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Spot galaxies, nebulae, star clusters, and other objects outside of our solar system
M51 and M101
Last post 06-17-2008 02:05 PM by johnm. 35 replies.
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06-05-2008 11:38 PM
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stargzr

- Joined on 05-29-2008
- Posts 127
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How different do these appear in an 8 inch scope...(skyquest xt8).. I was out last night observing and found M51 which was very discernable...I know M101 is a spiral galaxy but I'm not quite sure what I was looking at when trying to find M101.. Will M101 be dimmer than M51 even though M101 has a lower magnitude?... I read something about the light form M101 is more dispersed.. so the object that I thought was M101 was very, very faint and appeared as a large round sphere...... Is this what M101 should look like?? I guess what I am asking is "Has anyone seen M101 in an 8 inch scope? What does it look like? and Does it appear dimmer than M51?
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saberscorpx

- Joined on 11-03-2006
- illinois USA
- Posts 98
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The two are certainly different animals. Despite its brighter magnitude m101's larger area translates into a lower overall surface brightness. M101's threshold detection begins with its smaller 'stellar' core and seemingly unattached spiral knots. M51/ngc5195's more compact and uniform surface brightness can allow most of its core and spiral glow to pop out all at once. Side by side: http://tinyurl.com/5f3ph3
SJS
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DaveMitsky

- Joined on 07-25-2001
- Pennsylvania, USA
- Posts 6,141
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M101 has the lowest surface brightness of all the Messier galaxies (14.8 magnitudes per square arcminute) but is visible as a fuzzy, circular patch through a binocular or a small telescope from a dark site. I've observed it many times with my 101mm Tele Vue refractor. M33 and M74 also have low surface brightnesses and are similarly difficult to observe from a light polluted locale. Under dark skies, a DSO with a surface brightness of 12.5 magnitudes per square arcminute or brighter should be visible in almost any instrument, one with a surface brightness of 13.5 can be called average, and one with a figure of 14.5 or fainter can be considered a challenge object.
Both M51 and M101 looked fantastic through John Vogt's 32" f/4 ATM Dob last Thursday night at the 2008 Cherry Springs Star Party.
Dave Mitsky
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stargzr

- Joined on 05-29-2008
- Posts 127
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saberscorpx thanks for the info... very helpful... the side by side pic was exactly what I needed to see... thanks again
Dave.. I also appreciate the info... very helpful
conclusion.... I think I did find M101
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zachsdad

- Joined on 10-02-2007
- Wever, IA
- Posts 1,755
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stargzr:
"Has anyone seen M101 in an 8 inch scope? What does it look like? and Does it appear dimmer than M51?
What you describe is exactly what you should expect from your telescope. M51 is more condensed (you should be able to see the smaller companion galaxy NGC 5195 as well) and pops out against the background nicely, like a glowing ember. M101 will appear like a round, faint, cloud of smoke is comparison. With time, patience, and a trained eye you will be able to make out some of the spiral structure in M51 on a good night. Congratulations .
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mr Q

- Joined on 02-02-2008
- Edgewood, NM
- Posts 556
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SJS - The rendition of the two objects are good except that I would think M101 would be much larger in apparent size that M51. True, its surface brightness is very low but its central nucleus should ( I believe) be depicted as larger, though fainter than M51's appearance in a telescope or binoculars. My statement/question derives from the fact that though I have tried to observe this elusive object many times, I have not yet had a reasonable good view of it (just a hint of the nucleus with averted vision). I'm wondering if my assumptions are correct? Mr Q
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johnm

- Joined on 02-02-2007
- Posts 1,250
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Stargzr If you had your 8" pointed to where M101 should be and you could detect a faint blurry white spot, you probably had it in your EP. There's only one observing aid for galaxies that works. That's dark sky and dark sky and darker sky. On many nights I can see 101, 51, and others naked eye from my house, but few anymore have such sky and it's too bad. And I thinks it's unfair to reference the views of such objects through 20s and 30s and 40 inch apertures, few amateurs will ever have a chance to look through such scopes. I have a 12.5" and the chance of my ever having anything bigger is zip. Once you've identified such dim galaxies and can return to them again and again, each time your observing skill improves and when you can use your scope from good dark skies you'll see details you hadn't noticed before.
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saberscorpx

- Joined on 11-03-2006
- illinois USA
- Posts 98
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The DSS thumbs are to scale. 101 is measured across the outer knots. Also, picture 51 without 5195 as company.
SJS
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DaveMitsky

- Joined on 07-25-2001
- Pennsylvania, USA
- Posts 6,141
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johnm:On many nights I can see 101, 51, and others naked eye from my house, but few anymore have such sky and it's too bad. And I thinks it's unfair to reference the views of such objects through 20s and 30s and 40 inch apertures, few amateurs will ever have a chance to look through such scopes. I have a 12.5" and the chance of my ever having anything bigger is zip.
Hmm, both M51 (magnitude 8.4) and M101 (magnitude 7.9) are too dim to be visible with the unaided human eye. Brian Skiff, a professional astronomer at the Lowell Observatory, has a list of naked-eye DSOs posted at ftp://ftp.lowell.edu/pub/bas/deepsky/nakedeye.dso and, while the Messier galaxies M31,M33,M81,and possibly M83 have been sighted, M51 and M101 have not. M81 is extremely difficult to see naked-eye and probably represents the farthest object that the human eye can see without optical aid.
Any amateur astronomer who attends a star party is likely to catch views through scopes in the 20 inch, and possibly larger, aperture range.
Dave Mitsky
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johnm

- Joined on 02-02-2007
- Posts 1,250
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Let me put it to you this way. I know what my eyes can see. And not everyone lives anywhere close to where star parties may be held.
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saberscorpx

- Joined on 11-03-2006
- illinois USA
- Posts 98
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What's your LVM?
You're about to get a new neighbor.
SJS
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johnm

- Joined on 02-02-2007
- Posts 1,250
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I recon LVM here generally around 7.7-7.8. One of the reasons I live here is there aren't any neighbors. A light about 5 miles away drives me nuts and I can see a porch light on a house about 10 miles off as the crow flies if they turn it on.
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zachsdad

- Joined on 10-02-2007
- Wever, IA
- Posts 1,755
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Sounds like a little piece of heaven, John. I consider myself lucky, and my skies are only 5.5 to 6. Last weekend I saw M13 naked eye for the first time and was thrilled with that. And you are right, I'd have to travel a long way to attend a star party where I could get a few minutes at the eyepiece of a large aperture scope. It's just not an option for many of the folks on these forums.
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johnm

- Joined on 02-02-2007
- Posts 1,250
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The sad part about dark skies is that there probably isn't any pristine sky left on the planet except possibly in the southern hemisphere. If you get away from all man made light there's still dust and vapors in the sky that's man made or caused.
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tkerr

- Joined on 01-02-2004
- Coastal North Carolina USA.
- Posts 8,664
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I'm sorry but I am going to have to side with Dave on this one. Even under the best conditions the human eyes are incapable of seeing those objects. Especially an object such as M101 which may be a magnitude 7.9, however, has a very low surface brightness of only 14.8. Even small aperture telescopes have a difficult time of that one, M51 is magnitude 8.4 with a surface brightness of 12.6 Both are well beyond the limitations of even the best eyes under the best conditions.
Apparent magnitudes of known celestial objects
| App. Mag. |
Celestial object |
| −26.73 |
Sun (449,000 times brighter than full moon) |
| −12.6 |
Full Moon |
| −8.0 |
Maximum brightness of an iridium flare |
| −6.0 |
The Crab Supernova (SN 1054) of 1054 AD (6500 light years away) |
| −4.7 |
Maximum brightness of Venus and the International Space Station (when the ISS is at its perigee and fully lit by the sun)[4] |
| −3.9 |
Faintest objects observable during the day with naked eye |
| −3.7 |
Minimum brightness of Venus |
| −3.0 |
Maximum brightness of Mars |
| −2.8 |
Maximum brightness of Jupiter |
| −1.9 |
Maximum brightness of Mercury |
| −1.47 |
Brightest star (except for the sun) at visible wavelengths: Sirius |
| −0.7 |
Second-brightest star: Canopus |
| −0.24 |
Maximum brightness of Saturn |
| 0 |
The zero point by definition: This used to be Vega (see references for modern zero point) |
| 3 |
Faintest stars visible in an urban neighborhood with naked eye |
| 4.6 |
Maximum brightness of Ganymede |
| 5.5 |
Maximum brightness of Uranus |
| 6.5 |
Faintest stars observable with naked eye under perfect conditions |
| 6.7 |
Maximum brightness of Ceres |
| 7.7 |
Maximum brightness of Neptune |
| 9.1 |
Maximum brightness of 10 Hygiea |
| 9.5 |
Faintest objects visible with binoculars |
| 10.2 |
Maximum brightness of Iapetus |
| 12.9 |
Brightest quasar 3C 273 (2.4 Giga-light years away) |
| 13.65 |
Maximum brightness of Pluto (1,148 times fainter than naked-eye visibility) |
| 18.7 |
Maximum brightness of Eris |
| 23 |
Maximum brightness of Pluto's smallest moons Hydra and Nix |
| 27 |
Faintest objects observable in visible light with 8m ground-based telescopes |
| 30 |
Faintest objects observable in visible light with Hubble Space Telescope |
| 38 |
Faintest objects observable in visible light with planned OWL (2020)
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Have A Nice ________
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johnm

- Joined on 02-02-2007
- Posts 1,250
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The faintest thing seen by eye as magnitude 6.5? By eye in the daytime at -3.9? The faintest binocular objects possible as 9.5!!?? I don't know who came up with those figures, but I know some who would take serious issue with them. As far as seeing 101 with the naked eye, if I can look up where it is and see a white smudge and put the glasses or a scope on it and it's the galaxy, that's good enough for me.
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saberscorpx

- Joined on 11-03-2006
- illinois USA
- Posts 98
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Neptune must be a piece of cake.
SJS
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chipdatajeffB

- Joined on 07-16-2002
- Dallas area, Texas
- Posts 7,222
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Tim:
Where did you get that list? The links don't work, so I assume you copied it from an online source where the links do work.
There are some notable flaws in the list, but they may depend on explanations made at the (non-working here, at any rate) linked pages.
For example, the binocular statement clearly depends on which binoculars. Our Giant Fujinons can go way beyond what's quoted here, down around 14 or so.
Naked-eye limits depend not only on individual visual acuity, but also on sky conditions. On a photometric night at CSAC, I can go to about 7 zenithal and have done so on many occasions. A photometric night is exceptional for most locations, of course. John M's conditions could be exceptional a better than average percentage of the time, given his location. I am currently mapping CSAC's skies nightly for a week each month, in an attempt to determine just how often we can go really deep there. With modern CCD imagers this is a relatively easy thing to do ... you just need the time(!).
When I was (much) younger my eyesight was extremely good, and I lived for many years in the desert Southwest and far-western Texas (the Trans-Pecos region). I never, however, saw M51 or M101 naked-eye. With my eyesight today, I probably couldn't do it even on a photometric night.
A good, quick test for me at CSAC is M27. I have seen it listed anywhere from V 7.4 to V 8.1, but it is clearly visible to me on many nights from CSAC, so it must be toward the brighter end of that range, perhaps more. It is also rather condensed, which helps visually. I also have seen, and pointed out to others at the time, NGC 253 naked-eye several times. Even though it is quite condensed, it's low altitude from Texas makes it a toughie, but at 32 to 34 N a photometric night with low extinction brings it in range.
Among my observing buddies, the ones I find routinely doing the seemingly impossible are mostly those who have spent a good deal of time as variable and double-star observers. Those activities really train the eye and the mind. In particular, observing doubles without prior knowledge of their position angles is an often humbling way to teach yourself about observational bias -- we often (don't really) see what we expect to see, and convince ourselves we truly have seen it. But following the rigor needed to tease out dim companions and later learn your measured PA was within measurement error of the actual measure can train you in going beyond the norm.
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johnm

- Joined on 02-02-2007
- Posts 1,250
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The first time I noticed a glow, naked eye, at the position of M101 I was stunned. And have since observed it on a number of occasions, it's not a regular thing however even in these skies. And no chance for such observations for a while now since we're at just about no total darkness from this latitude. One of my great enjoyments also was to walk outside at anytime Venus had some decent elongation and see it naked eye. One night here I went to ~900X with my 12.5" on Saturn and saw near photographic detail. I consider seeing like that night a once in a lifetime thing, but I still have my notes and remember it vividly.
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DaveMitsky

- Joined on 07-25-2001
- Pennsylvania, USA
- Posts 6,141
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There is a very big difference between visual limiting stellar (point source) magnitude, which certainly can reach into the seventh magnitude range, and the integrated magnitude of an extended DSO like a galaxy. I have been observing for a long time and am familiar with most of the deep sky sites and astronomy fora on the Internet and have never before heard anyone claim that they could see M51 and M101 with the naked-eye.
I'm taking the liberty of posting Brian Skiff's naked-eye DSO list, as it appeared on the IAAC discussion board a number of years ago. Take particular note of the first sentence.
Dave Mitsky
Although many of the objects are easy or straightforward from a true-dark site, in the marginal cases one must be very careful to sort out neigbouring mag. 7 and 8 stars in order to make sure you've found the correct object. It makes one's claim more useful if such details are provided as well. I can post a discussion of what was necessary to identify M81, for example, if desired. I was pleased to see that Yann included Sharpless 264 (Sh2-264), the very large nebula surrounding the lambda Orionis group. I find this readily visible from the Lowell Anderson Mesa site, but I don't think anyone's ever mentioned it in print being a naked-eye object. On the other hand I have never convinced myself that I could see Barnard's Loop because there are so many faint stars strung along it that can mimic nebulosity. Still again, the Rosette Nebula is pretty easy to see even from a somewhat light-polluted site when using a UHC or [OIII] filter. This is a good target to start your challenging naked-eye viewing with, since the change in the size of the object going from unfiltered to filtered is dramatic.
\Brian
==================================
Blanco 1 too sparse Cr 065 not real Cr 069 lambda Ori cluster, easy Cr 070 Belt of Orion, easy Cr 089 not real Cr 106 not real Cr 121 too sparse Cr 132 too sparse Cr 135 too sparse Cr 140 too sparse Cr 316 = Trumpler 24 (preferred name) Cr 399 easy; Brocchi's cluster = Coathanger Cr 464 not real IC 0348 too faint IC 1396 nebula readily visible IC 1805 nebula too faint IC 1848 nebula too faint IC 4665 straightforward IC 4725 = M25; easy IC 4756 readily visible IC 4996 too faint, too small M002 probably visible M003 straightforward M004 easy M005 straightforward M006 easy M007 easy M008 easy M011 easy M012 probably visible M013 easy M015 straightforward M016 straightforward M017 straightforward M018 too faint M020 easy M021 straightforward M022 easy M023 easy M024 = IC 4715; easy M025 = IC 4725 above M028 background too bright? M029 too small/faint M031 easy M033 straightforward M034 easy M035 easy M036 straightforward M037 straightforward M038 straightforward M039 straightforward M041 easy M042 easy M044 easy M045 Pleaides M046 straightforward M047 straightforward M048 straightforward M050 straightforward M052 maybe too faint M062 background too bright? M067 straightforward M081 tough but visible M092 faint M093 straightforward Mel 020 = alpha Persei cluster Mel 022 = Pleiades Mel 111 = Coma Berenices cluster NGC 0253 reportedly visible from the south NGC 0281 too faint NGC 0752 easy NGC 0869 easy NGC 0884 easy NGC 1499 visible with filter NGC 1746 straightforward NGC 1981 straightforward NGC 2232 brightest star only NGC 2237 Rosette Nebula, visible with filter NGC 2244 Rosette cluster, easy NGC 2264 brightest star only NGC 2451 easy NGC 2546 easy NGC 5128 reportedly visible from south NGC 6124 straightforward NGC 6231 easy NGC 6530 = M 8 NGC 6633 easy NGC 6871 too small/faint NGC 7000 North America Nebula; straightforward NGC 7243 background too bright? NGC 7293 several reports (without filters!) Sh2-264 lambda Ori nebula, straightforward (much easier than Barnard's Loop!) Sh2-276 Barnard's Loop; often confused with encircling mag 5-7 stars Steph 01 delta Lyr cluster; brightest star only Stock 02 bright background, barely discernable Tr 10 probably visible, but in very crowded
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