I set up my scope at Goose Creek State Park with scattered clouds above. The Milky Way was shining like I haven't seen it in a long time and this convinced me that I've found my new favorite observing location. Not too long after I got started though, the clouds moved in permanently. But here's what I observed in the meantime, while listening to my new Telescopin' playlist:
M13 in Hercules
The Globular Cluster NGC 6229 in the constellation Hercules and at magnitude 9.39. At 100,000 light-years distant it appeared very tight and fuzzy but not point-like, or star-like. I could not resolve any part of it.
I observed what I think were NGC5985, a barred, spiral galaxy, and NGC5982, a class E3 elliptical galaxy, in the same Field of View in the constellation Draco. Both were very faint but I could seperate them from one another. NGC 5981, another barred, spiral galaxy, should have been in the same field but I could not locate it. So, I may have been seeing it instead of one of the other objects. I can't be for sure.
M101, the Pinwheel Galaxy, was very faint because of its location in the sky. The Globular Cluster M92 in Hercules was very bright. This has been my favorite Messier Object to observe lately.![]()
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