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Newbie question about a celestial body

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16 years 2 months ago #62914 by joxer66
okay topic sounds a bit strange but i'm an absolute beginner as regards star watching so all talk of constellations and astral events go right over my head (no pun intended) and this is problaly the wrong forum for this post but here i go. i've been looking at the skies over the past few months (through bins) and i've noticed a few things as the months go by.

theres a bright light to the south south west of me (i'm in Lucan and observed at approx 8.30 this evening) that i have only noticed this past few days and i'm wondering what it is. i dont remember seeing it before now. what is it? is it a star ? or is it man made? its really bright and twinkling like mad and i swear i can see different colurs in it?

also to the east of it there are three stars close together and in an almost straight line that i think is amazing for no other reason than their symmetery

and on last one there is a red 'star' that is almost overhead - it used to be quite bright but has dimmed over the past month or so. what is that? theres a constellation that is close by it (NE) and took my breath away when i first looked at it through binoculars though i think i need to get an adaptor for my tripod as its hard to watch for any length of time.

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16 years 2 months ago #62918 by dmcdona
Replied by dmcdona on topic Re: Newbie question about a celestial body
Joxer - sounds like the bright star is Sirius (the Dog Star) - very bright and shows mad twinkling colours.

The three stars in a line are Orion's belt - Orion is one of the best recognised constellations and one of the most photographed.

As for the red star overhead, I think that's probably Mars which is putting on a good show at the moment.

Hope this helps - if I'm wrong, someone will correct me soon enough :wink:

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16 years 2 months ago #62920 by iridium.flare
Replied by iridium.flare on topic Re: Newbie question about a celestial body
Sounds about right to me. That's what I came up with too.

It's worse than that, it's physics Jim!

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16 years 2 months ago #62921 by joxer66
Replied by joxer66 on topic Re: Newbie question about a celestial body
thanks for that Lads.

I had a feeling that the three stars was Orions belt but just wasnt sure- when i was a young fella i read up on the constellations so must've retained some of that info - similarly Mars overhead i wasnt sure of but its great to get confirmation.

oh yeah my directions were somewhat off, the gathering of stars i referred to as a constellation is North West of orions belt and Sirius at the time I observed is South Sotuh East [i'm usually good at directions]

this stuff sure drags you in dosent it? off to buy some books now i suppose

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16 years 2 months ago #62931 by jeyjey
Replied by jeyjey on topic Re: Newbie question about a celestial body
The gathering of stars NW of Orion's belt (directly W of Mars) was probably the Plieades.

There are three dimmer stars hanging down from the E side of Orion's belt, known as his sword. Train your binoculars on the middle star of the sword for a real treat (hint: it's not a star).

Cheers,
-- Jeff.

Nikon 18x70s / UA Millennium                              Colorado:
Solarscope SF70 / TV Pronto / AP400QMD             Coronado SolarMax40 DS / Bogen 055+3130
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16 years 2 months ago #62939 by voyager
Replied by voyager on topic Re: Newbie question about a celestial body
Hi Joxer66, welcome to the boards!

I'd highly recommend you install Stellarium, that will show you what's in the sky where at any time. Dead handy program. It's also free and cross-platform so works on Windows, Mac & Linux. You can get it from www.stellarium.org

Regards,

Bart.

My Home Page - www.bartbusschots.ie

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