Welcome!
Become a Member!
Contact Us
Event Calendar
Public Meetings
Newberry Star Park
Blaze Star Observing Challenge
Observing Resources
Before You Buy Your First Telescope
How to Find Stars 101
Lunar Calendar
Howard Cohen Astronomy Downloads
Space Place Resources
More Cool Stuff
Observing Etiquette
Satellite Orbit Visualization (Celestrak)
Variable Stars
Gainesville's Solar Walk
Solar Walk History
Solar System Models
Solar Walk Table
Pluto Status
Solar Walk Resources
Solar Walk Donors
To Buy / Sell
Donate to the Club
Astronomy Forecast
FAQ
About Us
Contact Information
Officers & Coordinators
Club By Laws
Club Store
*
Email
*
Password
Remember me
Forgot password
Reply to: UPDATES! Share your observations of T CrB
*
Mandatory
fields
Author
*
Body
<blockquote><strong class="quote">Anonymous wrote:</strong> <UL> <LI>Name: Mike Toomey</LI> <LI>Date & Time: June 18, 2024; 11:30pm MDT</LI> <LI>Location: Albuquerque, NM</LI> <LI>Magnitude: +10.25</LI> <LI>How Observation was made: Photographic with Seestar S50, 60s exposure. (Have not applied advanced techniques yet... meaning to get to that).</LI> </UL> <P>Likewise, Andy, I'm also watching asteroid Pallas in the same FOV as TCrB this evening. Still exposing... had to wait out the clouds for 3 hours. And if you trust my dreadful math (I certainly do not), 12 arc minutes at closest approach is what I came up with ... or 2,630 light years, depending on your perspective.</P> <P>Pic attached.</P> </blockquote><br>
You can use basic HTML tags.
Body should be less than 50 kilobytes
© Alachua Astronomy Club, Inc.
Powered by
Wild Apricot
Membership Software