Supernovae in the Whirlpool

Object Name: 2011dh
Object Type: supernova
Location: Cherry Springs, Pennsylvania
Date: June 5, 2011
Media: digital

Notes

High absolute humidity made the dust lane detail in the western arm invisible, and the dust lanes in the outer arm to the south and east required special positioning of the eye. In this respect, the view was much worse than last time I observed M51 this spring. All details in the arms also looked “fatter.” On the other hand, the view this time was consistent throughout the night, and with the supernova (marked on the sketch) it was well worth staring at.

Earlier last week, when the supernova was already there but not yet broadly announced, and not yet known to me or my fellow observers, some gentlemen on the field suggested that I should look at M51, because it was so nicely positioned. I did not heed their advice, thinking that with the summer humidity, it would be hard to surpass the view I had earlier this year, and absorbed myself with some new objects. I had my earlier sketch with me in my journal (the rough ball-pen original), in which the superimposed stars were marked way below the magnitude of the supernova. It would be fun to make the discovery at least for myself if not for real, but even that apparently was not fated.

A Delicate Triple

Object name: Theta Virginis (Sigma 1724/H III 50)

Object type: Double/Multiple star

Location: York, UK

Date: 24th April 2011

Media: Graphite pencil sketch on white paper at eyepiece, colour added digitally after scanning and reversing.

I often find springtime rather hectic, tracking down all those dim galaxies whilst the sky conditions permit. This year I have rediscovered relaxing in front of the scope, thanks to a birthday gift of the Cambridge Double Star atlas. Double stars allow you the time to enjoy colour and light and pattern without all the frustration of hunting for barely perceptible objects in uncontrollable sky conditions. Here is one of my favourites from this spring; Theta Virginis. The primary is 4th magnitude, I noted as white, with two “brown-orange” companions of 9th-10th magnitude at pleasingly different distances (7’’ and 70’’) and angles from the primary.

I used a Skywatcher Skyliner 152mm f8 Dobsonian with 10mm eyepiece.

Magnitude 13.4 and Rising

Object names: SN2011by, NGC 3972, NGC 3977
Object types: supernova, galaxy, galaxy pair
Location: Cherry Springs Dark Sky Park, Pennsylvania
Date: May 5, 2011
Media: digital

Notes
16” Dobsonian, 75-300x. The supernova SN2011by is the brightest star in the field. It is superimposed on the NE edge of the elongated galaxy NGC 3972, just to the left of the galaxy’s core in the drawing. The round galaxy is NGC 3977, in which recorded supernovae occurred in 1946 and 2006.

As of this writing, supernova 2011by is still the brightest currently in the sky, and still rising at magnitude 12.5. The magnitude in the sketch title refers to the time of my observation. It is in NGC 3972 right next to Gamma Ursae Majoris. This is very nice intermediate-inclination spiral that I saw last year with my 4”. I still retain the mental image of a nicely elongated blob. It can now serve me as something that supernova photographers would call the “pre-discovery image.” SN2011by was discovered at the end of April. At the redshift distance of NGC 3972 (46 Mly) it should become mag. 11.5, according to my rough calculations, and at the mean Tully-Fisher distance from NED (18 Mpc) it should still become 12.0. I.e. it might become a worthy target for “department-store scopes.”

I was curious about the structure in the host galaxy, which is featured in The de Vaucouleurs Atlas as a paradigmatic SA(s)bc. The southwest edge, which is opposite the supernova, is the one closest to us, judging by the photos. I thought that with some appropriate effort expended, the arm running along this edge and even some enhancements in it could potentially be visible in a 16”. But, somewhat disappointingly, all I could see was this edge being sharper than the one with the supernova. The view was essentially identical under a range of magnifications from 100 to 300x. On the other hand, this means that my “post-discovery image” (the view through the 16″) is only subtly different from my “pre-discovery image” (last year’s view throught the 4″), as far as the galaxy itself is concerned.

The field overall is very impressive. Not to mention the supernova, the elongation and asymmetry of NGC 3972 have their counterpoint in the perfect roundness of its apparent companion, NGC 3977. Unlike NGC 3972, this face-on spiral could not be just casually swept up last year with the 4”, and I did not stop to look for it then. NGC 3977 itself was host to two recorded supernovae, 1946A and 2006gs. About them I can only find that 2006gs reached mag 17. The only distance for NGC 3977 in NED is by redshift, 263 Mly. This is far indeed – 5 times farther than NGC 3972, adding to the perceived depth of this remarkable field.

At the eyepiece, I make a schematic in ball pen that records the essential information about positions, sizes, and the contrast, and concentrate on preserving my dark adaptation and building the mental image instead of detailed sketching. Subsequently I use a pressure- and tilt-sensitive digital pen tablet to simulate pencil, blender, and other traditional tools, to create the clean digital drawing, concentrating on conveying the visual appearance of stars and nebulosity.

A Nebulous Study

Hi all,

Sydney’s skies have been terrible for a long time. Finally tonight we got a clear, cloudless and dewless night. And I wasn’t going to let a little Moonlight get in the way.

As Sydney’s skies are also loaded with light pollution, the full potential of the Eta Carina nebula isn’t realized. The Homunculus Nebula isn’t visible at 29X – it’s too small. However, its distinctive colour is visible, it is the bright, orangeish star.

This sketch was more a case of blowing out some cobwebs from my pencil case. Modest gear, short time, and a refreshing ale. A target I wish to revisit in the coming New Moon from a dark site.

Object: NGC 3372, Eta Carina Nebula
Type: Emission nebula
Scope: 8” f/4 Newtonian, dob mounted
Gear: RKE 28mm (29X) and OIII filter
Location: Sydney
Date: 23rd March, 2011
Conditions: Awful Sydney sky + last ¼ Moon.
Media: White pastel, black & white charcoal, white and coloured ink on black paper

Cheers,

Alex M.

Gamma Leonis (Algieba) and his companion

Dear artists:
Hi;
Gamma Leonis (Algieba) and his companion.
Apparent Magnitude: +2.28
Companion Apparent Magnitude: +3.51
Distance from sun: 126 light years
Separation: 4”

Location: Iran/Tehran
25 March 2011. Time: 21.30 (local time)
Optic: Newt. 8”(Dabs.skywatcher)
Eyepiece: 10mm plossl
Moon: Waning Gibbous.
Seeing: 3

Pasha Majidi

Taurus in the Year 1054

I send you an illustration of what happened in Taurus in the year 1054 A.D.
This is the supernova which created the “Crab Nebula” (M.1).
Nearby to NE is the cresent moon. On old drawings on stones and so on,
the cresent moon was there when the SN exploded on 4. July this year.
More info on my sketch!
I used pen and pencil on white paper and inverted.

Best wishes for clear sky, Per-Jonny Bremseth

Albireo, the Beautiful

Hi artists!

I send you a double “Albireo, the beautiful”.

This pair of stars, in the head of the Swan, I have observed many, many times with my telescope, but
every time I had been amazed of their very beautiful contrast in colours.
I have never seen them split with naked eyes, but with 10x 50 I have seen both.
I think Albireo is the finest double seen from Norway. More info on my sketch!

The observation was made outside Trondheim city, Norway.

Best regards, Per-Jonny Bremseth.

Webmaster’s note: Per-Jonny, I’m terribly sorry this beautiful sketch got overlooked in the cue. I’ll be looking for your other sketch that was overlooked as well. Your sketches are always very well done. For anyone who may have sent sketches that were never posted, just email Rich Handy at webmaster@asod.info and Jeremy Perez at
asod@perezmedia.net. Let us know your sketch was overlooked and indicate the subject and date emailed and I’ll do my best to retrieve it. Again my sincere apologies.

Rich Handy ASOD webmaster.