NGC 869

Posted on September 17th, 2006 by Archon.
Categories: Sketch, Observation Report, Open Cluster, NGC.

NGC 869
Subject NGC 869
Classification Open Cluster
Date/Time 9/15/06 - 5:00 UT
Location 39N 92W
Instrument Orion XT10i - 10″ f/4.7 Dobsonian
Eyepiece/Mag. 19 mm TeleVue Panoptic
Conditions Clear and Breezy
Seeing Poor
Transparency Transparent
Darkness 6
Notes The double cluster in Perseus was visible with the naked eye and was easy to spot in my finder scope. After looking over the double cluster using a 26 mm eyepiece I decided to sketch NGC 869 because of the tighter star formations it displayed. The sky was very transparent making the higher magnitude stars in this cluster show up well while using the 19 mm TeleVue Panoptic eyepiece. The slight breeze that was blowing and low humidity kept dew from forming on any of my equipment and made for a dry and enjoyable observing session. After sketching for around an hour I had only completed the center of NGC 869. The attached sketch has two FOV circles. The outer circle represents the whole FOV I was looking through while the inner circle is the area in the FOV I was able to sketch.

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NGC 6910

Posted on September 10th, 2006 by Archon.
Categories: Sketch, Observation Report, Open Cluster, NGC.

NGC 6910
Subject NGC 6910
Classification Open Cluster
Date/Time 9/2/06 6:00 UT
Location Columbia, MO - Downtown
Instrument Orion XT10i - 10″ f/4.7 Dobsonian
Eyepice/Mag. Orion Sirius 10 mm Plossl - 120x
Conditions Mostly Clear
Seeing Average
Transparency Average
Darkness Light pollution from city
Notes I liked the formation of these stars in the cygnus region. For some reason the pattern they create catches my attention when I’m looking around Cygnus with a low power eyepeice. The brightest star in the group is HIP100548 and is a variable supergiant or gaint. HIP100548 gave off a sublte yellow/orange color in the eyepiece. I made the attached sketch not knowing this was a NGC object. After doing some research and having a discussion with other amateur astromers regarding the distance of HIP100548, I found out that it belonged to the NGC 6910 open cluster.

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