2019-08-01_Sky_and_Telescope

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skyandtelescope.com • AUGUST 2019 25


Until the late 18th century, most
astronomical discoveries were
made with small telescopes,
usually long-focal-length
refractors with apertures of less
than three or four inches. The
biggest moons of Jupiter were
discovered by Galileo and Si-
mon Marius in 1610 with 1-inch
refractors. Christiaan Huygens
discovered the rings of Saturn
and the planet’s largest moon,
Titan, with a 63-mm refractor,
which he often stopped down
to 35 mm. William Herschel dis-
covered the planet Uranus with
a 6-inch refl ector, but he might
as well have used a smaller
telescope because Uranus is
relatively bright.
And, of course, there were
the comet hunters and pio-
neering deep-sky observers.

Charles Messier and Pierre
Méchain discovered 21 comets
between them, along with doz-
ens of objects that now com-
prise the famous Messier List.
They used 4-inch (or smaller)
refractors. Even after Herschel
made an exhaustive catalog of
the deep sky, subsequent ob-
servers continued to discover
a few deep-sky stragglers.
The 6th-magnitude refl ection
nebula NGC 1333 in Perseus,
for example, was overlooked
by Herschel, but discovered in
1855 by the German astrono-
mer Eduard Schönfeld with a
3-inch refractor.
In the 20th century, the pace
of discovery with small tele-
scopes slowed but didn’t stop.
Patrick Moore’s fi rst research
paper, about craterlets on the

Moon observed with a 3-inch
refractor, was published when
he was still a teenager.
Many comet hunters through
the 20th century favored
small, wide-fi eld telescopes.
Famed comet hunter Minoru
Honda honed his craft with a
3-inch refractor he built from
a discarded lens. His fi rst
observations were made from
a battlefi eld near Singapore
during World War II while
his fellow soldiers slept. His
work inspired a generation of
Japanese comet hunters armed
with small instruments. A little
luck aided some discoveries: In
1983, George Alcock discov-
ered Comet IRAS–Araki–Alcock
(C/1983 H1) with a pair of
15 ×80 binoculars while kneel-
ing on the fl oor of his home

and looking through a double-
paned window.
Serious observation and
discoveries with small scopes
continue to the present day. In
2004, amateur astronomer Jay
McNeil discovered a variable
nebula with a 3-inch refractor
and CCD. The nebula waxes
and wanes due to outbursts
from an active protostar. In
2016, Giuseppe Donatiello dis-
covered a dwarf spheroidal gal-
axy some 10 million light-years
away with a 5-inch refractor
and CCD. Amateur Donald
Bruns used a 4-inch refractor to
detect the defl ection of starlight
predicted by Einstein’s general
theory of relativity, improving
on the 1919 measurement by
Sir Arthur Eddington (S&T: Aug.
2018, p. 22).

roughly 1° × 2° in size, ideal for any small telescope and a
low-power, wide-fi eld eyepiece.
Like Baade’s Window, the shimmering M24 complex
appears as a result of a gap in the dark galactic dust clouds,
affording us a clear view more than 9,000 light-years into the
Sagittarius Arm of the Milky Way. If there were no dust or
cold gas, the entire Milky Way from Cygnus to Scutum and
into Sagittarius (and beyond into Centaurus and Crux in the
Southern Hemisphere) would appear as bright and lumines-
cent as M24, more than bright enough to cast shadows on a
dark night. The individual stars in M24 range from magni-
tude 6 down to invisible in a small telescope. The cloud takes
on a three-dimensional quality in a good scope and steady
seeing, and some observers see the aggregate color as blue or
even green. If you have a very dark sky, look for the small oval
dark nebulae Barnard 92 and Barnard 93 on the north edge of
the cloud. You could spend an entire night examining M24,
and it would not be a wasted night.

The Northern Summer Milky Way
Moving northward from M24, pause to take in M17 (t he
Swan Nebula) and M16 (the Eagle Nebula). The pair is sepa-
rated by about 2.3° of sky, so you need a good 3° fi eld of view
to frame them well. Initially, they may not seem as impressive
as the Lagoon and Trifi d, but patient observers with pristine
sky are rewarded with a glimpse of the shape and structure of
these distant star factories.

pMOVING NORTH Follow the spangled course of the Milky Way from
the Teapot in Sagittarius through Scutum to the tail of Serpens Cauda.
Gently nudge your fi eld of view northwest of Theta Serpentis to fi nd the
broad open cluster IC 4756.

AK


IRA


FU


JII


M8

M20

M24

M11

Scutum
Star
Cloud

Serpens Ophiuchus

θ

β η

α

ν

ξ
η

ε

δ
M16
M17

4 Aql

IC 4756

ρ

ζ

NGC 6633
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