Object: NGC 2997 (GX, Ant)
Date: 06./07. 06. 2013.
UT.: 20h17m – 20h38m
Equipment: 400/1800 Skywatcher Dobsonian-reflector
Mag.: 225x
FOV: 13’
S = 7 / 10 T = 5 / 5
Observer: János Gábor Kernya (Hungary)
Location: Farm Isabis – Red house (Namibia)
Category: Galaxy
Phantom Erupts
Object Name: M74 and SN2013ej
Object Type: galaxy and supernova
Location: Cherry Springs, Pennsylvania
Date: August 5, 2013
Media: graphite pencil, white paper, digitally inverted and scaled
Notes: 16″ Newtonian, 225x. Observed UT 2013-08-05 06:30-08:20. 10 deg. C, 75% humidity. Exceptional transparency, good seeing. Most of the night the transparency was variable, but it became exceptionally good (at least for summer) one hour before astronomical twilight. As M74 was then reaching respectable altitude, it erupted with detail. The very compact HII region Hodge 627 was seen intermittently within the star cloud at the end of the southern arm. Although the exaggerates this brightness difference, supernova 2013ej was indeed brighter than the surrounding Milky Way stars.
An Interesting Arp with Jet Power
I grabbed just one observation last night [sketch from April 30], I considered comet PanSTARRS as inspired by Andrew Robertson’s dramatic observational drawing from the previous night showing fan like anti tail!
But with it still out of pointing range of the main observatories scopes I found myself again working from the Arp atlas. I picked one out that was well placed in Virgo up against the Leo border, Arp 161 aka UGC6665 turned out to be a real challenge! It was not only the location that caught my eye, but the ‘emanating jet’ nature of this galaxy that excited me, yes another one after Arp 138 from the previous evening!
I got the galaxy easily with my usual star hoping to negate the goto inaccuracies. Initially the jet & plume were pretty obvious, but as frames refreshed and I tweaked the camera control box, for gain, exposure etc both jet and the even more elusive plume disappeared, monitor setting for brightness and contrast were also adjusted, these in combination with the video camera controls as you can imagine have an infinite combo of setting potentials. With practice over what must be 7-8 years now I have a pretty good knack of getting the best image before ‘marking the paper’.
However you can’t adjust out bad seeing, the analogue video camera has eyepiece realism with faint objects and stars coming and going at every ‘refresh’.
The jet and extended plume that I had almost nonchalantly expected to see and sketch leisurely were proving much tougher than I had anticipated. At the time of writing I have no idea of their comparative brightness. The conclusion was that I sat there for nearly an hour before I made my rendition on paper, for something that will look so simple to you, it was very difficult to capture, or rather to try to capture as it appeared. Features such as the couple of very faint stars close into the extended halo of the galaxy appearing only fleetingly and on most apparitions looked rather like a jet themselves, tricky.
Arp 161 complete with Jet & Plume
Anyhow here you have my sketch of what is when you consider it a mind blowing object seeding out into the vast universe. The excellent book ‘The Arp Atlas of peculiar galaxies, Kanipe & Webb’ states it has been seen, the jet and plume that is with a 20″ under what I can only assume are pristine sky conditions, another observation with a 25″ just describes the galaxy with no extensional activity, a challenge for my pals off to Tenerife to explore the deep heavens with Rod’s 25” on mount Teide perhaps?
M84, M86 and More
Object Name: M 84, M 86, NGC 4388, NGC 4402, NGC 4387
Location: M 84: RA: 12h 25m 03.7s; Dec: +12° 53′ 13″
M 86: RA: 12h 26m 11.7s; Dec: +12° 56′ 462
Constellation: Virgo
Observing Location: Bonilla. Cuenca. SPAIN
Date: 13-14 April 2013.
Material used: graphite pencil on white paper. Inverted image and processed with Photoshop.
Celestron Telescope S/C 8″ Mount Cgt-5
Eyepiece: Hyperion Aspheric 31 mm;
Magnification: 65x.
Conditions: NEML: 5.9, Temp.: 10° C.
More information: http://astrodibujo.blogspot.com.es/
NGC 5907
NGC 5907 Draco
16 ” 180-240x fst:6m3 SQM 21,42
Kreuzleshöhe 1100m, Germany
Messier 74 and NS 2013ej
• Object Name: M 74 and NS 2013ej
• Object Type: Face-on spiral galaxy with a supernova
• Location: Bonilla-Cuenca Spain
• Date: August, 11th, 2013
• Media: Graphite Pencil HB 2, torchon 1 and 130g drawing sheet
• inverted colors with GIMP 2.8
Observation notes:
The supernova is shown as a little star in the middle of the southern disk of the galaxy. Of the five stars, I meet in front of M 74, the supernova is closest to its center.
Its brightness is very similar to the nearest star to the west and also to the middle star of the three that are on the eastern edge of the disc (picture below).
Greetings to all visitors of this page.
NGC 5128
Object: NGC 5128 (GX, Cen)
Date: 05./06. 06. 2013.
UT.: 01h32m – 01h51m
Equipment: 400/1800 Skywatcher Dobsonian-reflector
Mag.: 225x
FOV: 13’
S = 8 / 10 T = 5 / 5
Observer: János Gábor Kernya (Hungary)
Location: Farm Isabis – Red house (Namibia)
Perseid Heading through Andromeda
Object Name: Meteor
Object Type: Perseid
Location: Sketched at a dark sky sight in Bristol, UK
Date: 13th August 2013; 00:40am; conditions – very good
Media (graphite pencil sketch and then digitized using graphics tablet and Photoshop)
I usually sketch in some detail (mainly HB and 2B). I then scanned the result into Photoshop and sharpened the sketch.
Observing Details
Had intended to spend an evening under dark skies watching the Perseids. Started out at 11:30pm but after numerous bright meteors over the next hour or so I decided it might be worth trying to accurately sketch one. This meteor came out of Cassiopeia and headed towards Andromeda Galaxy and broke in two as it trailed away. Frustratingly while I was sketching the background stars (and looking down) my pad was illuminated by a flash and on glancing up I realised I had missed a monster heading towards Pegasus – I could see the smoking trail for a good 2 secs. Suffering for my art? Perhaps!!
Hope you enjoy,
Clear Skies
Chris Lee
A Grand Spiral
M31, spiral galaxy
M32 and M110 dwarf eliptical galaxies
Nicolas ZANNIN
Dobson Orion Optics 300/1200mm
Eyepiece : principally Uwan 28mm, and Nagler 16mm for check some spiral details near the core.
Good summer sky, but not perfect. altitude : 800 m
Forêt de la Joux, near Champagnole, Jura, France, 01/08/2013
Pencils on white paper
Stephan’s Quintet
Object Name: Stephan’s Quintet (NGC7317, NGC7318A, NGC7318B, NGC7319, NGC7320)
Object Type: galaxies in Pegasus
Location: Jodłów – small village in southern Poland (picture made during StarParty Jodłów 2011)
Date: 29.09.2011
Media: graphite pencil, white paper, color invert
Telescope: Columbus 320UL (320/1384 Newtonian) + Meade 5000UWA 8,8mm
Seeing: 2/5 (good)
Transparency: 2/5 (good)
NELM: 6,4 mag
One of the most popular “challenge objects”. If you want to observe this objects, one thing is very necessary – clear dark sky. Why? This objects are vey faint so good contrast between galaxies and sky is the most important thing. After few minutes of eye adaptation you can observe four very faint galaxies on the longest side of triangle of three bright stars (it is quite easy to find because it is near very bright galaxy NGC 7331). Very interesting objects – you must have it on your observation list under really dark sky.
Clear Sky
Łukasz