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Go-To Telescopes Under Suburban Skies (Paperback, 2010 ed.): Neale Monks Go-To Telescopes Under Suburban Skies (Paperback, 2010 ed.)
Neale Monks
R771 R663 Discovery Miles 6 630 Save R108 (14%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Go-To Telescopes Under Suburban Skies is the first book specifically written for amateur astronomers who own, or who are about to purchase, a computer-controlled go-to telescope. Computer control and automatic location of objects in the night sky is now a feature of even inexpensive astronomical telescopes (under $200), no longer just of the more expensive models. The advantage of the go-to capability is enormous the telescope can be aimed at any object in the sky with great speed and accuracy and so is the popularity of these instruments.

GO-TO Telescopes Under Suburban Skies provides literally hundreds more targets beyond those offered by the built-in nightly tours that feature on the telescope s computer handset (a feature incorporated by most manufacturers). Although most go-to telescopes have enormous databases of objects they can find usually running into tens of thousands the tours (that s suggested objects to look at) are always very limited. Once you ve seen the planets and bright objects that the computer suggests, you re on your own

This new book answers the question, What shall I observe next? in a way that is unique to go-to telescopes. Unlike all existing books on deep sky observing, GO-TO Telescopes Under Suburban Skies doesn't waste space on RA/Dec co-ordinates or Star Maps and Finder Charts for suggested objects. It is designed expressly to be used alongside a go-to telescope, using the NGC and SAO menus on the computer handset to quickly slew the telescope to each new target. This is unique, and makes the book much more information-rich than other observing guides.

Targets are arranged by season to maximise the chances of a given object being visible at the time of observing, and then are divided into four categories: three deep sky categories of increasing difficulty, and then one category of stars that covers things like coloured stars, multiple stars, and loose clusters/streams. The reader can quickly turn to the relevant season, and then work through the list of objects.

All existing books about practical deep-sky observing are biased towards non- go-to telescope owners and usually assume large-aperture instruments and/or dark, rural or desert skies. This book makes the more realistic assumption that the amateur astronomer has a relatively small telescope and is observing from a backyard in a suburban area.

Instead of devoting page after page to maps and co-ordinates, GO-TO Telescopes Under Suburban Skies leaves the computer to locate targets by using NGC and SAO catalog numbers, and so has the space to suggest many more fascinating deep-sky targets and provide detailed observing lists and information about what's being viewed.

Astronomy with a Home Computer (Paperback, 2005 ed.): Neale Monks Astronomy with a Home Computer (Paperback, 2005 ed.)
Neale Monks
R763 R666 Discovery Miles 6 660 Save R97 (13%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Here is a one-volume guide to just about everything computer-related for amateur astronomers

Today's amateur astronomy is inextricably linked to personal computers. Computer-controlled "go-to" telescopes are inexpensive. CCD and webcam imaging make intensive use of the technology for capturing and processing images. Planetarium software provides information and an easy interface for telescopes. The Internet offers links to other astronomers, information, and software. The list goes on and on.

Find out here how to choose the best planetarium program: are commercial versions really better than freeware? Learn how to optimise a go-to telescope, or connect it to a lap-top. Discover how to choose the best webcam and use it with your telescope. Create a mosaic of the Moon, or high-resolution images of the planets...

Astronomy with a Home Computer is designed for every amateur astronomer who owns a home computer, whether it is running Microsoft Windows, Mac O/S or Linux. It doesn't matter what kind of telescope you own either - a small refractor is just as useful as a big "go-to" SCT for most of the projects in this book.

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