On Christmas Eve, I went out to LaVerkin to do some stargazing through my 15" scope. It was pretty warm for December although it was hazy. I've never been confortable in December but it has been rather balmy lately. I only stayed till 10:45 pm before driving home. We saw the "e" and "f" stars in the Trapezium. I also found Hind's Crimson star. This star is a carbon variable star and it is one of the reddest "bright" stars in the sky. Also got a peek at the "Christmas Tree Cluster". It was too hazy to see the "Cone Nebula". Debbie
From: Michael Carnes <MichaelCarnes@earthlink.net> Date: 2005/12/27 Tue AM 09:17:37 MST To: Utah Astronomy <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] M34 Image posted
Although I guess I've turned into a sissy out here, in my New England days 30 degrees was quite mild. Many school star parties were conducted in sub-freezing weather. It would not be the least bit unusual for a group of folks to observe in single-digit weather. In the Northeast those are the most transparent skies of the year. Here there's so much schmutz in the winter air, you don't need a whole lot of thermal discouragement to just bag it and stay indoors.
On Dec 27, 2005, at 8:43 AM, Joe Bauman wrote:
Don't ruin my fantasy! I always imaging what it'd be like to visit our son in Tucson for a while and do astronomy in the desert nearby! Thanks, Joe
I live in southeastern Arizona and I don't think it's warm enough to stand being outside at night (teens to low 30s). It's better in the summer, but then it's almost too hot. It feels downright weird to be outside at 1:00 am, sweating, with the temperature still being 95 or so.
Joe Bauman wrote:
Beautiful, Deb! But don't you realize it's UINFAIR to take astronomical photos in the winter just 'cause you live in southern Utah where it's warm enough to stand being outside at night? -- Best wishes, Joe
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