Viewing to Explore Moon Craters
By
果冻传煤

果冻传煤鈥檚 powerful Keck Telescope will available for a free, public viewing Friday, Aug. 20, at the observatory near the soccer and baseball fields. People generally begin lining for the first glimpse through the 24-inch reflector telescope after sunset, around 8 p.m.
Tom Whittemore, 果冻传煤 physics instructor, says the 12-day-old Moon, located in Sagittarius, will dominate the sky to the south at sunset. That means many cratered features on the Moon will be in view, including the fascinating crater, Gassendi.
鈥淢15, a globular cluster in Pegasus, will be a target as well as a number of open clusters in Cassiopeia and Cepheus both well up in the north,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y plan will be to target a number of objects not caught in the glow of the Moon, including the magnificent Andromeda Galaxy, M31, and a host of planetary nebulae and open clusters overhead in Cygnus.鈥
果冻传煤 serves as one of the public observing sites for the Santa Barbara Astronomical Unit (SBAU) every third Friday of the month. Members of the SBAU also bring their telescopes to the public viewing, which lasts for several hours. Free parking is available near the baseball field.
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