Urban Club - Tips
Urban Club Chair:
Mike Benson
2308 Dundee Lane
Nashville, TN 37214-1520
(615) 883-6571
E-mail: ocentaurus@aol.com
Tips for Observing
in Light Polluted Area
Compiled by
Ken E. Boquist
Bill Geertsen
David Hasenauer
Lee Maisler
Chris Randall
Roberto Torres
John Wagoner
Sometimes it can be difficult observing
in heavily light polluted skies. But by following a
few procedures, your observing session can be more enjoyable
and more rewarding. The following are tips that our
crack team of observers offered to help increase your
satisfaction in observing in light polluted areas.
- Observe during new moon. Just like observing in
dark skies, the moon adds light to the night sky and
reduces contrast.
- Observe after 11:00 p.m., Many stores have closed
by this time, and because they turn off their lights,
a city's light glow is reduced considerably.
- Observe after 1:00 a.m. After the stores have closed,
most shoppers and workers have gone home which means
that there is a lot less traffic on the streets and
freeways, and light pollution is reduced.
- Ask your neighbors over for an observing session.
After seeing the effect of light pollution on observing,
they will be more cooperative in turning off their
lights for you.
- Try to catch your target objects straight overhead.
This is always the darkest part of the sky.
- Select the right objects to observe. Magnitude
is not everything. A bright galaxy may be invisible,
whereas a dim planetary may be easily seen. Small,
high surface brightness and stellar objects are easier
to observe than large, diffuse objects.
- If you have an altazimuth mount (Dobsonian), try
to observe near the meridian. Up-down, left-right
motions translate into north-south, east-west motions
and makes following a path on a star chart easier.
- Observe after 10:00 P.M.. This gives the dust and
water in the air a chance to settle. Dust and water
reflect light that can turn a good night into a bad
one.
- Pay close attention to the weather. Cool, dry nights
are best at any location, but are more pronounced
in the city.
- Learn to read the quality of the sky by the observing
of stars with the naked eye. A clear night might seem
perfect for observing, but may in fact be bad for
viewing if the seeing is not good.
- Observe after a rain storm. The skies appear darker
as light is no longer reflected off of dust particles
in the air.
- Observe after a cold front has come through. The
air is more stable and the air pollution has been
blown out.
- Use a dark cloth to cover your head and eyepiece
to shield them from stray light.
- Use a dew shield on your telescope to shade it
from stray light.
- Clean and collimate all optics. Dirty optics scatter
light.
- Light pollution and O-III filters are good for
planetary and emission nebulae.
- Use a pirate's eyepatch to keep out stray light.
- Pick the darkest section of your site and make
an extra effort to block out stray light. Using a
light baffle made of a tarp and tent pegs help, as
well as a three-sided wall made out of cardboard.
Try to make the immediate area around your site as
darkened and non-reflective as possible. Use existing
structures and foliage to block the direct view of
lights.
- A right-angle finder with amici prism under a dark
cloth is helpful for finding objects.
- Setting circles are a great aid for finding difficult
objects, especially when those objects are quite some
distance from a naked eye star.
- A good star atlas, a pair of binoculars, and a
one power finder (e.g., Telrad) with a template for
that finder, are important for finding objects in
bright, low contrast skies. Telrad-hopping can sometimes
be easier and just as useful as star-hopping with
a finder. Viewing the sky through your Telrad with
binoculars is also a nice trick.
- Use earphones or a radio to mask neighborhood noise.
Noise can be very distracting.
Finally, attitude is very important.
Any observing is better than no observing or TV.
Astronomical League National Headquarters
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Kansas City, MO 64114
ALOffice@earthlink.net
1-816-333-7759
www.astroleague.org