Saturday, 27 January 2018

#117: Winter 2018


 The beginning of a new year is usually a good time to both reflect on the past year and its achievements, and to look ahead and set some reasonable goals for the upcoming year.  In 2016, I made it my goal to get out and observe on every clear night I could.  For my galaxy observing I require nearly pristine, dry skies.  So to compensate for Essex County skies, I needed many different types of objects that could be observed at Hallam if under less than perfect conditions.  It was a good year for planets; I also did some remarkable double star work, and I even got back into lunar observing.  I managed to observe on 72 different nights in 2016.  By comparison, 2017 saw me under the stars only 34 times.  Had my goals changed?  Not by much.  I missed the April dark sky session because of travel plans, and ended up missing three good nights as a result.  Even so, the weather last year was often less than ideal for astronomers.  Was it just one of those years?  I hope so.  If I could make one wish upon a falling star, it would be for more frequent clear nights (not counting those beautifully clear nights around a full moon!).


While January is a great time to look back on the year’s notes, and to plan new observing goals, it is often a terrible time to be outside setting up a big scope.  The nights in deep winter are often more suitable for naked eye and binocular observing than for any telescopic work.  It is also a great time for some armchair astronomy.  I like pulling out my old Olcott book and glancing through it near a warm indoor wood fire.

William T. Olcott, in his Field Book of the Skies, divided the night sky into seasonal work.  His winter constellations include Taurus, Orion, Lepus, Canis Major, Monoceros, and Eridanus.  Using a telescope I have completed observations of   NGC and other deep sky objects in Taurus, Lepus, and Monoceros.  My clipboard is now prepared for Orion, and includes a grueling list of 178 winter objects.  However, before trying to navigate outside with freezing toes and fingers using my 12” Dob, it is always a good idea to explore some of the constellation with naked eye and 8 x 35 binoculars first. 

It is not surprising how many sky-watching novices think that stars are only white.  When colourful stars are presented, it can be an astonishing revelation for them.  Comparing Rigel and Betelgeuse with the unaided eye, a difference in colour is apparent.  However, using binoculars the difference is much more astounding.  If you are showing the orange and red star to a beginner, you might also make mention of Professor Michelson (1852-1931).  A number of interesting facts can be mentioned regarding this American physicist (born in modern-day Poland).  He was the first American to win a Nobel Prize in the sciences, for one thing.  His main work was in refining measurements of the speed of light.  However, it was his work in interferometry that brings his name into Olcott’s book, in conjunction with the star Betelgeuse.  This star became the first one, other than our Sun, to have its diameter measured (in 1920-21). Michelson’s interferometer design is still in use today at major observatories. Incidentally, Betelgeuse is 1.64 billion km in diameter. Our sun, by comparison, is 1.39 million km.  But wait, there’s more!   In popular culture, no less a man than Ben Cartwright helped Michelson get his career started.  In the “Look To The Stars” episode of Bonanza, broadcast in 1962, the 16 year old budding scientist (played by actor Douglas Lambert) is aided in his struggle for admission to the US Naval Academy by the Cartwrights.  Michelson did live in Nevada at that time in his life!  The episode can be watched on Youtube.

Now it’s time for a look at the Great Nebula.  Though it presents a distinctive mystery to the naked eye, in binoculars the mystery at least becomes a more beautiful one.  I have trouble with the trapezium star in hand-held binoculars, but with a steady hand the area makes for fun sweeping.  Olcott suggests that it was a Swiss Jesuit by the name of Cysatus, in 1618, who made the first report on the nebula.  His full name was Johann Baptist Cysat (c. 1587-1657), and his main interest as an astronomer was in observing comets.  He was one of the first to make astronomical and scientific use of a telescope.  Even in 1804 his descriptions of comets were still among the best available.  Here is Cysat’s brief description of the Great Nebula:

Another of these phenonmenon in the heavens is the congeries of stars at the last star of the Sword of Orion, for there one can find a similar congestion of some stars in a very narrow space, and all around and in between the stars themselves is a diffused light like a radiant white cloud.”

We actually suspect now that the first notated observation was in 1610, by Nicholas Peiresc, though he was silent on the nebula afterwards.  Surprisingly Galileo did not mention it in his early observations of 1609 and 1610, though he did map the stars of Orion.  Over the years hundreds of descriptions have come down to us.  I will leave this topic with Olcott’s own description:

“…The nebula is a stupendous mass of gas in a state of violent agitation, a gigantic whirlpool.  Even when viewed with an opera or field glass the star Theta Orionis appears to be enveloped in a haze which indicates the presence of the great nebula which is a glorious and wonderful sight in a large telescope.  Words fail to describe its beauty.”

Oddly enough Olcott goes on to describe the Horsehead Nebula in the unaided eye and field glass section of his Orion section.  The Belt stars, where we will finish up our cold winter’s night viewing, point in one direction towards Aldebaran in Taurus, and in the other down towards Sirius in Canis Major.  There is fine sweeping in those areas, too.  From bottom to top the belt stars are Alnitak, Alnilam, and Mintaka, all around 2nd magnitude.  These stars have attracted attention since the dawn of human sky gazing.  The Orion correlation theory holds that there is a correlation between the three largest Egyptian pyramids and the three belt stars in Orion.  That itself is worthy of some future Aurora article, and certainly worth a casual mention at a winter star party.



Wishing everyone clear skies in 2018!
Mapman Mike

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