Observing the Messier Objects with a Small Telescope
NEW
Philip Pugh
224 pages, 120 black & white illustrations, 10 colour illustrations.
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"Observing the Messier Objects with a Small Telescope" contains descriptions and photographs of the 103 Messier objects, with instructions on how to
find them without a computerized telescope or even setting circles. The photographs show how the objects appear through a 127mm Maksutov (and other
instruments, where applicable). The visual appearance of a Messier object is often very different from what can be imaged with the same telescope, and
a special feature of this book is that it shows what you can see with a small telescope. It also contains binocular descriptions of some objects.
Messier published the final version of his catalog in 1781 (it contains 103 different objects), a catalog so good that it is still in common use today, well over two centuries later. In making a catalog of all the 'fixed' deep-sky objects that observers might confuse with comets, Messier had succeeded in listing all the major interesting deep-sky objects that today are targets for amateur astronomers. Messier's telescope (thought to be a 4-inch) was, by today's amateur standards, small. It also had rather poor optics by modern standards. Thus - and despite the fact that he was a master observer - all the things Messier saw can be found and observed by any observer using a commercial 127 mm (5-inch) telescope. "Observing the Messier Objects with a Small Telescope" lets the reader follow in Messier's footsteps by observing the Messier objects more or less as the great man saw them himself!
Messier published the final version of his catalog in 1781 (it contains 103 different objects), a catalog so good that it is still in common use today, well over two centuries later. In making a catalog of all the 'fixed' deep-sky objects that observers might confuse with comets, Messier had succeeded in listing all the major interesting deep-sky objects that today are targets for amateur astronomers. Messier's telescope (thought to be a 4-inch) was, by today's amateur standards, small. It also had rather poor optics by modern standards. Thus - and despite the fact that he was a master observer - all the things Messier saw can be found and observed by any observer using a commercial 127 mm (5-inch) telescope. "Observing the Messier Objects with a Small Telescope" lets the reader follow in Messier's footsteps by observing the Messier objects more or less as the great man saw them himself!
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