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If You Can’t Name That Star, Try Asking Your Telescope
LONGTIME stargazers learned the basics of the night sky the hard way — with pencils, star charts and lots of patience with their telescopes.
Now high-tech equipment and smartphone apps are making the task a lot less daunting for beginners. New point-and-shoot telescopes, for example, require only the push of a button to go into action: Plunk one down in the driveway and the device gets its own bearings, aligning itself with the stars above so it can tell you that the twinkling light in the eyepiece is Betelgeuse. Three models of these new, self-aligning telescopes, costing about $700 to $800, will be offered this July by Celestron. The company’s new line, called SkyProdigy, is intended for amateurs who don’t have in-depth knowledge of the night sky, or may not even have a clue of how to set up a telescope, said Danyal J. Medley, a principal engineer at the company in Torrance, Calif. Even seasoned astronomy experts are heralding such automation. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/10/bu...ml?ref=science Note: April 9, 2011 |
I don't know. After seeing lots of beginners fighting with these mounts I'm not sure they are a good idea for a starter scope. A simple Dobsonian mount and knowledge of the sky is a far better deal giving more telescope aperture and thus better image to the eye and less headaches for the same cost.
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http://pyxis.homestead.com/StarPartyGuide_52.jpg |
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http://i.imgur.com/ldMv9.jpg |
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Glass is heavy, I just couldn't lift 25kg when i was 10 |
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The clearest skies I can remember seeing was on top of Upper wolfjaw mountain in the adrirondack park. It was midnight, we were 8 hours behind schedule, no food, no water, and 5 very mountainous miles to go. Oh and no flashlight, and no moon. We thought we were going to die, especially since it was mid october (those that know the park know how bad the weather can turn in that season, the 10th mountain div trains there), it was supposed to drop below freezing that night, and we had no cold weather gear on us, it was day hike and as I said, 8 hours behind. But the view from the summit was so awesome we stopped to take it in. |
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