Date: Fri, 3 Feb 1995, 14:44:53 -0500
From: Tony Cecce, Corning, NY <CECCE_AJ@corning.com>
Subject: Messier Objects for February
As promised here is my first installment of my twelve month Messier Series. This is a first draft, if you have any recommendations or suggestion please e-mail them to me. I can really use your help. I still need to write up the introduction to this series, including definitions and reference lists.

Remember, the goal is to help beginners walk through all 110 Messier objects within a year. And help them acquire the deep sky observing skills.

Tony


Twelve Month Tour of The Messier Catalog
February Messier Objects
rev 1.0

This month highlights 10 messier objects, most are within reach of binoculars, and over half can be seen with the naked eye.
M1
The Crab nebula is a supernova remnant in Taurus. It is a hazy patch in small telescopes, large scopes can resolve some detail. It is difficult but possible to see in binoculars.
M45
The Pleides are a large open cluster in Taurus. Easy to resolve six stars naked eye. Binoculars provide the best view. Large telescopes can show some nebulosity.
M35, M37, M36, M38
A series of open clusters in the winter milky way. M35 is in Gemini, the others are in Auriga. All can be seen naked eye as faint fuzzy stars, binoculars reveal fuzzy patches, low power telescopes can resolve these rich clusters.
M42, M43
M42 is the great Orion Nebula. It can be seen as small fuzzy patch naked eye. Binoculars show some detail, and the view is superb in most any scope. M43 is a small region of nebulosity next to M42, and probably requires the use of a telescope to view. Use low to moderate powers for the best view of this pair.
M78
A small emission nebula in Orion, a tough binocular object. Best viewed in a telescope at moderate powers.
M79
One of the smallest and dimmest globular clusters in the catalog. A tough binocular object in Lepus, best viewed in a telescope at moderate powers.
Last Month - M33, M34, M52, M74, M76, M77, M103
Next Month - M41, M44, M46, M47, M48, M50, M67, M81, M82, M93


Twelve Month Tour Index - February tour in Ascii
Hartmut Frommert (spider@seds.org).
Christine Kronberg (smil@lrz.uni-muenchen.de)

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