Thursday, 8 January 2026

A little ramble through Fornax the Furnace

 Fornax the Furnace is a constellation in the southern sky, its name is Latin for furnace. It is one of the so-called modern constellations it was named by the French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in 1752. Fornax like so many of the modern constellations is a very barren area in the sky.

The constellation is formed within the southern bend of Eridanus, originally part of Eridanus and partly ringed by the celestial river Eridanus. The stars of Fornax are so faint that quite honestly the stars could have remained part of Eridanus. Fornax is a very barren constellation which is just visible from Britain.

It was originally called Fornax Chemica the Chemical Furnace, today it is just known as Fornax.

The Chinese astronomers knew this area of sky as Tien Yu or Heaven’s Temporary Granary


The only star worth mentioning is alpha at magnitude 3.9. It would be possible just to glimpse alpha if the sky was very clear and you had a totally flat southern horizon. Originally designated 12 Eridani by John Flamsteed in the 1670s, alpha was named by Lacaille as the brightest star in the new constellation. It is a F class star lying at 46 light years away.

Although the constellation has little to offer to the naked eye observer there is a wealth of galaxies to users of large telescopes.

Unknown to Lacaille the constellation contains The Fornax Dwarf galaxy which is part of the Local Group of galaxies.

There is the Fornax cluster of galaxies 60-80 million light years away, the cluster contains around 60 galaxies.


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Wednesday, 7 January 2026

A little ramble through 19th century astronomy - possible observatory for Ecuador in 1874

 Nature April 2 1874

Astronomers will be interested to learn that among the numerous able men whom the president of the republic of Ecuador has gathered to that city in order to develop the University of Quito, there has appeared one, Father Menten, whose interest in astronomy has been such as promises to settle the long mooted question as to an observatory in that city.

Menten has now returned to Quito laden with a portion of that instrument outfit that he was ordered to secure at Munich. Among the apparatus is a six inch meridian circle. Father Menten was for some time a pupil of the eminent Argelander.



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Tuesday, 6 January 2026

Cooke Telescope Tales - Telescope for Rotherham in 1865

 In South Yorkshire, Jonathan Booth of Moorgate, Rotherham purchased a 4 inch educational telescope on a mounting with latitude adjustment. This telescope was purchased from Thomas Cooke & Sons in 1865. 

As is often the case I unfortunately have no other information on Jonathan Booth.


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Monday, 5 January 2026

The Astronomy Show on Drystone Radio

 Join me, Martin Lunn MBE every Monday evening from 7.00 pm-9.00 pm on the award-winning Astronomy Show on Drystone Radio, probably the only regular astronomy show on any radio station in the country. 

I will take my weekly look at the night sky and look at all the latest news in astronomy. There will be the astronomical anniversaries this week plus the latest news from the astronomical societies in the north of England.

 


The Astronomy Show every Monday evening only on Drystone Radio live online at www.drystoneradio.com DAB radio in Bradford and East Lancashire, or 102 and 103.5 FM and can also be heard later on the Drystone Radio Podcast.

Sunday, 4 January 2026

Cooke Telescope Tales - Telescope for Leeds vicar in1867

Another clergyman the Rev T Bland of Leeds purchased a Thomas Cooke & Sons 3.25 inch telescope in January 1867. Together with the telescope he also purchased an astronomical eyepiece of either 220 or 240 power. 

To date I have not been able to discover any astronomical observations by the Rev Bland, it is possible he was a member of the Leeds Astronomical Society.

 I don’t know what church the Rev T Bland was rector at.


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Saturday, 3 January 2026

A little ramble through 19th century astronomy - more on the Andromedid meteor shower of 1872

 Nature December 19th 1872

The Late Meteoric Shower

We have had here, and I presume you also have had in England, quite a fine display of shooting stars from the fragments of Biela’s comet.

On Sunday evening November 24th, they were coming about as fast as in the thickest parts of the August sprinkles – that is forty or fifty to the hour, for a single observer. Three fourths of them radiate from gamma Andromeda and vicinity.

On Monday morning there was no special abundance, but the radiant was then quite low in the north west.

Monday evening, they were coming with about half the frequency of the previous evening. Half of those seen came from the Andromeda radiant.

Tuesday evening the sky was overcast, but Wednesday evening was so great a display as to attract the attention of multitudes. Our party of from two to six persons counted 1,000 in a part of the first hour – that is from 6h 38m to 7h 34m, and in the next hour and a quarter we counted 750. The display was rapidly diminishing. Before midnight it was essentially over, and so far as know, has not re appeared.

The flights were slower than those of the November 14th period, and generally faint. The radiant was carefully observed on Wednesday evening by Prof Twining and myself, and we argued that the centre was in the line from the Pleiades to gamma Andromeda produced, and was about 3 degrees beyond that star. It was much longer in right ascension than in declination, and was not less than 8 degrees long. The star gamma Andromeda was the radiant area, for flights in the several directions from the radiant would, if produced backwards, pass sometimes on one side and sometimes the other of that star.

The character of this display, and the previously observed division of the comet into two parts , will I doubt not,, incline astronomers to the opinion of Dr Weiss and others, who think that the shooting stars are products of the disintegration of comets already moving in closed orbits, rather than the opinion of Prof Schiaparelli that they are drawn from the stellar spaces into long parabolic currents. The latter hypothesis presents difficulties which I cannot explain.

 

H A Newton

Yale College

December 2nd


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Friday, 2 January 2026

A little ramble through 19th century astronomy - Andromedid meteor shower 1872

 Nature November 28th 1872

Mr W F Denning, of Bristol, noticed on Saturday evening 23rd November a meteor of considerable brilliancy.  It radiated from a place at the extreme north west part of Andromeda, passing through the sword handle of Perseus, and onwards through Camelopardalis, becoming extinct, as if burnt out, on reaching the head of Ursa Major.

In its flight the meteor faded several times and revived again with great rapidity. It did not leave any train of light marking the path it had traversed, though it emitted a spark in its course. In reference to its brightness Mr Denning says it excelled Venus when at her maximum degree of brilliance.

 

Nature December 5th 1872

THE GREAT METEORIC SHOWER

As you will most probably have received from many other correspondents a general description of the magnificent spectacle on last Wednesday evening, I will confine my remarks principally to those observations which bear directly on the most important point at issue, viz, whether this meteor stream can be identified with the well-known comet of Biela. Having searched during the autumn, on every available occasion for a glimpse at the approaching comet, and the almost unvarying cloudiness of the early morning sky rendered even the negative value of the observation well-nigh useless, I read with the delight the prediction of Dr Weiss, and felt the greatest interest in its fulfilment.

Immediately I had noticed that a meteoric shower was in progress on the evening of the 27th November, I directed the two assistants of the observatory, who have had considerable experience in tracing the paths of meteors during the past few years, to devote their whole attention to the accurate determination of the radiant point. In the meantime, with the assistance of three of the students of the philosophy class and of the meteorological assistants of the observatory, I noted the rate per minute , the velocity, direction , magnitude, &c of the falling bodies.

The radiant was found to be in on the line joining gamma Andromeda and 51 Andromeda, and twice as far from 51 as from gamma. This gives as RA 26’ 37”, and N decl 43’ 48” agreeing very well with the prediction.

The epoch is somewhat in advance of that predicted; but this cannot be wondered at, as the comet has not been since 1852, and, in three complete revolutions round  its orbit, it could scarcely have been expected not to have been subjected to considerable unknown perturbation, either from planets whose masses are imperfectly known, or perhaps from some neighbouring meteor stream.

The time of the maximum was about 8h 10m pm but the numbers did not diminish before 9.00pm GMT. Between 8h 47m 30s and 9h 0m the computer of the observatory counted 512 which gives 40 per minute for one observer, and therefore at least 100 per minute invisible. From 9 to 10 o’clock at which time the sky became clouded, and remained so till morning, the mean rate was about 53 per minute, and almost constant from minute to minute, though varying much during each minute. At certain moments they were exceedingly numerous, thus at 9h 19 m nine appeared at the same instant at a point near beta andromeda.

A very peculiar feature of the display was the parallel motions of many stars that became visible at the same time. Thus at 9h 16m five burst out close by gamma Andromeda and travelled eastward together; at 9.25 four went together from gamma Andromeda to the Pleiades.

More than nine tenths of the meteors were very faint, and the larger ones seldom attained to any very considerable magnitude. Most had tails; and almost invariable colour being a white star with a greenish blue trail. The tails of those falling S E were observed to bend somewhat towards the E and to be straight only during the first half of their path. The ratio of numbers falling SE to those falling NW was 3 to 2, but this excess may in part be accounted for by the possibility of the radiant. More of the larger meteors went S the N and more W than E. The track of the larger  bolides rarely, if ever, exceeded 50’, and their velocities were very noticeably less than  that of the 13th and 14th November shower,  as might be expected, if their absolute velocities are comparable, the radiant for  November 27th being so far removed from the apex of the Earth’s way.

S J Perry

Stonyhurst Observatory

December 1st

 

A fine display of shooting stars was observed here on Wednesday 27th November. I first noticed them at 7.20pm Greenwich Time, and watched them till about 8, when the sky became obscured. They were occasionally seen again till 9.30. When first observed they appeared to radiate from the zenith and to be more numerous towards the north west and south west; many passed over the constellation Cygnus.

A W Scott

St David’s College

Lampeter

November 30th


During the recent star shower, my attention was given especially to the observations connected with h flight of individual meteors. As on many occasions in the presence of rare natural phenomena, I was keenly mortified with the deficiency of my own scientific training; but I send a few gleanings, if perchance a useful grain can be found amongst them. The brightness obviously increased with the distance traversed, but in many cases no increase in brightness was perceptible for the first third of the course. The extinction was not instantaneous but only very rapid, the distance traversed towards extinction being perceptible though very small; perhaps because the velocity seemed to diminish as the brightness increased. The train in many instances was forked, being brightest on its edges, the luminosity which lasted for some time after the immediate space was dark This seems incompatible with the hypothesis that the train is a mere optical result, of that the brightness arises, as in lightning, from incandescent particles of the atmosphere. In one or two instances the brightness of the train was granular, resembling the light of a partially resolved nebula, or of the Galaxy. In a few instances the paths of the meteors appeared to show remarkable deflections. One notably at 6h 25m, close to Vega, resembled an “S” drawn out nearly straight.

The course of a body passing with great velocity through an elastic medium tends to follow the direction of least resistance.

It is only in poetry that “the lightning falls with never a jag”

And though, as compared with that of electricity, planetary velocity is small, say twenty miles per second, yet this error in a very attenuated atmosphere would produce an intolerable amount of resistance right ahead.

Looking for deflections arising from this cause I saw, or fancied I saw, some very remarkable ones, such as no rules of foreshortening or perspective would account for. 

Henry H Higgins

Rainhill

December 2nd 

 

I hope last night, November 27th, was generally hear. It was so here and we were treated to the most splendid meteor shower that I have ever seen. I went out quite by chance into my garden at 7 pm and saw it in its full glory. I counted in a very few minutes 500 meteors, and then lost count, there being far too many to count all. On several occasions I saw as many as twelve in the sky at one: their radiating point seemed to be about Xi Cassiopeia, and from that point they floated in every direction – north, south, east and west. At that time Cassiopeia being immediately above one’s head, the effect was magnificent.

Edmund V Pigott

Malpas

November 28th

 

A very fine shower of shooting stars was observable at Boltsburn, Rookhope in Durham on Wednesday night 27th November. I first noticed them about half past seven, when they were very numerous; their directions were chiefly downwards, towards nearly all points on the horizon. The radiant point seemed to be situated near the Great Bear, but of this I could not make myself perfectly satisfied. They varied much in magnitude and length of track. Some of the larger ones left a streak of reddish light on their track, which lasted a second or two. About eight o’clock I counted in fifteen  minutes 600, which came within my field of vision from a doorway having a southerly exposure. The regularity of occurrence was such as to approximate closely to 200 during each five minutes. How long the phenomenon continued in the latter part of the night I had not the opportunity of ascertaining .

John Curry

Rookhope

Durham

November 29th

 

The following are the observations which I was able to make on the night of the great shower of meteors on Wednesday night.

The first which I saw was at 5.25 pm between 5.35 and 5.50, 150 were counted by one observer in the sky towards NE.  At 6.26 in four minutes five observers counted 310. At 6.40 in two minutes five observers counted 316. At 8.37 with a hazy cloud to N, six observers in five minutes counted 553. At 8.45 , in fifteen minutes, one observer counted 528 while facing SE.

A very few among so many left visible streaks of light after the meteor itself had disappeared, fifteen seconds being the longest time any of them remained visible. They appeared to radiate from a point a little to the south of mu Cassiopeia, many in the vicinity of that star having courses of less than one degree in angular measurement.

Towards 10 pm clouds covered the greater part of the sky, so that only unusually brilliant meteors could be seen; they were however, again visible, but in decreased numbers at 11.30.

G H H

Birkenhead

November 29th

 

There was a magnificent meteor shower here on Wednesday evening last, the 27th November. My attention was first called to it about half last five o’clock, and I watched it at intervals until about seven, when the sky became overcast with clouds. It really was a shower, and no mistake, the sky at times quite sparkling with meteors. Their point of origin appeared to be n the neighbourhood of Cassiopeia, and the general direction towards the west and north, though several radiated to the east and south. Some, after becoming, invisible, as if passing behind some intervening cause, suddenly emerged in all their brightness and then suddenly vanished. The streak left behind was in some instances a continuous smooth line, in others the appearance was that of a row of sparks strung together. The finest meteor, and the one of the longest duration, that I noticed became visible near Cygnus and continued its course to appoint a little to the south of Vega. It resembled a small rocket. On the following evening the sky was too overcast to make observations.

 

Thomas Fawcett

Blencowe School, Cumberland

November 30th 

 

The splendid meteor shower of November 27th was well seen at St Andrews. My attention was not called to it until after the meteors had begun to decline in frequency; but they were still at about 8h 30m GMT, so numerous as to give considerable confidence in assigning their radiant point, about which they were seen shooting out in all directions. I saw at least two, whose paths were foreshortened almost to a luminous point. There appeared very close to the radiant near two stars in the right foot of Andromeda, which in the star maps of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge are numbered 51 and 54, or in about RA 25’ N. Decl 48’. The sky became overcast; but at about 11h 30m, meteors were still falling I directions which confirmed my previous estimate of the position of the radiant. The sky was again clear at 1 h 30m am but I saw no more meteors.

I have since seen in a table by Schiaparelli, from observations by Zerzioli, 1867-69, and under the date November 30th a radiant point in RA 17’ Decl 48’, which agrees closely with that which I have ventured to assign to the remarkable shower of November 27th,

W Swan

St Andrews

November 30th 


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