Autost ar iii menu options – Meade Instruments 6" LS-6 ACF User Manual
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Guided Tour Menu
When Guided Tours is selected, LS-6 shows you a 
list of theme tours that will help you explore the night 
sky. These tours are pre programmed presentations of 
objects that are visible for the user’s particular location, 
time and date. 
The most popular tour is “Tonight’s Best” that guides 
the user to the best objects that are currently up in the 
night sky. This tour is the easiest way to get started 
exploring the cosmos with your new LS-6 telescope.
Each tour will select the objects, present multi-media 
clips about the object and, if you press “GoTo”, put that 
object in the eyepiece of the telescope for you to view.
To exit a tour, press “Mode”.
The telescope comes pre-loaded with:
• “Tonight’s Best”, a selection of the most
interesting objects visible on any night.
• “A Star’s Life”, explains how stars are formed,
created, changes through their lives and finally 
die using examples that are visible tonight.
• “How Far is Far”, an explanation of the
phenomenal distances you can see with your 
LS-6.
AutoStar Suite also allows you to create your own 
guided tours of the skies, including your own objects, 
titles, images and sound files (for complete instructions 
on how to use the authoring tools please refer to the 
reference manual included on the AutoStar Suite 
DVD). 
Object Menu
Almost all observing with LS-6 is performed using the 
Object menu category. (NOTE: Exceptions include 
Guided Tour and Landmarks).
Many LS-6 menu categories contain databases. 
An LS-6 database is a list of objects, such as stars, 
planets, comets, nebulae and so forth. When one of 
these objects is selected from a database by pressing 
“ENTER” and then “GO TO”, LS-6 moves your 
telescope (when properly aligned) and points it at the 
selected object.
The Object Menu options include:
Solar System is a database of the eight planets (Earth 
is not included) in ascending orbits from the Sun, 
followed by the Moon, asteroids, and comets.
Constellation is a database of all 88 Northern and 
Southern Hemisphere constellations. When this menu 
option is chosen and a constellation name appears on 
the first line of the screen, the multimedia description 
of the constellation is played. When the media 
presentation completes, or you press the “MEDIA” 
key to halt the presentation, a menu gives you three 
choices:
 • Show Summary –  presents the key data about 
 the constellation.
 • Walk the Stars – presents a catalog of the 
 brightest stars in the constellation so that you 
 can walk the constellation figure. 
 • Show Objects – presents a list of the best deep 
 sky objects in this constellation for you 
 to explore.
Deep Sky is a database of objects outside our Solar 
System such as nebulae, star clusters, galaxies, and 
quasars grouped in various catalogs like Messier, 
Caldwell and NGC.
Star is a database of stars listed in different categories 
such as named, double, variable, or nearby. 
Important Note: When you are looking at descriptive 
object text, pressing “ENTER” will synchronize the 
telescope’s coordinates with the object. This is most 
useful when synching on bright stars to achieve better 
pointing in the vicinity of the star.
User Catalogs allows the user to define and store in 
memory deep-sky objects of specific interest that are 
not currently in the LS-6 database. See Appendix B, 
page 37 for more information (for complete instructions 
on how to use the authoring tools please refer to the 
reference manual included on the AutoStar Suite 
DVD).
Satellite is a database of Earth-orbiting objects such 
as the International Space Station (ISS), the Hubble 
Space Telescope (HST), Global Positioning System 
(GPS) satellites, and geosynchronous orbit satellites. 
In order to find and track satellites, you must download 
recent orbital data into the telescope. 
Landmarks stores the location of terrestrial points 
of interest that you create in the permanent LS-6 
database.
AUTOST
AR III MENU OPTIONS
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