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stevek
Pooh-Bah
   
Reged: 04/16/06
Posts: 1229
Loc: west michigan
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I was out at a dark site this weekend - showed off a bunch of goodies to some friends & neighbors Thurs Nite but had superb sky to myself on Fri. After playing thru Sag & Scutum & Sagita & Delphinus, I realized that NA neb was winking naked eye. It looked fine thru my 11x56 broadband binocs. Pelican showed decent too. I sniffed pretty well at it thru the 30mm (40X) on the DOB. I added my dgm-npb filter to the 21mm and was able to track distinct variations throughout that nebulous region. I hadnt realized this narrowband could enhance the NA. Is this generally true? or only in dark skies? General emissions for NA=??? Steve
-------------------- DSO 8" f6 DOB w/ 8x50 RACI & 2"Crayford
1958 Sears Discoverer 76mm Refractor
GSO SV 30mm 2",21mm Hyp,13mm Strat,BO/TMB ver2-6mm & 4mm
1.25"Filters: DGM-NPB, 25%ND
1.25" plossls: 25mm,20mm,15mm,9mm
Orion 2X Shorty Barlow
Garrett Gemini LW 11x56mm binocs
BTG-10 4.0mW green laser pointer
"What is that burning in the sky? Tell me y'all..." Jeff Beck/Jan Hammer
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David Knisely
Postmaster
   
Reged: 04/19/04
Posts: 6783
Loc: Beatrice, Nebraska
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Quote:
I was out at a dark site this weekend - showed off a bunch of goodies to some friends & neighbors Thurs Nite but had superb sky to myself on Fri. After playing thru Sag & Scutum & Sagita & Delphinus, I realized that NA neb was winking naked eye. It looked fine thru my 11x56 broadband binocs. Pelican showed decent too. I sniffed pretty well at it thru the 30mm (40X) on the DOB. I added my dgm-npb filter to the 21mm and was able to track distinct variations throughout that nebulous region. I hadnt realized this narrowband could enhance the NA. Is this generally true? or only in dark skies? General emissions for NA=??? Steve
Generally, the narrowband filters do wonders for the North America Nebula, although under some light pollution, the Oxygen III filters may yield somewhat higher contrast. It is important to use them at low to moderate powers (3.5x per inch to 9.9x per inch of aperture) and with an eye that is fully dark adapted. I find the filters actually work a bit *better* under dark sky conditions, so it is important to have them with you wherever you are observing. My favorite view of the North America comes in my 100mm f/6 refractor at 25x using either the NPB filter or the OIII filter. There is a good article on which filters might be useful for which nebulae on the web site of the Prairie Astronomy Club:
FILTER PERFORMANCE COMPARISONS FOR SOME COMMON NEBULAE
Clear skies to you.
-------------------- David W. Knisely
Hyde Memorial Observatory
http://www.hydeobservatory.info
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stevek
Pooh-Bah
   
Reged: 04/16/06
Posts: 1229
Loc: west michigan
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Thanks David. Your continued assistance in this area is greatly appreciated! I used that filter with that EP because mine is a 1.25" filter and that 21mm is my lowest mag EP (except the 30mm/40X 2"). While I couldnt see all of it at once, it was an easy 'pan-around' to follow the edges of the neb. Worked great doing this up by M11 area too! Thaks for the link - added to my favs. Steve
-------------------- DSO 8" f6 DOB w/ 8x50 RACI & 2"Crayford
1958 Sears Discoverer 76mm Refractor
GSO SV 30mm 2",21mm Hyp,13mm Strat,BO/TMB ver2-6mm & 4mm
1.25"Filters: DGM-NPB, 25%ND
1.25" plossls: 25mm,20mm,15mm,9mm
Orion 2X Shorty Barlow
Garrett Gemini LW 11x56mm binocs
BTG-10 4.0mW green laser pointer
"What is that burning in the sky? Tell me y'all..." Jeff Beck/Jan Hammer
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