldn’t think that this star is nearly 2 magnitudes brighter than the other stars in the centre of the cluster, which look like they’re the brightest by far.

Ferenc Lovró

Date / Time 2008.02.12 20:15 UT
Telescope: 12” f/5 Newtonian 71x
FOV: 22’
Seeing: 7/10 Transparency: 3/5
Object / Location: M-50 (NGC 2323) R.A. 7h 3m; Dec. -8º 20’
Sketching Location: Nádasladány, Hungary

Blue Beauties

M45

M45, The Pleiades or “Seven Sisters”
Sketch and Details by Przemysław Horoszkiewicz, text by Rich Handy

This beautiful arrangement of stars is the Open Cluster M45. The Pleiades or the “Seven Sisters” contain nebulae that reflect and scatter the blue light of the hot cluster stars. This gives the dust clouds the characteristic blue color. This superb sketch was submitted to ASOD by Polish amateur astronomer Przemysław Horoszkiewicz.

Sketch information:
Obiect name: Messier 45
Scope:Orion APO ED 80
Eyepieces: Super Plossl 25mm
Place: Poland, Zielona Góra (A few kilometers for city)
Seeing: 5/10
Date: 30.12.2008 r
Technique:Pencil,graphics GIMP2
Amateur astronomer: Przemysław Horoszkiewicz (Poland)

Great Globular with a Small Aperture

M13

The Great Globular Cluster M13
Sketch and Details by Daniel Stepniak

My sketch of great globular cluster in Hercules, M13. In my telescope it
wasn’t resolved, but the view was fine.

date: September 20, 2007

place: Sochaczew, Poland- suburbs of medium city with light pollution an
star’s apparent magnitude 4,5-5.

equipment: Synta 114/500, NPL 15mm (33x, fov 1,5°), graphite pencil 🙂

O Tannenbaum, O Tannenbaum!

NGC 2264

NGC 2264, The Christmas Tree cluster
Sketch and Details by Kiminori Ikebe, translation by Eiji Kato

NGC 2264 in Monoceros: The Christmas Tree

Mr. Ikebe wrote: (Translation from Japanese by Eiji Kato)

A beautiful cluster with bright stars arranged in a shape of a
Christmas tree. A bright star is shining at the foot of where the
star of Bethlehem is located. This star is S Mon. The cluster is
very large and fits a 1.6-degree field of view well. It is bright
and has an interesting shape; one of the best open clusters. The
number of the stars in this cluster is not particularly large but
its distribution is quite interesting. With this instrument the
diffuse nebula is completely invisible, but NGC 2261 is detected in
the south outside the field of view.

This sketch was made by Kiminori Ikebe using 30×125 Binoculars on
1996.01.21 01:12

Seven (or more) Sisters

M45

The Pleiades, M45
Sketch and Details by Marek Plonka, text by Rich Handy

This beautiful sketch of the Pleiades star cluster M45 by Marek Plonka of Poland shows that the cluster contains many more members than the famous Seven Sisters said to be observable without optical aid. The dusty cacoons that once held nascent stars still linger, scattering the blue light from the hot and relatively young stars of the cluster.

Sketch information:
Object name: M45 (NGC 1432) open cluster+nebula
Scope: Skywather dobs 1200/200 + SWA 32mm + UHCS
Place: Poland, Silesia, Skrzyszów
Seeing: 8/10 Transparency: 5/5
Date and time: 15.12.2008r, 9:00PM (21:00)
Technique: Pencil
Author: Marek Płonka (Poland, Silesia)