GeorgeDuke
Carpal Tunnel
   
Reged: 04/24/03
Posts: 1585
Loc: PARADISE! (So.Florida)
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I guess the "how far can you see?" question is probably the most asked. On occasion I have told them that space is curved and if they look very closely they can see the back of their own head!
-------------------- George
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SkyShed POD XL-3
LX200GPS 203mm f10
StellarVue SV102ED2 Feathertouch Ser#0018
LXD75 GOTO with Orion 16" pier extension
Baader Hyperion 8mm ,13mm, 21mm + FTRs
2" GSO ED barlow, 2" SV Dielectric and Orion Prism Diagonals
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stefanj
Carpal Tunnel
   
Reged: 11/15/07
Posts: 1755
Loc: Western New York State
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These are all too funny- But it leaves me wondering what the public REAL thinks is out there- Anyway- my story- I took my daughter and a few other girls from Camp to see a metor shower last August. Well the metors were few and far between- but we were having a blast spotting satallites- The 2 girls suddenly became very concerned because it appeared that a satallite and an airliner were about to crash! My daughter and I still get a good chuckle over that one!
-------------------- Life is a circus- and I'm stuck in the FREAK TENT
If these are blue- it means the moon is full!
Meade ETX 90RA w/ tripod
Meade AZ 70 (now solar)
Meade DS 2130 AT
Zhumell 10" Dob
Simmons 10x50 Binoculars
GLPx8
LPI
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rocco13
Got Milk?
Reged: 07/29/06
Posts: 2642
Loc: Phoenix, Arizona
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I've also been asked the "how far can you see?", and also "how much power does it have?" So I say right around 8000x, and always get a "hmmm" accompanied with a knowing 'nod' or "that's about what I would have guessed".
One thing that happens no matter what the age of the viewer is after looking through the eyepiece, they ALWAYS step back and look to the sky in that same direction, as if they were going to see the object naked eye, too.
Re the astrology confusion...more than once, when my astronomy hobby is mentioned, I've been told that "I don't really believe in that stuff, but it's fun to read my horoscope anyway."
-------------------- Rocco
Zhumell Z12
Super C8 (1984 vintage)
Celestron 102 f/5
and a cheap pair of binoculars
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DaveCPAC
member
   
Reged: 02/21/08
Posts: 36
Loc: Lincoln, NE
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Speaking of the moon, I set up my scope for the kids (about 12 of them) at one of our family reunions. Oddly enough it was the younger ones (4-7) who were the most intrigued with what I was showing them, which was the Jupiter and the Moon. One nephew (5 y/o) was looking at the moon and I asked if he could see it. He nodded and his cousin asked "what do you see Sam?"
"Holes" was his answer. Interesting perspective I thought
-------------------- Dave Churilla
Prairie Astronomy Club
Lincoln, NE
http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org/
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werewolf6977
Lord High Smasher
   
Reged: 12/15/03
Posts: 8428
Loc: Hanover, Ohio
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Out of the mouths of babes.....
-------------------- Pete
6" Apogee/LXD55
Starhopper 6" Dob
Spaceprobe 130EQ
Black C8 OTA
WO Zenith Star 66 Patriot Edition
Sun Pak Pro 7500 Platinum Edition
8X42 Bushnell H2O Porro
7X35 Tasco
10X50 Nikon Actions (Type 7)
15X70 Skymasters
Dell Inspiron Dual Core 531s
"Science without Religion is lame, Religion without Science is blind" A.Einstein.
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Skip
Starlifter Driver
   
Reged: 01/23/08
Posts: 1337
Loc: San Antonio, Texas, USA
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Speaking of "out of the mouths..." I'm at almost all of the outreach events for our club and we get very few really "stupid" or wiseacre questions. Most people are really thrilled at what they are seeing. But once I had a 7 year old looking at M31 through my scope. I told him it was the farthest thing we could see with our naked eye and that the telescope was something like a time machine looking back in time over 2 million years. He jerked his head back from the scoppe, eyes really big, and shouted "Hey Mom, come over here and see this guy's time machine!"
-------------------- Skip
Celestron NexStar 6SE (Small Caliber)
Orion SkyQuest XT10i Intelliscope (Howitzer)
2 25mm Plossls; 24mm & 13mm Hyperions; 10mm Plossl; 6mm BO/TMB; 2X Barlow
Telrad + 4" Riser
7Ah PowerTank
Starbound Observing Chair
Eagle Eye Observatory, Texas -
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David Culp
Pooh-Bah
   
Reged: 04/10/07
Posts: 1177
Loc: Carrollton, TX
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One of my favorites goes something like this:
"Hey man, how much will that magnify?"
"Well, that really depends, right now were looking at (insert object) at about 45X"
"That scopes trash man, my friend has one he bought from Wal-Mart that can go up to 550X!"
-------------------- Atoka, Ok
Edited by David Culp (04/03/08 02:12 PM)
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Trebor777
Hazy
   
Reged: 01/04/08
Posts: 1159
Loc: Connecticut - U.S.
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Quote:
Or the "moon conspirators" who always ask "why don't we point Hubble at the moon so we can see the flag or the rover". I always tell them that they are located on the opposite side of the moon where Hubble can't get to.....
You can't see anything we left on the moon with a telescope. Anysize basically. Even the Hubble can't see anything we left.
You'd need a telescope, in space, over 100meters in size to actually see anything we left... Flags, rovers, etc, etc...
-------------------- - Randy
Telescopes (Solar too), Eyepieces, Mounts, Filters, CCD Cameras,
Astronomy Accessories, My Eyes, My Mind (Sometimes) and Hopefully Clear Skies.
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llanitedave
Humble Megalomaniac
   
Reged: 09/26/05
Posts: 12929
Loc: Amargosa Valley, NV, USA
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I like the "horror-scope" response to the astrology-confused. Whenever someone asks me what my "sign" is, my answer is "No Parking".
-------------------- "Since the process of science generates more mysteries than it solves, I predict that we'll never learn everything: and we'll continue to generate new ignorance at the speed of knowledge."
"S.O.E." (Sauron's Other Eye), with 16" Royce conical mirror: A permanent work in progress.
10" Homebuilt dob, old Coulter mirror
Under Construction: The "Eye of Sauron" Observatory!
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Classic8
sage
Reged: 04/12/06
Posts: 236
Loc: Naperville, IL, USA
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Quote:
Quote:
Well At least you dont work with a bunch of auto techs like I do who think it is hillarious to say that im always looking at Uranus.
Hey, thats nothing, at least you're not a science teacher who has to put up questions such as:
"Hey Mr. Culp, how big is Uranus?" "Hey Mr. Culp, I heard Uranus is blue, is that true?" "Hey Mr. Culp, is Uranus full of gas?"
I hate that planet.
I pronounce it Er-in-us now. Why? When I was in college I had a classical mythology class and the professor was talking about the god that the planet was named after. She pronounced it that way, and I figured, well, she would know how to pronounce it.
And it sounds a heck of a lot better than Yer-ayn-us. Or the other pronunciation Yer-in-us, which isn't much better.
-------------------- George
8" Celestron SCT
ETX 125PE
SV102
MaxScope 40
"Oral agreements aren't worth the paper they're written on"
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Firewood
super member
Reged: 10/27/07
Posts: 132
Loc: 29°7' N, 95°4' W
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Hi, folks!
I was out camping with some friends a few years ago and pulled out my binoculars to take advantage of the clear, dark skies. I showed the Andromeda galaxy to one friend when another walked up and asked what we were looking at. The first friend pulled the binoculars away from her face, look at him, and said in all seriousness: "The Androgynous galaxy."
- Jeff
-------------------- Clear skies,
Jeff
Nexstar 8 GPS XLT
40mm Optiluxe, 22mm LVW, 13mm Widescan III, 9mm Expanse, 6.7mm S4000 UWA, Plossls
Houston Astronomical Society
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Jason D
Post Laureate
   
Reged: 10/21/06
Posts: 3291
Loc: California
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Quote:
Quote:
Or the "moon conspirators" who always ask "why don't we point Hubble at the moon so we can see the flag or the rover". I always tell them that they are located on the opposite side of the moon where Hubble can't get to.....
You can't see anything we left on the moon with a telescope. Anysize basically. Even the Hubble can't see anything we left.
You'd need a telescope, in space, over 100meters in size to actually see anything we left... Flags, rovers, etc, etc...
Instead of hitting golf balls, the Apollo astronauts should have taken their time to stack/arrange lunar rocks on the moon's surface to make a huge "X" sign visible to amateur astronomers  Jason
-------------------- XT10 classic with premium optics
Tri-knob CR2 with compression rings
Round Table Platform
4.5" StarBlast
6" StarBlast6
TV EPs
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David Culp
Pooh-Bah
   
Reged: 04/10/07
Posts: 1177
Loc: Carrollton, TX
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Quote:
I pronounce it Er-in-us now. Why? When I was in college I had a classical mythology class and the professor was talking about the god that the planet was named after. She pronounced it that way, and I figured, well, she would know how to pronounce it.
And it sounds a heck of a lot better than Yer-ayn-us. Or the other pronunciation Yer-in-us, which isn't much better.
I actually pronounce it "You-ron-us" to try and avoid the chuckles from kids in class.
I really hate that planet.
-------------------- Atoka, Ok
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Sky_Watcher2007
easily amused
Reged: 07/24/06
Posts: 174
Loc: Belleville, IL
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Quote:
Quote:
Well At least you dont work with a bunch of auto techs like I do who think it is hillarious to say that im always looking at Uranus.
Hey, thats nothing, at least you're not a science teacher who has to put up questions such as:
"Hey Mr. Culp, how big is Uranus?" "Hey Mr. Culp, I heard Uranus is blue, is that true?" "Hey Mr. Culp, is Uranus full of gas?"
I hate that planet.
I just laughed so hard I almost fell out of my chair!
-------------------- Rhonda~
C9.25 ASGT SCT
Hardin Optical 6" Dob
Pentax 16 x 50 XCF Binoculars
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RussL
Music Maker
   
Reged: 03/18/08
Posts: 1925
Loc: Cayce, SC
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Quote:
at least you're not a science teacher who has to put up questions such as:
I had a science teacher in high school (also the golf coach) who once pronounced Copernicus as "Copper Nickus." I corrected him after class. Not good. I was also on the golf team. Uh oh.
-------------------- --Dawg, the Russell
"Akita mani yo." Observe everything as you walk. (--Lakota)
Celestron Celestar 8 Standard SCT, f10
Celestron 80mm Wide View ref., f5
Orion 120ST ref., f5
Criterion RV-6 Dynascope, Newt., f8, (c. 1962)
Sears Discoverer 60mm ref., f7, (c. 1973)
Celestron Ultima DX 10x50, 6.5 TFOV
Tasco 7x35 wide
Several mediocre eyepieces
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David Culp
Pooh-Bah
   
Reged: 04/10/07
Posts: 1177
Loc: Carrollton, TX
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Quote:
I just laughed so hard I almost fell out of my chair!
I see you live up to your tag line of "easily amused"
-------------------- Atoka, Ok
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Sky_Watcher2007
easily amused
Reged: 07/24/06
Posts: 174
Loc: Belleville, IL
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You have no idea....
-------------------- Rhonda~
C9.25 ASGT SCT
Hardin Optical 6" Dob
Pentax 16 x 50 XCF Binoculars
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larrymax
super member
Reged: 02/02/08
Posts: 179
Loc: Orting, WA
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Had my first "question" last night.
I was setup in the front yard last night and my neighbor came out and said "Are you looking at the sky?" I stepped back from the Ep and stared at her for a second then I looked at the scope and then back at her and said "no". She got a puzzled look on her face and walked back in her house. I started laughing so hard I had to call it quits for the night.
--------------------
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Trebor777
Hazy
   
Reged: 01/04/08
Posts: 1159
Loc: Connecticut - U.S.
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Quote:
Had my first "question" last night.
I was setup in the front yard last night and my neighbor came out and said "Are you looking at the sky?" I stepped back from the Ep and stared at her for a second then I looked at the scope and then back at her and said "no". She got a puzzled look on her face and walked back in her house. I started laughing so hard I had to call it quits for the night.
You should have said you're looking for angels to shoot down.
-------------------- - Randy
Telescopes (Solar too), Eyepieces, Mounts, Filters, CCD Cameras,
Astronomy Accessories, My Eyes, My Mind (Sometimes) and Hopefully Clear Skies.
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larrymax
super member
Reged: 02/02/08
Posts: 179
Loc: Orting, WA
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Quote:
You should have said you're looking for angels to shoot down.
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