Getting Into Space, One Way Or Another 117
EccentricAnomaly writes: "David Cash has some interesting
pictures of the International Space Station made with a
Celestron telescope and webcam. This makes me want to get back into
amateur astronomy ... in part, as a fun way to learn image processing." The resolution Cash achieved with consumer-grade equipment (Celestron Ultima 9.25 telescope and Philips Vesta Pro camera) is amazing. Demanding a slightly more visceral approach to space is "Rocket Guy" Brian Walker, who plans in the near future to launch himself to around 30 miles up in a home-brewed rocket. An unnamed reader points out the current feature on Walker over at space.com.
Rocket Guy (Score:2)
But seriously, I hope he pulls this off. I'll laugh my ass off seeing a man make a rocket with his own cash, blast himself into space and LIVE for fraction of what it would cost NASA to do the same.
-Henry
Indeed. (Score:5)
Not to mention the possibility that, having successfully pulled it off, he gets swamped with cash from other space investors who want him to build private rockets just like this for those crazy enough to follow in his footsteps.
If he pulls it off, it's the beginning of a new space race, mark my words. The 'racetrack' this time: our own backyards...
I hope he makes it. I really, really hope he does.
Wow... (Score:5)
All I can think is that this guy is setting himself up the bomb...
Slashdot's getting to me.
Another site (Score:4)
Here's a link to his site. [hyperusa.com]
-John
faa (Score:1)
i hope he, in the true spirit of Amercia, does it anyway.
Re:Indeed. (Score:3)
Re:faa (Score:3)
-Henry
How much to get into this? (Score:2)
So how much for a good telescope and the gear to hook it up to a computer? I have two Mac laptops (iBook 2000 and G4 Titanium) so Mac solutions would be best.
Mirror of web site (Score:4)
Brian Walker is Wan Hu reincarnated (Score:2)
Hmm, or maybe that was Larry Walters [darwinawards.com].
--
Why do that? (Score:3)
Re:faa (Score:1)
The FAA can pull his (probably nonexistant) pilot's license. The local (launch area) cops can ticket him for violating their noise ordnance. The local (impact area) cops can ticket him for littering. Unless the craft is controlled by the passenger, it isn't piloted, is it? Just a big-ass Estes going downrange.
Ok, provided the feds let him do it (Score:2)
Re:How much to get into this? (Score:5)
The author just used a pretty standard webcam, so we're talking $100 here, plus $50 in mounting gear. Note that if you mount the camera in place of the eyepiece, you can skip my recommendation of getting a really good eyepiece and let the camera serve.
You can also use any 35mm camera with a telescope, using a simple t-adapter ($40) to attach it. If you spend, oh, $500 you could get a digital SLR and then have fun using that.
But ultimately, I say go with a C-8 and good webcam and do it for under $2000. I like the C-8s because they are highly portable, easy to set up, and fun!
Pick up an issue of "Sky and Telescope" for prices before you start shopping, of course.
Demon Internet (Score:1)
Of course it doesn't help when there's several animated gifs on an image-laden page.
Get those mirrors up quick...
--
Enough about rockets. (Score:1)
I've got a Logitech and an IBM-the damn thing looks like a miniatire of one of their PS2s, and the image quality in my living room isn't much better. He did good work.
Re:How much to get into this? (Score:1)
FP
Re:Another site / What's stacking? (Score:1)
But, I wonder... can anyone tell me what this "stacking" process is?
Re:Mirror of web site (Score:2)
It's just cruel and abusive to subject someone's little ISP/account to the teeming hordes. More often than not, I'll wager, it causes overwhelming surcharges to the poor sucker who gets the attention.
I'd *never* want a site of my own to come under the Slashdot gun. It'd just cost way the hell too much.
--
mirror mirror (Score:4)
http://www.perljam.net/misc/iss/www.djcash.demon.c o.uk/astro/webcam/webcam.htm [perljam.net]
-ted
WOW - manual tracking! (Score:4)
It can be tough enough (as an amateur, at least) to find and track a planet when you already know its precise coordinates. Finding the ISS by hand, I'd imagine, takes some impressive cojones.
Re:Another site / What's stacking? (Score:5)
Rocket Guy (Score:4)
Treatment, not tyranny. End the drug war and free our American POWs.
Re:Rocket Guy (Score:1)
Or, also likely, that one man with a large hunk of mass (such as a rocket) can make a huge impact into the Earth.
Re:Mirror of web site (Score:1)
---------------------------------
Re:Mirror of web site (Score:1)
That goes into copyright issues, as well as a pile of stuff such as how is space.com going to pay for the bandwidth they do use when slashdot robs their content and doesn't put up the ads.
Besides, /. is slow enough when it's just serving text and a few tiny images. You might slashdot slashdot if you throw a pile of images into the mix.
You can always host your pictures on geocities and move the blame from you to them...
-------
Re:How much to get into this? (Score:2)
Re:Never content. You Americans are so restless! (Score:2)
Re:faa (Score:5)
I have sent a query to the FAA about getting waivers for the manned rockets my team is working on, but it got booted up to Washington a couple weeks ago, and I haven't heard back yet.
John Carmack
Re:Indeed. (Score:1)
I do hope he has considered and dealt with these sorts of nit-picky issues. An close-to-full-scale engine test, at least, might be a good idea.
--
You guys wanna get really good pictures? (Score:1)
http://www.globaldialog.com/~obsessiontscp/OBHP
That thing would make a great lawn ornament, dont you think? Right alongside the pink flamingos.
McDoobie
Re:Another site / What's stacking? (Score:3)
Often the objects an astronomer is trying to photograph are very faint, and they might not reliably register on the CCD. Stacking up (adding together) a bunch of image frames allows even the faintest readings to show up.
The other problem is turbulence. Temperature differentials in the atmosphere can cause optical distortion. By taking hundreds of frames of the same object, you have the luxury of selecting the least distorted frames for processing.
Basically, integration/stacking lets you extract as much detail as possible out of a large set of imperfect images.
-John
Thanks! (Score:2)
Oh...Mod me down, I'm offttopic
Re:Never content. You Americans are so restless! (Score:2)
Re:WOW - manual tracking! (Score:2)
Pretty impressive stuff being done with off-the-shelf equipement these days.
--Seen
Re:faa (Score:2)
Re:Never content. You Americans are so restless! (Score:2)
It's a no-brainer!
--
Darwin Award (Score:3)
"... goes to -- Brian 'Rocket Guy' Walker!"
Maybe David Cash can capture the Kodak moment when Brian goes up on Challenger Two.
Re:Rocket Guy (Score:2)
--Gimlet the Dwarf.
--
Re:Rocket Guy (Score:1)
Is this about Timothy McVeigh?
Teh right stfu (Score:3)
So should he be building rockets then?!?
Re:send people up (Score:1)
Re:faa (Score:1)
Grind Your Own Telescope Mirror, I did (Score:5)
The 6 inch had a decent figure but I didn't know I could send it away to be vacuum aluminized, so I chemically deposited silver on it using chemicals I bought at the University of Idaho [uidaho.edu] chemistry stockroom. Take my advice, it's much better to get a mirror aluminized.
I hurried a bit too much on fine grinding the 10 inch and wasn't happy with it, so I tried again with my 8 inch and was much more patient, and got excellent results from it (1/10 wave according to Chabot Amateur Telescope Maker's Workshop's Paul Zurakowski).
Grinding telescopes and being a sciency kind of guy led me to study astronomy at CalTech [caltech.edu] where I assisted CalTech astronomer Jeremy Mould in observing the the Palomar 60 inch and 200 inch telescopes - the experience of a lifetime for an amateur astronomer.
It's been about 18 years since I last worked any glass but I just bought an 8 inch plate glass kit from Dan Cassaro [jacksonville.net]. You can buy Pyrex kits and optical glass (suitable for lenses) from Newport Glass [newportglass.com].
I'm starting to write about the telescope I'm about to work on here [geometricvisions.com].
If you are in the San Francisco Bay Area check out the Eastbay Astronomical Society's Chabot Amateur Telescope Maker's Workshop [eastbayastro.org] (there's an observatory there too, it's in Oakland), Fremont Peak Observatory [fpoa.net], which has a 30 inch reflector that's open to the public, with regular gatherings of amateurs who bring their telescopes up there, and the San Francisco Sidewalk Astronomers [sfsidewalk...nomers.org] - the Sidewalk Astronomers set up telescopes on city sidewalks and introduce people to astronomy by inviting them to look through their scopes.
You can get books on astronomy, and importantly, the specifics of how to actually grind and polish a telescope from Willman-Bell [willbell.com] and Newport Glass [newportglass.com].
Check out this guy who made a ribbed mirror blank [tms-usa.com] by cutting out a pattern from one disk of glass with a water jet and fusing it to a solid sheet in a furnace.
Visit Google's index of Amateur Telescope Making [google.com], particularly http://www.atmpage.com [atmpage.com].
If you want to get into amateur telescope making, take advantage of an immensely valuable resource that wasn't available to me when I was a kid - subscribe to the ATM List - here's the FAQ [jacksonville.net].
Mike [goingware.com]
Why build capsule from scratch? (Score:2)
Re:Wow... (Score:1)
Re:Wow... (Score:1)
Re:Never content. You Americans are so restless! (Score:1)
Read his bio. Make up your own mind.
Re:Never content. You Americans are so restless! (Score:1)
Wait, I though it was Europeans who became restless with and roamed away from Europe to the New World? Crud... damn biased history books!
I wonder how long it will be before someone like Rocket Man attaches a GPS system and a accute steering to a rocket and makes an intercontinental missle. It's not illegal to fire a few dozen exploding cans of Spam over to the County of Hampshire, is it?
Re:How much to get into this? (Score:2)
Screw buying a telescope, and grind your own mirrors. The blank will cost you about $50-100 for a decent quality blank. Grinding the blank into the right shape will a take you about 40-60 hours at most. Silvering the blank shouldn't be much and the materials to mount the mirror and hold the secondary and eyepiece shouldn't cost more than a hundred or so. You can buy a good secondary from fisher scientific for a hundred, and the eyepeice can be purchased also. The mount and tracking stuff can be purchased off the shelf. So I figure total costs shouldn't run more than $1000.
Plus when you grind your own mirror, you can really get a high quality surface on it and can test it and get rid of small imperfections. It's a lot cheaper than buying a high quality 6-10 inch scope.
If it were only so easy. (Score:2)
See, the majority of GPS chipsets and firmware (and off the shelf units) don't work so hot above certain altitudes and speeds. (as I recall anyway) Reason: Uncle Sam doesn't like people using GPS for ICBM guidance.
Now the RUSSIAN system (called GLONASS [www.rssi.ru]) would be a better bet. Only catch is that it isn't quite as accurate as GPS.
However if you are just trying to hit a county it would probably do just fine...
who owns the rights to space? (Score:1)
Almost all the "property?" on earth seems to be owned by someone. But as technology advances, and can see a whole bunch of problems in the future when someone other than a gov. agency wants to settle on the moon- etc. etc. etc.
I can't wait to see how the world governments handles this- but it will probably go through the stages that most gov. invloved legal issues do.... interpretation of the constitution...and so on.
activist groups...protesting...bashing...laywers...money..
Re:Indeed. (Score:3)
But, perhaps what this shows is that we can have an effect on the Rocket Guy's plans - so maybe we should start sending him other ideas as well - maybe it can be a "group guided" effort, hmm?
Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
12 Hooters Girls? (Score:2)
Random Chance (Score:3)
However, a pendulum always has a force acting on it that's directed upwards. This is because the pendulum hangs on a wire *attached* to something that's fixed. If the pendulum would be attached to something that makes fairly random movements however (much like Walker's rocket, 'attached' to the athmosphere pretty much), the pendulum would not swing all that well and the point of attachment could easily end up being below his rocket, making the rocket point to the White house for example, and kill that arrogant Texan oilbaron. Now THAT would be funny.
Re:Indeed. (Score:2)
Sometimes simpler is better.
---
Re:Another site / What's stacking? (Score:1)
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
http://www.rocketguy.com/ [rocketguy.com]
Here's how you grind a telescope mirror (Score:3)
The stubby Celestron [celestron.com] and Meade [meade.com] telescopes that are popular with amateur astronomers who prefer to purchase their instruments are of a type called a "schmidt-cassegrain". This has a nearly flat corrector plate in the front, that actually has a shallow fourth-order curve ground into it to correct spherical aberration, a deep prolate spheroidal primary mirror, and a convex secondary mirror mounted on the back of the center of the corrector plate.
It's the convex secondary that makes the telescope a cassegrain. The 200 inch on Palomar is a cassegrain. I don't have a schmidt-cassegrain to show you but here's how an ordinary cassegrain is laid out [atmpage.com].
The use of the schmidt corrector plate allows one to make the telescope very short, with a small ratio of focal length of the primary to its diameter, without making images away from the center of the field blurry.
This is an advanced kind of design for an amateur to make oneself, although many amateurs have. Here's how one guy made a schmidt corrector plate [atmpage.com].
The typical amateur starter scope is the "newtonian reflector" [atmpage.com]. This has a concave parabolic mirror at the back end of the tube, and a few inches inside its focus is an optically flat mirror at 45 degrees. The optical path shown in the diagram is for the light from a single star, an image is formed from light sources spread across a small angle, and a small image is formed at the focal plane where it's examined by the eyepiece (a high-power magnifier) or photographed with film, a CCD or I guess even a webcam.
If you make a parabolic mirror with too short a ratio of focal length to diameter (the f-number, like the f ratio on a camera lens), then the images away from the center are blurred. This is called "coma". A parabola only focuses light perfectly if it's parallel to its axis and tilting the beam introduces coma. A ratio of 1 to 4 is about the shortest you can make it - f/4. My 6 inch is f/8, my 10 inch is f/3.5, and my 8 inch is f/6.
Having a longer focal length gives you greater magnification. Having a shorter one gives you a wider field of view, within the limits of the coma. Having a shorter focal ratio also makes it easier to fit in a car, an important consideration for making the scope enjoyable. Those Celestrons are nice because they'll easy fit in the trunk of a car or even in airline luggage (with a hard case) but it comes at the expense of a fancier design.
For the first homebuilt scope one usually grinds the primary and buys the flat diagonal mirror from a vendor. More advanced amateurs make their flats too but again optically flat surfaces are hard to make.
Making a primary that doesn't have too short a focal ratio is not too bad because the grinding process naturally makes a sphere. You grind a sphere of the right radius of curvature, fine grind through successively finer grits, then polish. You then use an optical test to get the mirror perfectly spherical, then deepen the center to move from a sphere to a parabola of revolution, testing carefully as you go.
The way I ground my mirrors was with pyrex mirror blanks on plate glass tools. Initially each is flat. They are both pretty thick, my 8 inch is about 1.25 inches thick, to stiffen them so they don't lose their figure. You have to have a figure that is perfect to about 1/8 of a wavelength of visible light in variation across the whole face of the glass, so any bending is disastrous. The 1/8 wave limit is the same for mirrors of all sizes so it's much harder to figure larger ones - best to start small. I would recommend an 8 inch for a first mirror. I have heard of people doing much larger first telescopes though.
What you do is sprinkle some granulated silicon carbide and water on the tool, place the mirror blank face down on it and push it back and forth until the silicon carbide ("carborundum") breaks down. (This is the same abrasive as you find on black wet-or-dry sandpaper, only in free-flowing powdered form). Then you add more abrasive and water and repeat. When too much mud builds up you wash it off and add more abrasive again.
To grind a concave curve into the mirror blank you place it on top, face down, grind with long strokes and have it hanging mostly off the side. Also you put pressure on it, either pushing hard or putting weights on it. This concentrates the grinding action in the middle and a shallow sphere develops.
Every few strokes you rotate the mirror a little, and once a minute or so you rotate the tool a little, with the idea that every part of the mirror gets ground over every part of the tool in every direction.
These days it has become popular to "hog out" a mirror with a metal ring tool, like a pipe cap as I'm about to try, then after rough grinding you make a fine-grinding tool out of small bathroom tiles mounted in dental stone or portland cement. This is in part because it's getting harder to get telescope making kits, unfortunately because it's so easy to buy a Celestron people don't make their own as much anymore. So people conserve the glass just for the mirrors and make the tile tools instead.
Be aware, before you say "well it's easier to buy a Celestron", that the price of a telescope goes up astronomically with increasing diameter - my 8 inch kit was $78 including shipping, I'll probably spend a few hundred to make a nice clock-driven mount, but the 10 meter telescope on Mauna Kea cost $90 million! If you know how to make your own, it is within your reach to grind your own 20 inch, which will have astounding views, but few of us could hope to afford to purchase a twenty inch commercial scope.
I know people who have ground 30 inch scopes and I know of some amateurs who are now figuring a 67 inch mirror!
Anyway it takes several hours of work to rough grind your mirror, more if you're doing a short f/number, less if you have a higher one, also less for smaller mirrors and more for larger ones. My 6" f/8 was about as deep as the thickness of an american dime, I don't know a little more than a millimeter.
Then you fine grind, grinding for a few hours with successively finer grades of abrasive. Usually you rough grind with 80 mesh silicon carbide - it is graded by sieving it through a mesh with 80 wires in it (same as the sandpaper sizes). Then you grind with #120, #220, #320, #400 and then several very fine grades of aluminum oxide whose sizes are given in microns.
The idea is that each finer grade erases the pits left by the previous grade. Between each grade you must scrupulously clean yourself, the mirror and tool and your work environment lest a coarse particle get into a finer stage and cause a scratch.
With each grade the mirror and tool surfaces will become more and more accurately spheres, within the limits of the sizes of the grits. This is because a sphere is the only shape that allows two surfaces to be placed anywhere against each other in any position or rotation (a flat surface is the limit of this as the radius goes to infinity). If there are any high spots, they will get more pressure and grind off quickly; any low spots will miss out on grinding and the surrounding surface will come down to match.
Then you polish. You make a "pitch lap", using either another dental stone base or the glass grinding tool, covered with refined, thickened pine pitch. You cut channels in the pitch with a knife or mold them in with a silicone mold. Then you cover the pitch lap with a suspension of cerium oxide in water, or else ferrous oxide (same as rust but finely powdered - "jeweler's rouge"). Then again you stroke the mirror on the pitch lap.
During fine grinding and polishing you use shorter strokes, and alternate which is on top, the mirror or the tool, to keep the depth constant. You also stroke a little side-to-side, in a W pattern. This evens everything out.
To test the mirror you use the Foucault test [atmpage.com] or the Ronchi Test [uoregon.edu]. The foucault test appatatus I link to is much fancier than you need, although nicer to use - you can do it all with your naked eye and the tester, you don't need a camera.
In each test you use a light emanating from a pinhole or narror slit just to the side of the center of curvature of the mirror. The image of the pinhole or slit will form an equal distance to the other side, where you can place a knife edge (Foucault) or screen (Ronchi) across it and hold your eye there and look at the mirror.
It's kind of hard to explain but each of these has the effect of dramatically magnifying deviations from spherical surfaces in the mirror. A dramatic demonstration is to have someone hold their hand in the beam - you can see the distortion in the beam caused by the warm air rising from their hand.
You can easily make out a bump or hollow that's a fraction of a wavelength high on the glass.
Then you make your mirror perfectly spherical by preferentially polishing off the high spots. If you did the fine grinding and polishing well you won't have to work hard to do this.
Unfortunately what we want is a parabola, not a sphere. This must have a precisely controlled error in each test. This is a little more than I want to get into, but basically your preferentially polish out the center of the mirror so it's deeper in the middle than appropriate for a sphere by a little bit. Get it just right and you have a parabola, and your mirror will focus perfectly.
Then you package it securely and send it off to one of the people who does vacuum aluminization. They clean the mirror extremely well, place it in a high vacuum, and evaporate aluminum off of tungsten wires. The aluminum vapor sticks to your glass and you have a telescope mirror.
Mike [goingware.com]
the telescope he used (Score:4)
You've all seen the big blue Meade scopes, the 8", 10" and maybe a 12" down at "Nature Store" and places like that. All those scopes (all these are SCT's, or Schmitt Cassegraine Telescopes) and the Celestron SCT's have a pretty mediocre reputation for quality. However, people say the 9.25" model is a winner. It has a differently designed set of mirrors than the other common SCT's available.
Re:Another site (Score:3)
Neat pictures, but if you are into astrophotography... why not a real camera? Or a good digital camera? Seems like a shame to waste $1-2k of telescope on a $100 imaging unit.
Would this guy's story have made the front page if it didn't use a webcam?
Re:the telescope he used (Score:1)
Here are some more astropics from the Celestron 9.25" scope:
Weatherman's 9.25" pics [weatherman.com]
Re:Mirror of web site (Score:2)
It would be a simple matter to *not* cache the banner advertisements, which would allow the site to continue its ad revenue.
Slashdot is usually pretty darn quick for me. I can't say the same for the poor sites that get slashdotted.
--
Re:If it were only so easy. (Score:1)
The real reason is much more mundane. If they artificially cap the speed at 90mph (150km/h) or so, they can drop the prices on consumer-grade GPS units and make a smaller unit profit on scads more units, without cannibalising sales for the sleek aerospace units, which generate a much larger unit profit on fewer units.
Re:Teh right stfu (Score:1)
is coffeine or nicotine addiction more suitable?
Disorders doesn't mean somebody's dumb.
Re:Indeed. (Score:1)
Re:Another site (Score:1)
To get better quality, you'd have to buy a considerably more expensive camera; probably $500+, at least. That's not appealing to a low-budget amateur (this IS just a hobby for many astronomers). Even then, there's no guarantee your results would be better. A "professional" grade camera may very well use the same CCD chip as something like the Vesta.
-John
Re:who owns the rights to space? (Score:1)
-Legion
Re:How much to get into this? (Score:2)
----
Brian Walker (Score:1)
Re:Grind Your Own Telescope Mirror, I did (Score:1)
Re:Another site (Score:2)
A "professional" grade camera may very well use the same CCD chip as something like the Vesta.
Heh, no way.
Re:How much to get into this? (Score:1)
Re:How much to get into this? (Score:1)
Re:How much to get into this? (Score:2)
A 37mm to T-ring adapter works for astrophotographical purposes, but I don't know (actually, I doubt) if you could do anything constructive with your nice lens on top of the standard lens (f=6.1-18.3mm).
Ref: http://home.att.net/~scopetronix/digitalcam.html
--
Re:Grind Your Own Telescope Mirror, I did (Score:1)
If you are at all interested in astronomy, look into a local astronomy club. I've been involved with the Atlanta Astronomy Club [atlantaastronomy.org] for the past five years, and the members are very knowledgeable and friendly. There are all kinds of people doing pretty much any kind of astronomy you can imagine. The Google list is here [google.com].
Re:Wow... (Score:1)
Re:Never content. You Americans are so restless! (Score:1)
Let me tell you a little story about history. Once upon a time, there was a country in mainland Europe. They elected a guy to the top job who had a funny mustache and only one testicle. This guy wanted to kill my parents, and a dozen or so million people with last names like my parents'.
There was another country floating just off the coast of Europe. This country elected a guy to the top job who was determined to appease the aforementioned nutless wonder at all costs. And then there were a few more countries which set up puppet governments to do whatever the euunich said for them to do.
So there's something in the American mindset that there's always something better if we just go and actually look for it. That brought us out of Europe, Africa, Asia, South America, etc, saving us and our children from having to live with the likes of you.
Some people are happy with taking a stream of sewage and calling it a river, or are happy with having no power themselves. Some people like living in apartments and being dependent on public transportation for their whole lives. Some people like to fork over two-thirds of their paychecks. Some people can't stand the thought of even the very existence of a wilderness big enough to get lost in. Heh. In my state, they don't last long west of I-25.
So, you're damn right we're restless. There's ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS a better way, if man only has the drive and the imagination to find it and learn it.
Sweet! (Score:1)
I mean, if NASA doesn't really care about Aeronautics or Space, someone has to. It's good to see that this guy is into it enough to actually do something with it.
Yeah, the FAA is going to shit bricks. They're more Administration than Aviation anyway. And he's in the PNW, home of some genuine silliness. Some crystal-wearing posie sniffer is probably going to stumble on this, think "rocket=missile=weapon=nuclear," and go truly apeshit and try to chain herself to the rocket.
But just the same, this needs to be done.
So, where does he want the donations sent? I'm not an engineer, and the only physics I know are the ones involved in firearms and traffic accidents, but I have a few buck to throw in.
Re:Never content. You Americans are so restless! (Score:1)
Re:Never content. You Americans are so restless! (Score:1)
You mean one spouting some revisionist view of World War 2, the kind that's so popular with many Europeans these days? You people do so love to rewrite history to suit yourselves, especially when there's any sort of humiliation involved....
Max
Re:Never content. You Americans are so restless! (Score:1)
Sadly, moving to a new continent proved only to be a stop-gap measure. By creating the internet we managed, much to our dismay, to bring European hubris and ego right back into our living rooms.
It's no wonder private citizens are looking for a way to leave the planet.
Max
Re:Random Chance (Score:1)
Re:Rocket Guy (Score:1)
Re:Rocket Guy (Score:1)
Don't get a telescope straight away (Score:3)
You could go and buy an expensive telescope, but unless you're really devoted to what you're doing you might find that you don't use it after a few months. You'll probably just find that it's bulky, heavy and awkward to carry around. Especially if you don't have anywhere convenient to set it up.
I'm currently the membership secretary of a local society. We have a deal with a local science shop to sign up new members as they buy telescopes. If we can't get these people and drag them in, they're usually no longer members after a year because they never really got involved enough in astronomy to understand how to find things and enjoy it properly.
They look through it a few times expecting to see a brilliant time-lapsed artificial-colour image out of a book or magazine, then get very dissappointed when it's just a faint, barely visible blur. To really appreciate seeing most things involves lots of time to sit down and observe something, learn what it looks like, and having looked long enough you'll slowly start to see new things.
You can almost never look at a galaxy and see a brilliant image in ten seconds. You have to look at lots of galaxies and understand how to look at them, and then they start to look like brilliant images - but albeit in a way that most people don't see.
It's also a bit offputting that it gets so cold at night and you usually have to be organised and know how to define what you're doing to survive out there for hours without getting bored and cold. There are only so many things you can find without knowing what to look for, and there's only so much that a book can teach.
I'd recommend first finding and joining a local astronomy club or society. Turn up to the meetings, get to know some people, and look through other people's telescopes. Going observing with other people is lots of fun. It's not just a social thing, you also get to learn from other people how to do and enjoy nearly everything. Then you get to show them things afterwards.
Arrange to borrow telescopes if and when you can so you can get a good idea of what sort of thing suits you best. It might sound boring at first, but I reccommend getting a small one to start with. There's heaps of things you can see with small telescopes when someone's there to show you how and where to look. Often there's more to see, because the things you look at are much more common an obvious.
Don't bother with a motor drive and expect to use it much. If you want to just key in positions and let the scope find stuff for you, you're missing out on lots of experience that is valuable for nearly everything else. Learn the constellations and star names, because they're the first part of using a star map to find your way around the sky.
Have fun.
===
Re:WOW - manual tracking! (Score:1)
Guy 1: It should be any minute from just above that tree.
Guy 2 (with binoculars): Right...
Guy 1: THERE IT IS - WOW!
Guy 2: Where?
Guy 1: I didn't think it would move so fast - amazing.
Guy 2: Is it above the tree yet? Where??
Guy 1: No - it's above that house now.
Guy 2: Which One???
etc... etc.... etc....
Oh - and no, I wasn't the guy with the binoculars
An interesting thing the image sequence shows. (Score:4)
Ground based telescopes are limited by convection cells that roil the image. Anybody who's looked at a planet through a small telescope pushed to the limits of its usable magnification has seen this.
However, there are brief instnaces where you happen to be looking through a patch of stable atmosphere, as can be clearly seen in the image sequences -- one is much clearer than the others. Ron Dantowitz from the Boston Museum of Science discovered the technique of using individual video frames (actually he used half frames from an NTSC CCTV camera) to get unprecedented resolution images of satellites from small telescopes. For instance he has taken ground based pictures of the shuttle where you can see whether the cargo bay doors are open or closed. He put images of spy satellites on the web and got a prompt visit from some NSA spooks who wanted to know how he got them. The cool thing about this is that works in broad daylight, so you don't have to be up freezing your butt off after midnight.
here [skyshow.com] are some samples, unfortunately without captions, and here [mos.org] are a few with captions.
The ISS pictures in the article were even better; perhaps the state of the art has advanced, or the observer was lucky.
Re:Never content. You Americans are so restless! (Score:1)
You're talking about New Yorkers, right?
"What are we going to do tonight, Bill?"
Only 30 miles? (Score:1)
telescope (Score:1)
--
Re:WOW - manual tracking! (Score:1)
More ISS/Webcam pics (Score:1)
the best astrocam webpage (Score:1)
Another site with special webcam for astronomy is SAC [nbci.com]
--
Re:Another site (Score:1)
--
Re:who owns the rights to space? (Score:1)
mind you, might be wrong
Re:How much to get into this? (Score:2)
I found the whole grinding process to be fairly simple. The hardest part was getting the imperfections out. Then again I had an experienced friend helping me. He's graduated to bigger scopes now. I think his other scope is the 10 meter one at Keck.
Re:Grind Your Own Telescope Mirror, I did (Score:2)
While there are some women who grind telescope mirrors, it still seems to be a largely male activity, and while my wife encourages it, she thinks it's a pretty odd thing to get excited about.
I read a lot on the ATM list about how wives tend to think their ATM husbands are pretty weird for making telescopes.
On the other hand, I am married, so it can't be all that unattractive to the opposite sex. Probably best something not to put forward on the first date though.
Mike [goingware.com]
Re:If it were only so easy. (Score:2)
I was working with some motorola GPS DSP chipsets/firmware a while back and there was some info on this stuff.
Re:Here's how you grind a telescope mirror (Score:2)
While you could make a telescope this way, you wouldn't get one with a very wide objective lens, so it wouldn't capture much light.
Also, you have the problem that the lens is made out of only one kind of material (plastic these days), so you have the problem of chromatic aberration - any one kind of lens material refracts light of different wavelengths differently, so you can't get all the colors in focus simultaneously and you get colored fringes around your stars, or just blurring of larger objects.
Mirrors work by reflection, and reflect geometrically, so they don't suffer from chromatic aberration. I think this is what Newton was after when he invented the newtonian telescope.
A lens suitable for astronomy needs at least two components, and needs to be made of glass of precise characteristics, and free of internal defects, and their are four surfaces to grind and polish, and further you can only support them at the edges. So it's impractical to make large quality refractor lenses - the biggest is the Yerkes observatory 40 inch.
Modern observatory instruments are all mirrors, I think the biggest single mirror is the 236 inch in Russia, and you can also compose a mirror out of numerous smaller mirrors, and the biggest one of those is the Keck 10 meter on Mauna Kea, Hawaii which has thirty mirrors in it.
Mike [goingware.com]