OR 1/31/14: Three supernovae on one night!
by Steve Gottlieb
Friday night (January 31, 2014) was clear but cold (in the mid 30’s) and breezy at Lake Sonoma. As opposed to last weekend, I was glad I packed my winter clothing gear. Nevertheless, conditions were good for deep sky viewing with SQM reading starting off at 21.2 and topping 21.4 after midnight. And seeing was surprisingly steady (easily holding 375x on galaxies). The night started with a beautiful scene after sunset -- a thin 28-hour crescent moon was hung low in the west with Mercury, at its greatest elongatation, shining brightly 6° to its upper left (east). I spend most of the night working on a mixed-bag of reflection and emission nebulae, disrupted and interacting galaxies, and small groups the highlight was a 15 minute tour of
three supernovae in bright galaxies! The blazing mag 10.5 orange-red SN 2014J in The challenging object was a faint supernova in Continuing on with more exotic objects, here are the other highlights from the evening ... Steve Gottlieb |
At 375x, the southwest component ( |
At 375, the main galaxy appeared fairly faint, fairly small, irregularly round, 24" diameter, irregular surface brightness with a very small slightly brighter nucleus. |
VV 539 = UGC 3906 At 375x, the brighter eastern component ( |
At 200x, a faint but easily seen reflection nebula fanned out in a wide angle to the south of XY Persei (close double with components 9.7/10.6 at 1.2"). The size was difficult to estimate, but roughly 3'-3.5' in diameter. The brighter component of XY Per is a young Herbig Ae/Be star. |
Howell-Crisp 1 (HoCr 1) This "new" planetary nebula was picked up unfiltered as 200x, though it required known the exact location. Adding a DGM Optics NPB filter, this likely PN was just visible
continuously with averted vision and appeared very faint, roundish, 30" diameter, low fairly even surface brightness. A mag 15 star is at the NE edge. Located 10.7' SSW of mag 7.3
HoCr1 was found on images taken by Michael Howell and Richard Crisp in early 2006 assumed to be a possible planetary. My first observation was on Nov 18, 2006 at Bob Ayer's property at Willow Springs. While observing with Ray Cash and Mark Wagner, Ray took a stab at this object with his 13.1-inch using a UHC filter and it was marginal at best in partially cloudy conditions. I later took a look in my scope when the sky was clear and it was definitely visible, though still only glimpsed part of the time with averted vision at 115x using a DGM Optics NPB filter. It appeared as an extremely low surface brightness hazy spot, perhaps 30" in diameter. Mark felt the object had an irregularly round shape with an occasional sharp edge on its SW perimeter. A trio of faint stars 1' W pinpointed the position. Located 11' SSW of 7.4 magnitude HD 44251 and 37' ENE of the reflection nebula IC 444. |
This triplet consists of a |
Picked up unfiltered at 200x, though low contrast as the entire field is patchy in faint stars and affected by some dust. Seems roughly 20'x10, elongated N-S and includes several
bright stars ( |
NGC 1044 is a double system with fainter |
NGC 2496 is the brightest in a group of faint galaxies. At 375x it appeared moderately bright, fairly small, slightly elongated N-S, fairly high surface brightness, gradually
increases to the center but no distinct nucleus or zones. A mag 14 star is 35" W of center. |