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wow, an astronomy snob.2dimes wrote:It's 8-9 here so obviously if I'm setting up the telescope for something besides the Moon, I'm probably camping. The cutbank airport is a 4 and the Milky Way is impressive to my naked eye there. There are lots of 2 areas an hour and a half away.

mrswdk wrote:Maybe this is the right thread to ask:
I've been to rural Africa once, and when I looked up at night there whole sky was full of stars (peppered with dozens, possibly even 100+) and something that I assume was the Milky Way. I've looked up at the sky from the countryside in the UK and, although fairly starry, wasn't as impressive. Does living in different parts of the world make any difference to the stars that are visible from where you are, or was it just coincidence that I saw the cool stars when I was in Africa?
Also how far does light pollution reach - when I've been looking at stars in the UK I've generally been doing so within about 15-20 kilometers of a big city and only about a kilometer away from a town of 10-20,000 people. Don't know if that's still close enough for light pollution to have an impact.
mrswdk wrote:I am capable of using Google. Just wondered if anyone already knows about this and is able to supply a quick answer from their own knowledge.
mrswdk wrote:I am capable of using Google. Just wondered if anyone already knows about this and is able to supply a quick answer from their own knowledge.
I'll check those out since you can never have too much info, provided it's decent and so far skyandtelescope.com is.jusplay4fun wrote:http://www.skyandtelescope.com/astronom ... telescope/
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/astronom ... telescope/
The two above is for 2dimes, so he can see what he got and what upgrades he may want to get.
I hope this information helps. Let me know.
JP4F
2dimes wrote:Calm down.
I'll check those out since you can never have too much info, provided it's decent and so far skyandtelescope.com is.jusplay4fun wrote:http://www.skyandtelescope.com/astronom ... telescope/
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/astronom ... telescope/
The two above is for 2dimes, so he can see what he got and what upgrades he may want to get.
I hope this information helps. Let me know.
JP4F
I have learned a ton this year looking for info on eyepieces.
The guys at this shop actually are on an acreage and actually use their stuff. https://www.all-startelescope.com Very knowledgable but they don't even mess with the mid range eyepieces. Cheap eyepieces to them means just over $100. Looking for a fifty dollar special, I had to reluctantly get one off amazon, that's why I have to wait to see how good it will be with my inexpensive firsts cope. Eventually I will buy my next telescope there unless I just bum along with my brother and satisfy myself. He has an 8 or 10"" dobsonian and some other sizes of mid grade Plossl eyepieces.
Some much internets nostalgia right here.2dimes wrote:Just ask Jeeves
...
Tricking someone into looking at lemon party is great fun. Don't google that unless you like old naked guys.
Oh man, that must have been incredible. Part of why I'm starting to get so into this is actually being able to apreciate the simple act of stoping to look at it.mrswdk wrote:Thanks 2dimes. Hadn't realized light pollution could affect you that far away from the light source.
I was on the equator when I was looking at the stars in Africa.
And it's a quaint myth produced centuries later by European Protestants (forgetting that Luther hated him more than the Pope did) to suggest that the Church (you know the source for all major European Universities) was "anti-science." Galileo was not a proper scientist in the sense of the word. He frequently mixed in philosophy, religion and science in his arguments.jusplay4fun wrote:I disagree, tzor. In the course of the History of science, it is Galieo's methods of experimentation that we teach in Physics TODAY.

Actually it was atmospheric distortions. Most of the major optical telescopes are located in areas with little light pollution. They are also located really high, but that is mostly to reduce atmospheric distortion although it does help with the light polution.2dimes wrote:Without getting too specific, yes light pollution makes a big difference in what you see both naked eye and even with a good telescope. That is why NASA launched Hubble into space.

riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
Pretty cool to read the bortle classes described. Most people will never even get to a class 1 sky area. I imagine most will never see a class 3 or better actually. Many will have no idea about it either.jusplay4fun wrote:
1) impact of light pollution. This site will help:
http://www.bigskyastroclub.org/lp_bortle.html
KoolBak wrote:pssst....dimey.....every star you see is the "milky way"![]()
Whats the furthest bright object we can see....10 light years? and we're approx 25 from the center of the galaxy, which is 100 across? Like at my cabin in the high desert of central oregon, the band of the galaxy is incredible....like a bright ribbon across the sky, and we are still seeing so little. Boggles the mind....