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Sept 1SaturnMarsGary Seronik
Binocular HighlightSkyandTelescope.com September 2014 45Barnard’s EβαγδAQUILAAltair5 °b
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wAquila’s Dark Secret
Dark nebulae are one class of deep-sky object that
doesn’t get enough attention. That’s not surprising
because appreciating them requires a diff erent mindset.
Instead of seeking light, you’re hunting for the absence
of luminosity. The other factor that works against dark
nebulae is that you need very good skies to have any
chance of seeing them at all. If you can’t see the Milky
Way easily, you’re out of luck. That’s because you need
the background glow of starlight to render these opaque
objects visible. Riding high in the sky this month, the
constellation Aquila provides both a rich swath of Milky
Way and one of the fi nest binocular dark nebulae.
The Charles Messier of dark nebulae was Edward
Emerson Barnard. Like Messier, Barnard started out
a comet hunter, but he’s best known for his work at
Yerkes Observatory, where he produced a photographic
atlas of the Milky Way. A byproduct of this eff ort was
his catalog of dark nebulae. Instead of M numbers, his
objects have B numbers — including Aquila’s B142 and
B143. Together, these opaque clouds are also known as
Barnard’s E, owing to their photographic resemblance to
the fi fth letter of the alphabet.
I can make out Barnard’s E fairly easily in my 10× 30
image-stabilized binoculars, provided the skies are dark
and clear. The E shape isn’t distinct, however — the
nebulae more resemble a pair of east-west elongated
blobs joined by a vague vertical protrusion. I can see the
dark nebula in my 15×45 image-stabilized binoculars too,
but it’s actually slightly more diffi cult. That’s because
the fi eld of view is a bit too constricted to include both
the nebula and enough of the surrounding Milky Way to
let it stand out. ✦When
Late July Midnight*
Early Aug. 11 p.m.*
Late Aug. 10 p.m.*
Early Sept. 9 p.m.*
Late Sept. Nightfall
* Daylight-saving time.NHSC layout.indd 45 6/23/14 12:18 PM