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Autumn Sky Tour Home Page |
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The autumn sky brings some of the faintest constellations carrying the brightest legend - the story of Andromeda and Perseus. With this sky you have the opportunity to tell the story in full, illustrated in spectacular fashion by the stars. While there are many other bright constellations up at this time with interesting features of their own, the Andromeda Legend is the centerpiece of the sky and the backbone of the Autumn Stargazing Tour.
The account here is the agenda that I loosely follow in providing a guided tour of the autumn skies as visible from 45° North Latitude. This tour is designed for one topic to lead to the next, so it flows nicely and still manages to teach Astronomy under the night sky as we caravan from one constellation to another. Aside from the binoculars and telescopes I usually make a point of also bringing a highly focused flashlight which serves as an effective pointer for tracing out constellations.
View to the South
View to the North
Polar
Constellations
Down the
Milky Way
The Zodiac
Constellations
The
Andromeda Legend
Perseus
the Hero
I actually start the autumn tour with a quick observation of the Great Square, since you can scarcely move around the sky without stumbling across it. We then turn to the polar constellations, wind our way down the Milky Way, skirt across the southern horizon following the Zodiac, then finish with the Andromeda Legend as the grand finale. Under a time pressure, I have been known to tell the story of Andromeda, then pick up other items of interest as time permits.
Time might be limited, if it's chilly, if conditions are changing, or else if time is just limited. In that case, these are the best items to hit - the ones that the kids (and the adults) are talking about days later.
| Feature | Naked Eye | Binoculars | Telescope |
| Mizar & Alcor | ü | ü | |
| The Double Double | ü | ü | |
| The Ring Nebula | ü | ||
| The Coathanger | ü | ||
| Albireo | ü | ü | |
| Andromeda Galaxy | ü | ü | ü |
| d Cephei | ü | ü | |
| Algol the Demon Star | ü | ü | |
| Double Cluster | ü | ü | |
| M15 (Globular Cluster) | ü | ü |
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Goddard Space
Flight Center Hubble Site The best Hubble web site in my "hubble" opinion
SEDS
"Students for the Exploration and Development of Space" -- the single most
informative astronomy site on the web, period.
Views of the Solar System Excellent reference on the solar system, well
organized and packed with goodies.
PLEASE NOTE!
All content material was graciously provided and used by the permission of Randy Culp