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Saturday January 5, 2019 from 6:00pm to ?:?? PM
Announced by our Observatory Director on Friday, January
4, 2019 at 10:57 AM |
Status updated by our Observatory Director on Saturday,
January 5, 2019 at 2:01 PM |
The forecast calls for clear skies this evening.
The observatory will open at 6:00 PM with the following
celestial objects
added to the observing list: Blue Snowball Nebula,
Little Dumbbell Nebula,
open clusters NGC752, M103, M52, and galaxies M74 & M77.
The observatory will open at 6:00 PM |
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Public
Observing Event
at
the ACA Observatory
Impromptu Event
It looks like a great evening for stargazing; cold
temperatures, low humidity, and clear skies.
What will we be looking at tonight?
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Herschel's Double Cluster,
Pleiades through the 100mm wide field telescope,
the planet Uranus,
globular cluster M15, open cluster M34, and
Andromeda Galaxy are on
the observing list.
The observatory will open at 6:00 PM
The forecast calls for temperatures in the lower
30s, so it is important to
come properly
dressed for the event. Standing behind a
telescope looking
at star clusters produces
little body heat; it only warms the heart. |
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.Visible satellite passes from the ACA Observatory:
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Be
sure to hit the REFRESH / RELOAD button on your browser
(or the <F5> key on your keyboard) for up-to-date information |
Live AccuWeather Satellite Mosaic |
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Jet Stream (updates
automatically to latest available image)
The Jet Stream affects astronomical "seeing" (steadiness of the air)
If
we're in a gray area, seeing will not be as good as in a white area.
If
we're in a white area, the shorter the arrows, the better.
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