Patrick, Because you imaged M57 I would say that the candidate may be close by which means M13 is the most likely candidate. But I also checked out M56, M29. I would say of the 2 only M29 is could be a possible because it has TYC3152-182-1 and TYC3152-146-1 with TYC3152-350-1 in the same relative position as your bright start at 7 o’clock and those other 2 bright stars at about the 9:30 position. I would say that star at 7 o’clock would be about 15’ from the cluster. Not convinced I looked on. M39 was too big. M2 is beautiful but I couldn’t match any stars. M15 looks like another candidate to me except the one bright star is too close to M15compared to the other star pair. M71…uh I don’t think so. M10 another pretty cluster, but I don’t see those reference stars. OK M14 looks pretty good. TYC5084-89-1 is 14’ 30’ from M14 and TYC5084-230-1 with TYC5084-93-1 are in the right relative position…maybe a little off. I think it is M13. Even though the reference stars are only about 10’ away I will stick with M13. I mean, come on, if you are in that part of the sky where M57 is what else would come to the mind of the average citizen? M13! I gave you an out there. You are certainly above average, and no telling what can go through the mind of any wild astronomer with a new camera. ;>) Jim --- On Wed, 3/4/09, Patrick Wiggins <paw@wirelessbeehive.com> wrote: From: Patrick Wiggins <paw@wirelessbeehive.com> Subject: [Utah-astronomy] Help ID a globular? To: "utah astronomy listserve utah astronomy" <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Date: Wednesday, March 4, 2009, 5:16 AM I came across a couple of slides I took years ago when I was first dabbling in astrophotography. One of M-57 was easy to identify. The other is a globular but I've no idea which one. I've compared it to pictures of several globulars but none match. Anyone have any ideas which globular it is? http://users.wirelessbeehive.com/~paw/temp/mystery.jpg Thanks, patrick _______________________________________________ Utah-Astronomy mailing list Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Visit the Photo Gallery: http://gallery.utahastronomy.com Visit the Wiki: http://www.utahastronomy.com