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Observer: Dave Mitsky (e-mail: 17-inch equatorial reflector Location: Harrisburg, PA, USA no.: 285 Estimated to lie midway in brightness between Delta Ceti (4.0) and Alpha Piscium (3.8). At 76x, appeared to be slightly elongated N-S.
Reflector 3 not showing on obs Patch#
no.: 286 Easily swept up from memory near Delta Ceti an obvious fuzzy patch at 38x. Instrument: 8-inch Dobsonian reflector Location: Carpinteria, CA, USA Tonight, there was the Jupiter at east sky.
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no.: 360 Celestron Powerstar 8, 78x - I can only see east sky at the porch of my apartment room. Instrument: 8-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain reflector Location: Syracuse, NY, USA Observer: Byung Hoon Kang (e-mail: web: ) There were also hints of detail but these were too faint to discern with any certainty. However this effect is not described in it's Hershcel 400 entry which describes it as, 'a very long looking barred spiral'. It is very elongated and seemed to be slightly bent rather than a straight streak. no.: 577 Although this galaxy was fairly faint it stood out from the sparse star field. Light pollution: moderate Transparency: excellent Seeing: good Observer: Thomas Godfrey (e-mail: 8-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain reflector Location: Norwich, Norfolk, England 100x on a 8" f/8.The program Skåhart v2.7 with the Tycho 2 star catalog helped me trace all my observations more easily in spite of the city's light pollution. Looks like a pair of hazy stars (One is the galactic core, and the other is a 10.76 mag star: TYC4699-01219-1), one of them being larger (The galactic core) than the other. no.: 1327 A nice object, but not even showing a distinct core and surrounding haze at Bangalore. Observer: Akarsh Simha (e-mail: 8-inch equatorial reflector Location: Bangalore, Karnataka, India It bore magnification well and at very low magnification, it appeared a sort of planetary nebula with a star right next to it. Its unusually bright centre does show a striking difference between ordinary galaxies and active galaxies. no.: 1464 On this day, for my luck, the power went off in the city and I got to see a country sky right in the heart of the city! But the moon washed away the fainter stars. Instrument: 6-inch other Location: Bangalore, Karnataka, India no.: 1754 Iridium 65 appeared out of a cloud in the South another good CalSky prediction!!! Light pollution: light Transparency: good Seeing: good Schneider (e-mail: naked eye Location: Garden Grove, California, United States of America Finally, I just enjoyed the whole seen with my naked eyes. In fact, I dare call Mercury the second red planet of the Solar system. Mercury had an orange look, which is usually the case. In binoculars, Venus looked perfectly round as it gets ready to begin its waning gibbous phase. The moon was razor thin & I could see the roughness of the moon because of its mountains & craters. no.: 2043 This evening, I observed the gathering of the one day old crescent moon, Venus & Mercury in the western sky at sunset. Light pollution: moderate Transparency: good Seeing: good Observer: Michael Amato (e-mail: 50-mm binoculars Location: West Haven, Connecticut, United States no.: 2226 wow it looked like a rare Iridium Flare but COSMOS-SKYMED 2 made itself clear to me passing east of the Moon. Light pollution: light Transparency: fair Seeing: fair Schneider (e-mail: naked eye Location: Orange, California, United States of America Observations made in the constellation Cetus: Observations made in the constellation Cetus