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Is Orion the Hunter calling you?

Posted 12-17-2007 by Michael Bakich

Chris SchurRecently, I stood in a foot of snow when the Fahrenheit temperature was barely in the teens. I dressed warmly (or so I thought), but I wasn’t doing anything physical, so the cold was biting at my extremities. Yes, I was observing.

As much as I despise cold weather (see, for instance, my blog “The weather gods hate me”), there’s a lot to be said for observing during the winter. When the temperature dips well below freezing, the crunchy snow pack seems to absorb all the atmosphere’s moisture. Not only does this deter cloud formation (including fog), but also dry air doesn’t carry light pollution as well as moist air.

More often than not, winter nights mean no or low-velocity wind. Nothing kills atmospheric steadiness (seeing) like wind. And nothing kills an observer’s desire like the words “wind-chill factor.”

Winter offers the brightest stars of any season, terrific nebulae and star clusters, and a Milky Way not many observers know well. In the summer, the well-known Great Rift (a dark region that appears to split the Milky Way) passes through Cygnus, Aquila, and Scutum. And even far-northern observers are familiar with the southern summer Milky Way in Ophiuchus, Scorpius, and Sagittarius. After all, that region houses our galaxy’s center.

How many northern observers, on the other hand, know the southern winter Milky Way well? Traditionally, it starts to the left (east) of the familiar constellation Orion the Hunter in the not-so-well-known star group Monoceros the Unicorn. From there, head south through Canis Major the Great Dog and into Puppis the Stern.

This region is so rich in open clusters that you’ll run out of nights before you run out of star clusters to observe. Each has something special to offer (that’s right, they don’t all look the same), but pay particular attention to the Messier clusters M41, M46, M47, M50, and M93, and the spectacular magnitude 3.8 Tau Canis Majoris Cluster (NGC 2362).

If you’re a fan of nebulae, you’ll find both the Rosette Nebula (NGC 2237-9, 46) and the Cone Nebula (NGC 2264) in northern Monoceros. Through an 8-inch or larger telescope and a nebula filter, you can coax the nebulosity into view under a dark sky, and that may warm your feet for a while. Both of these immense gas clouds, however, also contain prominent open clusters.

Within the Rosette Nebula, NGC 2244 formed recently, and several of its stars provide the energy with which the nebula shines. In the Cone Nebula, the star group is the aptly named 4th-magnitude Christmas Tree Cluster. ’Tis the season, after all. Through binoculars, the “tree” appears 0.5° tall and triangular. 7x50 binoculars will reveal between two and three dozen stars. How many depends on how dark your sky is. The Christmas Tree Cluster’s brightest star is S Monocerotis, which, rather than topping the tree, forms its base.

As you can see, even the southern winter sky offers a lot more than just Orion — a whole lot more.

What’s that you say? It’s not winter yet? Oh, good grief!

Comments

  • cinematograph said:

    I love your enthusiasm for astronomy; it leaps off the screen!  I am relatively new to the wonders of stargazing but I have always been in awe of our magnificent universe.  I taught 5th grade science in Eagle Pass a few years ago and my favorite aspect was teaching astronomy to ten year olds.  I own three telescopes and I would hold stargazing evenings for my students and anyone else that wanted to see the rings of Saturn or the moons around Jupiter that Galileo saw way back in 1609 or so.  My kids (and one grandfather in particular) were amazed that the craters on the moon were so detailed and that a planet that is millions of miles away could be seen through the optics of my scopes.

    I look forward to reading more of your blogs!

    December 21, 2007 8:04 AM
  • Rocinante said:

    Living now in Florida allows for some great winter watching.  I am new to the game, having fiddled with small scopes off and on for years and Orion has my attention right now.  

    I have a question, you've probably seen this a million times, but to my 6" with a 4mm peice, this one star field? is new to me.

    With the lights of Orlando to my east, I can make out the two brightest stars on Orion's sword.  With binocs, the star above them.

    When i look up a little more towards the belt, there is a trio of dual 'stars" and the center two when looked with 4mm show a trio of "stars" with a beautiful "cloud" starfield/nebulae around them.

    I am still looking for Vista friendly software so if you can help, what am i looking at?

    Anything else you can explain to look for in Orion to an amateur would be appreciatted!

    December 23, 2007 6:41 PM
  • Rocinante said:

    Any help to a beginner on what and where to look for sights on or because of Orion would be great!  If you know where i can find help with Orion, email me at balinskijr@yahoo.com

    Thanks!

    Mike

    December 23, 2007 6:43 PM
  • setldown said:

    Rocinante

    It sounds like you have discovered M42. It is my favorite  winter dso. Here is some information to get you started.

    www.seds.org/.../m042.html

    December 28, 2007 10:04 AM

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Michael Bakich
  Michael Bakich is a senior editor with Astronomy magazine.
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