--- Mark Wagner <mgwagner@No-Spam> wrote:
>
> Awesome.
>
> Really.
I'll second that. The seeing varied only a little bit, from very good
to excellent all night. Those who stayed past the various waves of
clouds and other yuck were well rewarded as Mars climbed higher and
higher. (I stayed only until 3:30...possibly others got even more of
this later.)
It started out with a good omen: very easy to split the Dbl Dbl just
after sunset, as soon as Vega was visible. We also found both Jupiter
and Mercury, visible with the nekked eye, close together low in the
west. The seeing was so good that I pushed the power up quite high
(just over 500X) on Nu Scorpii and got a refractor-like split with four
perfect star images with dark space between.
This was with TOBY, my 10" f/6 CPT with a Royce primary; see
http://observers.org/tac.mailing.list/2003/Jul/0425.html
After several hours of Globs and Doubles, and showing some eye candy to
the many visitors, most of us spent a lot of time on Mars. Around
midnight, the S. Polar cap had a much brighter spot on its Northern
edge, just slightly West of center. And just West of that was a little
notch taken out of the edge. I was using a Tak LE 5mm (around 300X)
for most of my Mars viewing.
Eventually, much more detail emerged in the albedo features near the
equator, at first on the West half, then all across the disk. And
several of us suspected seeing a little bit of the N. polar cap as
well.
I observed in a group with Mark W., Kevin R., Richard N., Jim B., and
Rashad (who needs no last initial). A fun night with a great group of
people. Thanks.
As Jamie D. has said, "more of this" ... please.
Bob J.
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