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Under-corrected Commercial Mirrors

21 Sunday Jan 2018

Posted by gfbrandenburg in Uncategorized

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I have tested three different Newtonian mirrors from 12″ to 16″ diameter over the past few years that were labeled as being by Meade. One had been refigured by someone else before I tested it.

Each of the mirrors initially looked nice and smooth, and the Ronchigrams looked pretty close to the theoretically-perfect image generated by RonWin or similar software.

However, when I did a zonal test, in every single case, the mirror turned out to be seriously under-corrected, in some cases by about 50%. In other words, if a perfect mirror should have the outer zone (say the outer inch) to “null out” at 0.236″ from the location where the central zone nulls out, then the mirrors I tested might null out at only 0.118″ instead.

I took care to repeat the measurements several times in each of these cases, and in one case the owner also took a set of readings; his and mine agreed pretty closely.

I don’t know if it’s my skills at reading Foucault/Couder shadow zones that are suspect, or if I’m correct. Anybody else have similar or opposite stories or experiences?

Make your own telescope!

18 Thursday Jan 2018

Posted by gfbrandenburg in astronomy, education, Optics, Safety, Telescope Making, Uncategorized

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achromatic, doublet, Gaithersburg, lens, make your own telescope, PVC

This weekend, I’m hosting a small workshop at the Community Museum in Gaithersburg, MD, where interested persons from 8 to 88 years of age can make their own telescope in an hour or two. We will be using surplus but high-quality achromatic primary doublet lenses as well as inexpensive eyepieces, along with PVC tubing and some really cool tripods to hold it steady.  We will some basic optics experiments to help explain how these gizmos work, and will have spray paint and colored tape to decorate the tubes.

If you are interested, here is the necessary information:

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Gaithersburg Community Museum's photo.
JAN21

Make Your Own Telescope

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    Sunday at 1 PM – 4 PM
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    Gaithersburg Community Museum

    9 S Summit Ave, Gaithersburg, Maryland 20877
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Make your own refracting telescope in just an afternoon! This workshop will be led by veteran DC amateur telescope-maker Guy Brandenburg. He will show you how to make a small functioning telescope that can either be held in your hands or mounted on almost any camera tripod. All of the materials needed will be provided, and no experience is necessary. This workshop is open to anyone from the ages of 9 through 99, but a parent would need to accompany any child from 9 – 11. You might get a little dirty, so don’t wear your best clothing!

You will also see how various types of telescopes such as reflectors, refractors, and catadioptrics are put together and operate, using actual examples, including the type made and used by Galileo around 1609.

$30 City of Gaithersburg residents/$35 non-residents. Space is limited to 15 so pre-registration is required. To register go to RecXpress at https://online.activenetwork.com/gaithersburg/Start/Start.asp. It’s activity #49690.

For more information or if you have trouble registering call the museum at 301-258-6160 or museum@gaithersburgmd.gov

 

Is This A Sketch of the Evolution of Galaxies Over Time?

15 Monday Jan 2018

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The answer is, of course, no. Though they do bear some resemblance to the amazing astronomy graphics you come across these days at websites like Astronomy Picture of the Day, or graphs that astronomers show to their peers, these are merely wonderful doodles made by a fellow-volunteer at the registration desk at last week’s American Astronomical Society at the Gaylord convention center at the National Harbor in Oxon Hill, MD. Sorry, I have forgotten his name and I also didn’t get permission to post. (He was an undergrad or grad student but I forget where.) So I definitely need to pay him royalties if he ever tracks me down.

(He won’t get very rich though: even 12% or 37.5% or 99.99% of zero income from this blog is still zero…)

All of us volunteers and paid staff were very impressed by his doodles.

I’m sure that the reaction of a group of Freudian psychoanalysts would have been quite different.

Photos from Chabot

14 Sunday Jan 2018

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A bit of weight-saving astro whimsy on a scope for my Great-nephews

14 Sunday Jan 2018

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I was inspired to try making some Astronomical cutouts in the side panels of a 6″ f/8 Dob I’m making for my Great-nephews. The tube is smurf blue, as requested. I’ve never tried cutting out decorative holes in plywood before, so don’t laugh too much.

A visit to Oakland’s Chabot Science and Amateur Telescope Making Class

10 Wednesday Jan 2018

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Three highlights of my visit in late

December 2017:

🏵the weekly Friday-night telescope-mirror-Making workshop there …

🏵visiting some of their big, ancient refractors, one of which is the smaller cousin of the 26″ refractor at the USNO in DC …

🏵viewing some of their collection of old & modern donated telescopes, which they are endeavoring to put into service again and into the hands of interested observers …

I’ll post pix in a bit

Fall 2022 Hopewell Observatory Open House and Star Party: October 15

17 Friday Nov 2017

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Anybody interested in the night sky, including members of local astronomy clubs like NCA and NOVAC, are invited to the Fall 2022 astronomical open house and star party at Hopewell Observatory on the night of October 15(Saturday evening and on into Sunday morning). Feel free to pass this invitation to friends, neighbors, and family and anybody else you care to notify.

We are located about 30 miles west of the Beltway on Bull Run Mountain – a ridge that overlooks Haymarket VA from an elevation of 1100 feet, near the intersection of I-66 and US-15. Detailed directions are below.

Assuming good weather, you’ll get to see planets, star clusters and nebulae and the Milky Way itself, as well as many other galaxies. If you like, you can bring a picnic dinner and a blanket or folding chairs, and/or your own telescope, if you own one and feel like carrying it. We have outside 120VAC power, if you need it for your telescope drive, but you will need your own extension cord and plug strip. If you want to camp out or otherwise stay until dawn, feel free!

If it gets cold, our Operations Building, about 40 meters north of the Observatory itself, is heated, and we will have the makings for tea, cocoa, and coffee.

Warning: While we do have bottled drinking water and electricity and we do have hand sanitizer, we do not have running water; and, our “toilet” is an outhouse of the composting variety. At this time of year, there are almost no insects of any kind, although it’s always wise to be safe and check yourself for ticks after you get home.

The road up here is partly paved, and partly gravel or dirt. It’s suitable for any car except those with really low clearance, so leave your fancy sports car (if any) at home. Consider car-pooling, because we don’t have huge parking lots. We will have signs up at various places along the way to help guide you, and will try to have parking spaces denoted.

Two of our telescope mounts are permanently installed in the observatory under a roll-off roof. We have others that we roll out onto the grass in our roughly one-seventh-acre field. We have two 14-inch scopes (one hand-made Dob and one Celestron SCT),  and a 10” f/9 reflecting scope also made by hand. We are about to install a brand-new Astro-Physics GoTo computerized mount in addition to our sturdy, highly accurate, but 1970s Ealing mount. The entire observatory was hand-built, and is maintained, by the labor of its founders and current members. We also re-built the electronics and motors for the Ealing mount.

The drive is about an hour from DC. After parking at a cell-phone tower installation, you will need to hike south about 130 yards to our observatory. Physically handicapped people, and any telescopes, can be dropped off at the observatory itself, and then the vehicle will need to go back to park near that tower. To look through some of the various telescopes you will need to climb some stairs or ladders, so keep that in mind when making your plans.

It’s not the inky-scary dark of the Chilean Atacama or the Rockies, but Hopewell Observatory is mostly surrounded by nature preserves maintained by the Bull Run Mountain Conservancy and other such agencies. Also, our Prince William and Fauquier neighbors and officials have done a pretty good job of insisting on smart lighting in the new developments around Haymarket and Gainesville, which benefits everybody. So, while there is a pretty bright eastern horizon because of DC and its VA suburbs, we can still see the Milky Way whenever it’s clear and moonless.

The easiest planet to find will be Mars, and with our telescopes you may be able to see polar caps and dark regions. Saturn will set fairly early (6:43 pm), Uranus and Neptune will be findable, Venus will rise a bit before 4 am, and the moon will rise after 2 in the morning.

We should also be able to track down and examine many, many deep-sky objects.

You can find detailed directions and a map to the observatory below:

DIRECTIONS TO HOPEWELL OBSERVATORY:

[Note: if you have a GPS navigation app, then you can simply ask it to take you to 3804 Bull Run Mountain Road, The Plains, VA. That will get you very close to step 6, below.]

(1) From the Beltway, take I-66 west about 25 miles to US 15 (Exit 40) at Haymarket. At the light at the end of the ramp, turn left/south onto US 15. (Exit is at approximately latitude 38°49’00″N, longitude 77°38’15″W.)

(2) Go 0.25 mi; at the second light turn right/west onto VA Rt. 55. There is a Sheetz gas station & convenience store at this intersection, along with a CVS, a McDonald’s, a Food Lion, and a Walmart-anchored shopping center on the NW corner that includes a number of fast- and slow-food restaurants, including a Starbucks.. This is a good place to stop for restrooms or supplies.

(3) After 0.7 mi on Va 55, turn right (north) onto Antioch Rd., Rt. 681. You will pass entrances for Boy Scouts’ Camp Snyder and the Winery at La Grange. (38°49’12″N, 77°39’29″W)

(4) Follow Antioch Rd. to its end (3.2 mi), then turn left (west) onto Waterfall Rd. (Rt. 601), which will become Hopewell Rd. (38°51’32″N, 77°41’10″W)

(5) After 1.0 mi, bear right onto Bull Run Mountain Rd., Rt. 629. This will be the third road on the right, after Mountain Rd. and Donna Marie Ct. (38°52’00″N, 77°42’08″W) Please note that Google Earth and Google Maps show a non-existent road, actually a power line, in between Donna Marie Ct. and Bull Run Mtn. Rd.

(6) In 0.9 mi, enter the driveway on the right, with the orange pipe gate. There is a locked stone and metal gate on the left, opposite our entrance, labeled 3804 Bull Run Mountain Road. Don’t take that road – it goes to an FAA radar dome. Instead, go to the right (east). We’ll have some signs up. This is a very sharp right hand turn. (38°52’36″N, 77°41’55″W)

(7) Follow the narrow paved road up the ridge to the cell phone tower station. You should park around the tower (any side is fine) or in the grassy area before the wooden sawhorse barrier. Then you should walk the remaining hundred meters to the observatory on foot. Be sure NOT to block the right-of-way for automobiles.

(8) If you are dropping off a scope or a handicapped person, move the wooden barrier out of the way temporarily, and drive along the grassy track to the right of the station, into the woods, continuing south, through (or around) a white metal bar gate. The few parking places among the trees near our operations cabin, the small house-like structure in the woods, are reserved for Observatory members. If you are dropping off a handicapped person or a telescope, please do so and then drive your car back and park near the cell phone tower.

Please watch out for pedestrians, especially children! The observatory itself is in the clearing a short distance ahead. We do not have streetlights, and there will not be any Moon to light your way, so a flashlight is a good idea. In the operations cabin we have a supply of red translucent plastic film and tape and rubber bands so that you can filter out everything but red wavelengths on your flashlight. This will help preserve everybody’s night vision. In the cabin we also have a visitor sign-in book; a supply of hot water; the makings of hot cocoa, tea, and instant coffee; hand sanitizer; as well as paper towels, plastic cups and spoons.

The location of the observatory is approximately latitude 38°52’12″N, longitude 77°41’54″W. The drive takes about 45 minutes from the Beltway. A map to the site follows. If you get lost, you can call me on my cell phone at 202 dash 262 dash 4274.

hopewell map revised

A Recent Image of M-13, the Great Hercules Globular Cluster

09 Saturday Sep 2017

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Last weekend I practiced doing some astro-imaging during a beautiful night that featured a nearly full moon night, up at Hopewell Observatory. I was particularly concerned with getting decent ‘flat’, ‘dark’ and ‘bias’ subframes, which are shots where you take images of what appears to be nothing at all. However, using those apparently ‘nothing’ subframes, you can subtract out noise and unwanted internal signals, in order to get decent images. I was using a Celestron 14-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope on an ancient Ealing mount whose drive has some problems; as a result my ‘light’ sub-frames could only be 2 minutes long. I am also using a second-hand Canon EOS Xsi 450D DSLR camera that has had the infrared-rejection filter removed.

I did the stacking and registering and removal of noise using a program called Deep Sky Stacker, with no further processing. One day I will learn how to adjust colors with something like Pixinsight to make it look more beautiful I was fairly pleased with the results, which you can see here:

m13 as png file from hopewell labor day 2017

Magic in the Night Air

04 Monday Sep 2017

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My cell phone can’t do it justice with pictures, but I’m in an enchanted land right now.

There is something magical about being outside on a very pleasant summer night at 2 AM, away from any city lights, at our observatory on Bull Run Mountain. I’m well-napped and caffeinated, standing on a platform, surrounded by silver light, trees, our observatory, grass, and deep shadows. Because of this nearly-full moon, I didn’t need any flashlight to make my way between buildings, and now I’m listening to the cicadas, tree frogs and katydids, and also doing astronomy — or at least trying (with some success) to do various experiments with our equipment! And we have a cell phone signal strong enough for me to post this!

(ICYWTK, I’m imaging the very famous M13 — the great globular cluster in Hercules — as well as the also-famous Double Cluster, trying various settings on the mount and camera, more for my edification than to do any original research… I also tried using the Full Moon filtered through my T-shirt to produce “flat frames”. ICYDK, you have to subtract the signal in the flat frame from the signal in your “light frames” — the images you take of the star or galaxy or whatever — in order to get rid of noise and other distortions… It’s all complex mathematical algorithms today to produce those pretty astro photographs we live to enjoy…)

Being outside under the moon and stars on a nice summer night is something few of us get to do anymore. But it’s MAGIC. Try it some day.

Image

The eclipse, in an image made by an expert: the first one that (sort of) matches what the eye could see!

29 Tuesday Aug 2017

2017 Total Solar Eclipse, High Dynamic Range Corona

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