Astronomy and family time.

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barry.armstead  

Posted:
Fri May 01, 2009 7:50 am

Joined: 06 Jul 2006
Posts: 167
Location: canberra
Astronomy and family time.

'Twas a perfect night last night. I had a lovely family come to look at the heavens through the telescope, preceded by a laser-guided tour of the sky, followed by a bit of a photographic slide show and explanation of the life of stars.

After they left, the moon set and the sky remained clear, crisp, cold and sharp. Upper atmospherics were pretty stable and there was not a cloud or even suggestion of dew point being reached for the entire night.

I set the camera for a few 15 minute darks and left to watch a companionable movie with my wife while my target got up above the horizon. The movie finished an I got straight into it. No sleep on a night like that! Many layers of clothing, a beanbag, blanket and settled in for the night.

As dawn broke, i switched to taking flats of the evenly lit pre-dawn sky and packed it all up.

I got 22 x 15-minute exposures all up on the nebula. That's 5.5 hours total. I'm pretty chuffed to get that much data in one night. Last time it took me a week to get that much between clouds...

I locked it up, cooked my lovely wife some brekky and a cuppa before waking her, then sat down and enjoyed the treat with her (no mad rushing around this time) and off we wandered to work. Who says astronomy is bad for family life?....Though I reckon I will crash and burn later this afternoon...lol.



fybroptk  

Posted:
Thu Jan 07, 2010 9:56 pm

Joined: 07 Jan 2010
Posts: 1

My father-in-law is in a great deal of pain causing difficulties in his sleep patterns, & likes to go outside at night & look up at the sky to calm himself.

My wife & I are looking to purchase a reasonably priced scope that can be hooked up to his tv next to the patio that can be controlled from his rocking chair (if feasible & reasonable.

What should I be looking for that can supply these conditions? Any help would be more than I have right now ;-0

cheers,

shoe


barry.armstead  

Posted:
Fri Jan 08, 2010 3:49 am

Joined: 06 Jul 2006
Posts: 167
Location: canberra

Hello Shoe. Unfortunately, such a setup will cost a lot of money. You will need a telescope that can capture a lot of light, a very sensitive CCD live camera, a robotic mount with go-to technology and some complex interfacing software.

This sort of thing takes time, money and a lot of experience to set up.

Baz.


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