Wednesday, 18 June 2025

Alpha Centauri observed from Australia in 1906 with Cooke telescopes

 Alpha Centauri one of the leading double stars in the southern hemisphere was observed by G D Hirst using his 4.25 inch Cooke telescope and James Nangle using his 6.25 inch Cooke telescope in Australia in June and July 1906.


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Tuesday, 17 June 2025

A little ramble through 19th century astronomy - A new variable star in 1863

On the night of May 20th, 1863, Mr N R Pogson, the government astronomer at Madras, observed a star of the ninth magnitude on a spot in the constellation Scorpio, where no star had been seen in the months of April and May during the last nine years.

At first it was supposed to be one of the minor planets, but a series of micrometrical measures of its position with respect to other stars near it, made the same night, established its fixity, and revealed its true character.

On the following night it was decidedly less bright, and by the 28th May it had diminished to less than the twelfth magnitude. Strong moonlight then interfered with observations, but on the night of June 1st, during the darkness caused by the total eclipse of the Moon, it was again looked for but was no longer visible.

Only three other stars are known, discovered respectively by Mr Hind, Mr Baxendell and Herr Auwers, whose appearances and disappearances take placed so suddenly; and every addition to the list of objects so remarkable is regarded with considerable interest by astronomers.

Mr Pogson called his new variable star U Scorpio.

Today we know that U Scorpio is a recurrent nova system that has been seen to brighten up not only in 1863, but also 1906, 1936, 1979, 1987, 1999, 2010, and 2022. Pogson’s  observations from 1863 are the only ones known regarding that outburst.

None of the outbursts were bright enough to be seen by the naked eye, all needing either binoculars or a small telescope.


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Monday, 16 June 2025

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.

Titan observed from Australia in 1907 using a Cooke telescope

On November 5th / 6th 1907 Mr A B Cobham and Mr G D Hirst using a 4.5 inch Thomas Cooke & Son telescope in Australia saw a dark spot on Saturn. This was afterwards ascertained to be Titan. 

They also both commented that they caught glimpse of the edge of the ring at flashes, the impression indicating the extreme fineness and delicacy of the rings when seen edgewise.



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Sunday, 15 June 2025

A little ramble through Capricornus the Sea Goat

 In the south quite low down in the sky in the south in late summer and early autumn is one of the constellations that form the zodiac. This is Capricornus the Sea Goat. Although there are no particularly bright stars in Capricorn it has some of the oldest mythological legends attached to it.

Normally associated with a sea goat by Aratus 315 – 240 BCE the Greek poet who drew the pictures we recognise as the 48 classical constellations it was a Horned Goat, while Eratosthenes 276 – 194 BCE he was the Greek astronomer and mathematician who measured the circumference of the Earth thought that Capricorn was half fish who jumped into the river Nile to escape the monster the Typhon.

In Persia, it was Bushgali, in Syria it was Gadjo, in Turkey it was Ughlak while to the Arabian astronomers it was Al Jady, all these names refer to a goat. In Egypt it was Chnum or the God of the Waters, this would I assume be associated with the rising of the river Nile.

In Asia Capricorn was sometimes known as The Southern Gate of the Sun, this would almost certainly be because Capricorn is the constellation where the Sun is at its lowest in the sky, and this is when the winter solstice occurs. The Tropic of Capricorn is the position at approximately south 23 degrees where around December 21st the Sun will be directly overhead. Although it is still referred to as the Tropic of Capricorn the position has moved and is now moved into the neighbouring constellation of Sagittarius. This is due to a very long-term effect called Precision or the wobbling of the Earth.

 The second mythical king of Rome Numa Pompilius c715 BCE – 673 BCE began the year when the Sun was in the middle of Capricorn and when the day lengthened after the winter solstice.

Today we see Capricorn as the sea goat, but some Greek and Arabic astronomers saw it as just goat like.

Early Hindu names were Mriga and Makara, while the Tamils saw it as Makaram an antelope. It was sometimes shown with the head of a goat upon the body of a hippopotamus indicating some kind of amphibious creature.

In China it was the zodiacal bull or Ox that would later become Mo Ki the Goat Fish. Sometimes the Chinese grouped some of the stars of Capricorn and Sagittarius together to form Sing Ki the Starry Record. Very early in astronomy in China it was known as the Dark Warrior.

The brightest star in Capricorn is not alpha but delta. I have mentioned before that in 1603 the German astronomer Johann Bayer introduced a system on his Uranometria star atlas using the 24 letters from the Greek alphabet. Whereby the brightest star is labelled alpha followed by beta then gamma and all the way down to omega which is the 24th and last letter of the Greek alphabet. It does not always follow that this system works. It doesn’t in Capricorn. I don’t know why this situation sometimes occurs.

Delta or Deneb Algedi which is Arabic and means The Tail of the Goat, it has a magnitude of 2.9 and is 39 light years away. It is an eclipsing binary system of the Algol type. The prototype for this class of variable star was discovered in 1669 by the Italian astronomer Montanarri and explained by John Goodricke the deaf astronomer and Edward Pigott in York in 1782. I called these two astronomers the Fathers of Variable Star Astronomy because of the work they did together between 1781 -1786 observing and explaining the changing light of some of the stars they observed. This partnership went on until the untimely death of John Goodricke at the age of just 22. The magnitude of delta varies between 2.8 -3.0 over a period of just over one day.

It was close to delta that the planet we now call Neptune as discovered in 1846 through the calculations of the astronomers Urbain Le Verrier in France and John Couch Adams in Great Britain.  Neptune was discovered at the Berlin Observatory.

The next brightest star in beta or Dabih the meaning of which is uncertain it’s another double star. The brighter component has a magnitude of 3.1 and its companion star has a magnitude of 6.1, the pair can be seen with binoculars. The system is 340 light years away.

Alpha or Al Sa’d al Dhabih, the Lucky one of the Slaughterers this name appears to refer to the sacrifice of animals by the Arabs at the time of the heliacal rising of Capricorn. Another double star, the two components can be seen with the naked eye under the very best of conditions. The brighter star has a magnitude of 3.1 the other star has a magnitude of 4.3. The system lies at 690 light years away.

The last star I will mention here is gamma or Nashira which means the fortunate one or the bringer of good tidings. It has magnitude of 3.7, it’s an A class star meaning it’s hotter than our Sun and is 139 light years away.

There is one messier object in Capricorn this is Messier 30, it is known as the jellyfish cluster. It’s a globular cluster and was discovered by Charles Messier in 1764 who described it as a circular nebula without a star.  Globular clusters are old clusters of stars compared to open clusters which are formed of young stars. M30 lies close to a 5th magnitude star labelled as 41 Capricorn. This was the 41st star catalogued by John Flamsteed in Capricorn as part of his survey of the stars in the night sky.  He was the first astronomer royal in the late 17th century. His project  was to record the bright stars in all the constellations visible from London.

 Today astronomers refer to M30 as a remarkably bright, large and a slightly oval cluster. It lies at around 27,100 light years and is about 93 light years across, this gives some idea of just how big some of these globular clusters can be. M30 is believed to be about 12.9 billion years old. With a magnitude of 7.2 it can just be glimpsed as a spot of light through a pair of binoculars.


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Saturday, 14 June 2025

Stars and the Moon observed in Edinburgh in 1899 with a Cooke telescope

 W M Baxter used a 5 inch Cooke equatorial in Edinburgh to observe a series of occultations of stars  during the partial eclipse of the Moon on the night of 16th-17th December 1899. He observed 10 stars before fog and cloud prevented further observations.



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Friday, 13 June 2025

Important observations made by a Thomas Cooke telescope in Australia in 1877

 York Herald Thursday 22nd March 1877

 

Strange news has been recently received from an Australian observatory (Adelaide). It might be described as revolutionising our ideas respecting the largest of the planets, were it not that the careful study of much older observations had already led the more advanced students of astronomy to adopt the theory which has now been demonstrated by direct observation. 

 During the last eight or none years the belief has been gaining ground that the giant planets Jupiter and Saturn are in a state of intense heat and enwrapped in atmospheres of enormous depth and density. In fact it may be said that according to the new theory we never see the actual body of either Jupiter or Saturn, but only the outermost surfaces of the cloud layers; the real surfaces lying, not a few miles, or a few hundred miles but several thousand miles below the cloud surface measured by astronomers.

It has been shown that all the phenomena presented by the two gas giants planets correspond with this theory, whereas not one in ten can be explained by the older theory. 

Fortunately in the case of Jupiter, we have evidence we have evidence from the Adelaide Observatory where a fine (8 inch) telescope by T Cooke & Sons of York has been erected, and where a singular purity of air greatly assists astronomical observation, two practised observers (Mr Todd and Mr Ringwood) on two different occasions, both observing  on each occasion saw the nearest of Jupiter’s satellites through the outer layer of the planet’s cloud laden atmosphere, which must, therefore, of necessity, be at least 2,000 miles in depth. 

In his book ‘Flowers in the Sky’ Richard Proctor makes references to this observation by Mr Todd and Mr Ringwood.


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