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Mike Loffland
Web Guru (Astronomics)
   
Reged: 09/03/04
Posts: 2080
Loc: Norman, Oklahoma
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Binocular Universe: The Double Cluster and Friends
By: Phil Harrington
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Sarkikos
Pooh-Bah
Reged: 12/18/07
Posts: 1036
Loc: Suburban Maryland
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Love the article but hate the format. It's too wide. Even when I set the text to smallest, I have to keep shifting the cursor back and forth to read everything.
-------------------- Celestron 10" f5 Newt on 1stBase (DSO)
Zhumell 8" f6 Newt, Bosma 6" f12 MCT (NSO)
6" f5 Newt, 130ST, 4.5" f4.4 Ball w/GLP, ST80 w/Crayford (RFTs)
C4-R (NSO/DS)
90mm f13 MCT (Luna/DS)
SkyMaster 25x100, 15x70
Zhumell 20x80
Barska XWA 10x50, 8x40
OptiView LPR 10x50
Const View 2.3x40
BV-125C
CG5, 2 drv / CG4, 2 drv, wood legs, ScopeStuff saddle / CG3, 1 drv
SV AZ / 501HDV on Bogen 055XB / P+ on Oberwerk
QuikFinder, Telrad
Orion Dynamo Pro 12, Dew-Not
Have GLP and not afraid to use it!
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Sarkikos
Pooh-Bah
Reged: 12/18/07
Posts: 1036
Loc: Suburban Maryland
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Phil,
I downloaded your article as a PDF file and found it much easier to read in that format. I especially like Stock 2. It looks surprisingly like a person through a small rich field telescope or medium-size binoculars. Many amateurs don't know that he is standing there so close to the famous Double Cluster. My daughter giggles everytime she sees the Muscleman. 
Mike
-------------------- Celestron 10" f5 Newt on 1stBase (DSO)
Zhumell 8" f6 Newt, Bosma 6" f12 MCT (NSO)
6" f5 Newt, 130ST, 4.5" f4.4 Ball w/GLP, ST80 w/Crayford (RFTs)
C4-R (NSO/DS)
90mm f13 MCT (Luna/DS)
SkyMaster 25x100, 15x70
Zhumell 20x80
Barska XWA 10x50, 8x40
OptiView LPR 10x50
Const View 2.3x40
BV-125C
CG5, 2 drv / CG4, 2 drv, wood legs, ScopeStuff saddle / CG3, 1 drv
SV AZ / 501HDV on Bogen 055XB / P+ on Oberwerk
QuikFinder, Telrad
Orion Dynamo Pro 12, Dew-Not
Have GLP and not afraid to use it!
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PhilH
sage
Reged: 01/27/05
Posts: 277
Loc: Long Island, NY
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Quote:
Phil,
I downloaded your article as a PDF file and found it much easier to read in that format. I especially like Stock 2. It looks surprisingly like a person through a small rich field telescope or medium-size binoculars. Many amateurs don't know that he is standing there so close to the famous Double Cluster. My daughter giggles every time she sees the Muscleman. 
Mike
Thanks, Mike. The Muscleman is a lot of fun!
I've also contact Mike Loffland (CN Web Guru) about the width of the article, since I'm seeing the same thing. Don't know why this one looks different from the rest, but I'm sure he'll fix it ASAP.
Thanks, Phil
-------------------- Phil Harrington
Contributing editor, Astronomy magazine
Author: Star Ware || Star Watch || Touring the Universe through Binoculars || et al...
Binocular Universe
http://www.philharrington.net
http://www.observingsites.com
"Two eyes are better than one!"
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Doug76
Postmaster
  
Reged: 12/05/07
Posts: 5537
Loc: SE Louisiana, future Texan
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I could care less about the width. I'm just glad to get another good article from one of my favorites. Nice Phil. You are missed in the magazine.
-------------------- Doug
Truckstop Astronomer
The Universe, the light of God, in all it's majesty
6 achro refractors 50mm-150mm
1 apo refractor 90mm
1 SCT 8inch
UO Abbe Volcano Tops
Faworski Ortho's
Panoptic 24mm
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PhilH
sage
Reged: 01/27/05
Posts: 277
Loc: Long Island, NY
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Quote:
I could care less about the width. I'm just glad to get another good article from one of my favorites. Nice Phil. You are missed in the magazine.
Thanks, Doug. I really appreciate that.
FYI, I just shot off a piece on summer binocular stargazing to the magazine, so look for that next year. Whether that evolves into a regular quarterly feature, time will tell.
-------------------- Phil Harrington
Contributing editor, Astronomy magazine
Author: Star Ware || Star Watch || Touring the Universe through Binoculars || et al...
Binocular Universe
http://www.philharrington.net
http://www.observingsites.com
"Two eyes are better than one!"
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Gregklu
newbie
Reged: 03/19/09
Posts: 1
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The article is a hard read.I cannot recognize any stick figures. Nothing is "circled" in the figure as described in the article.
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Doug76
Postmaster
  
Reged: 12/05/07
Posts: 5537
Loc: SE Louisiana, future Texan
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I hope it does Phil, at least that. I'll put in a word to the Big Guy Upstairs.
-------------------- Doug
Truckstop Astronomer
The Universe, the light of God, in all it's majesty
6 achro refractors 50mm-150mm
1 apo refractor 90mm
1 SCT 8inch
UO Abbe Volcano Tops
Faworski Ortho's
Panoptic 24mm
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PhilH
sage
Reged: 01/27/05
Posts: 277
Loc: Long Island, NY
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Look at the PDF version .
-------------------- Phil Harrington
Contributing editor, Astronomy magazine
Author: Star Ware || Star Watch || Touring the Universe through Binoculars || et al...
Binocular Universe
http://www.philharrington.net
http://www.observingsites.com
"Two eyes are better than one!"
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desertstars
Please stand by...
   
Reged: 11/05/03
Posts: 34547
Loc: Tucson, AZ
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Quote:
Look at the PDF version .
-------------------- Tom W.
Collinder's Catalog
Jewels in Dark Settings
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ArizonaScott
Postmaster
   
Reged: 04/29/04
Posts: 5526
Loc: Scottsdale, AZ
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Excellent article, Phil! At a recent gathering my son hunted down several of these objects with a rich-field scope and SA2000. He could easily make out the Muscleman figure in Stock 2 and had very little trouble locating some of the clusters in Cass. His first star-hop, I was very proud!
-------------------- Scott
10" LX200 Classic, Konus 200, Orion ST80, ETX90 OTA, 60mm Celestron alt-az, Obie 20x80's, Meade 10x50's
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markkilner
newbie
Reged: 11/10/09
Posts: 1
Loc: Kent, England
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Great article. The Double Cluster has always been my favourite deep-sky object; I never get tired of looking at it (or should that be "them"?).
As for Messier's curious omission of it from his catalogue, Stephen James O'Meara offers an interesting theory in Appendix B of his book Deep-Sky Companions: The Caldwell Objects. To summarise very briefly, he suggests that Messier (who was only really interested in comets) ignored the Double Cluster because it was always outside his preferred searching cometary area, and so it didn't make the list of "objects that could be confused with comets".
I'm not sure I buy all of the arguments that O'Meara puts forward, but it's as good a theory as I've heard to date.
Mark
-------------------- Vixen SP-102
Tele Vue TV60
Swift 7x50 binos
Canon 40D DSLR
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