beautypg.com

Basic astronomy, Index – Meade Instruments 6" LS-6 ACF User Manual

Page 40

background image

INDEX

Planets change positions in the sky as they orbit

around the Sun. To locate the planets on a given day

or month, consult a monthly astronomy magazine,

such as Sky and Telescope or Astronomy. You can

also consult LS for information about planets. Scroll

to the “Object: Solar System” menu and scroll through

the lists of planets. When a planet you are interested

in displays, press “ENTER”. Use the Scroll keys to

display information about the planet, such as the

planet’s coordinates, and the rise and set times (Tip:

enter a date in the Date menu and you can determine

if a planet) will be visible during the night of the entered

date by checking its rise and set times). Listed below

are the best planets for viewing through the LS.

Mars is about half the diameter of Earth, and appears

through the telescope as a tiny reddish-orange disk.

It may be possible to see a hint of white at one of the

planet’s Polar ice caps. Approximately every two years,

when Mars is closest to Earth in its orbit, additional

detail and coloring on the planet’s surface may

be visible.

Jupiter is the largest planet

in our solar system and is 11

times the diameter of Earth.

The planet appears as a disk

with dark lines stretching

across the surface. These

lines are cloud bands in

the atmosphere. Four of

Jupiter’s 16 moons (Io,

Europa, Ganymede, and

Callisto) can be seen as

“star-like” points of light

when using even the lowest

magnifi cation. These moons orbit Jupiter so that the

number of moons visible on any given night changes

as they circle around the giant planet.

Saturn is nine times the

diameter of Earth and

appears as a small, round

disk with rings extending

out from either side. In

1610, Galileo, the fi rst

person to observe Saturn

through a telescope, did

not understand that what

he was seeing were rings.

Instead, he believed that

Saturn had “ears.” Saturn’s

rings are composed of

billions of ice particles

ranging in size from a speck of dust to the size of a

house. The major division in Saturn’s rings, called the

Cassini Division, is occasionally visible through the LS.

Titan, the largest of Saturn’s 18 moons can also be

seen as a bright, star-like object near the planet.

Deep-Sky Objects

Star charts can be used to locate constellations,

individual stars and deep-sky objects.

Examples of various deep-sky objects are

given below:

Stars are large gaseous objects that are self-

illuminated by nuclear fusion in their core. Because

of their vast distances from our solar system, all stars

appear as pinpoints of light, irrespective of the size of

the telescope used.

Nebulae are vast interstellar clouds of gas and dust

where stars are formed. Most impressive of these is

the Great Nebula in Orion (M42), a diffuse nebula that

appears as a faint wispy gray cloud. M42 is 1600 light

years from Earth.

Open Clusters are loose groupings of young stars,

all recently formed from the same diffuse nebula.

The Pleiades is an open cluster 410 light years away.

Through the LS, numerous stars are visible.

BASIC ASTRONOMY

40

This manual is related to the following products: