Sunday, 31 May 2026

A little ramble through 19th century astronomy - Unclaimed property on Railway in 1867

 Sheffield Daily Telegraph Saturday 16th March 1867

 

Among the curious things connected with the business of railways are the variety and strange character of the unclaimed property which falls in to the hands of the railways as carriers of passengers and goods.

 

One person has left a very superior astronomical telescope in mahogany case complete, and it is now unclaimed. Where is its owner and what has he been doing to render himself unconscious of the loss he has sustained? Or has he abandoned the study of astronomy for the more prosaic and common occupations of the earth?    

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Saturday, 30 May 2026

A Little ramble through Lupus the Wolf

Lupus is often overlooked by observers because it is so close to the constellation of Scorpius and Centaurus. Although the term Lupus refers to a wolf, the Greeks and Romans regarded this constellation as an unspecified wild animal held by Centaurus as an offering to the gods. It appears to be during the renaissance period that the connection with the Wolf seems to have become the common term to use.   Lupus lies in the Milky Way so it is very rich in stars.

To the Euphrateans it was Zibu the Beast while to the Akkadians it was Urbat the Beast of Death.

To the Arab astronomers it was sometimes referred to as Al Asadah or the Lioness.

Alpha is a magnitude 2.3, B class star with a temperature of around 21,000,C compared to that of 5,800,C of the Sun, it lies at a distance of 460 light years. The only names it has is Chinese and is Yang Mun the South Gate.

Beta is a class B star even hotter than alpha at 23,500,  it has a magnitude of 2.7 and is 383 light years away. It will quickly use up its supply of hydrogen and become a red giant before possibly becoming a supernova in the future.

Gamma is 420 light years away and shines with a magnitude of 2.8 it is a B class star.

Eta magnitude 3.4 is 440 light years away and is an A class star.

Epsilon also magnitude 3.4 and is a B class star lying 510 light years away. 

There are many clusters in Lupus but they require small telescopes to see them, I will mention just NGC 5986 a globular cluster lying at a distance of 34,000 light years and shining at a magnitude of 8.0 It was discovered by the Scottish astronomer James Dunlop at the Paramatta observatory in Australia.

In the year 1006 a supernova appeared in Lupus, SN 1006, it  was probably the brightest observed stellar event in recorded history, reaching an estimated −7.5 visual magnitude and was roughly sixteen times the brightness of Venus. Appearing between April 30 and May 1. The Supernova was seen for about 3 months in the sky.


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Friday, 29 May 2026

A little ramble through 19th century astronomy - astronomy lectures in Leeds in 1810

Leeds Mercury Saturday 22nd September 1810 

Theatre Leeds 

Mr Llyod has the honour most respectfully to inform the Ladies and Gentlemen of Leeds  and its Vicinity, that he intends, early as the proper arrangements can be made to give his COURSE. of ASTRONOMICAL LECTURES, illustrated by the : 

DIOASTRODOXON, Or Grand Transparent Orrery, Accompanied by the CELESTINA. 

 With all the splendid Scenery, explanatory of the seasons, eclipses , tides and comets as exhibited in London, and the University of Oxford. -The Whole forming the most perspicuous and comprehensive view of the WORKS of the CREATOR in the United Kingdom.

  Mr. Lloyd's extensive  improvements on the Transparent Orrery, having excited humble  Imitations, under the Description of Originals and Descriptions  and as no Person whoever read  upon a Transparent Orrery was ever the Inventor of one, he feels it his Duty to caution the Public, against being imposed upon by so notorious quackery. 

 Subscription to the Course, Three Lectures, Nine Shillings, Epitome included – tickets transferable 

Subscriptions are received at the Leeds Mercury Office, where may be had an Epitome of the Course . Non- Subscribers Price One Shilling.


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Thursday, 28 May 2026

A little ramble through the night sky - the Micro Blue Moon on May 31st.

It’s May Moon Madness this month, as there are two full moons,  meaning the second one is a Blue Moon, and in addition, both are Micro Moons. The last time this happened was in October 2020 and the next will be in July 2053.

There will be two full moons this month, one on the first and the other on the thirty-first. This second one is referred to nowadays as a ‘Blue Moon’. The Moon takes around twenty-nine and a half days to orbit the Earth once and apart from February all months have either thirty or thirty-one days, meaning it is possible to have two full moons in a calendar month.

This use of the term ‘blue moon’ only has a history dating back to the 1940s when a letter, sent to the American astronomy magazine ‘Sky and Telescope’ (which incidentally is still published) asked the question ‘what is a blue moon?’. The answer was that it is the second full moon in a calendar month. The publishers of the magazine, realising that they had given the wrong answer, retracted their original statement. However, it was too late; the genie was out of the bottle, and for the last eighty years everyone has accepted this definition.

I have my own theory about the term ‘blue moon’. Each month I give the name of the next full moon, and as I often say, these names go back to the times of the monastic period in Britain around 1,000 years ago. The monks, who were amongst the cleverest people around during the Middle Ages due to their vast monastic libraries, knew full well that in some years there were thirteen full moons, rather the normal twelve.

Monks liked order in their lives. They kept diaries and special dates were always marked in red ink. The phrase ‘a red letter day’ is a monastic saying going back over 1,000 years. I just wonder if, when this 13th full moon occurred, it was marked in diaries in blue ink as a source of irritation because it messed up a very orderly system. I once checked the reference library in York minster without success, but maybe someone in the future will check the Vatican library and discover a monk’s diary with a full moon marked in blue ink!

You have probably heard of the Super Moon, but did you know we also have the Micro Moon?

The Moon takes around one month to orbit the Earth. Its normal distance from us is 239,000 miles.  A micro moon occurs when the Moon is more than 250,000 miles away. A supermoon is when the Moon is less than 230,000 miles away.  This is why a supermoon appears larger than normal, while a micromoon appears smaller. The discrepancy happens because the Moon does not orbit the Earth in a circle but in an ellipse or egg shape.


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Wednesday, 27 May 2026

A little ramble through 19th century astronomy - a notable shoemaker died in 1896

 Sheffield Daily Telegraph Tuesday 4th February 1896

 

On Sunday morning- there was carried to the grave at Darlington Cemetery Mr. W. H. Harris, who was a working shoemaker, living in a poor neighbourhood, at Hank Top, Darlington. Mr. Harris, who was 54 years old the time his death, was born at Barnard Castle.

 

Though working hard at his trade, he had attained local celebrity as an astronomer, and maker of telescopes with 9 inch and 12inch mirrors, which he, ground, figured, and silvered. This work required nice mathematical calculations, which he carefully worked out. He had intimate knowledge of optics, botany, astronomy, electricity, etc., and was a good French scholar. Mr. Harris was self-taught.


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Tuesday, 26 May 2026

A little ramble through 19th century astronomy - comet observed in 1819

 Leeds Intelligencer Monday 12th July 1819


The following communication from Mr. Christie of the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, contains probably all that can be yet known of this celestial phenomenon:— “I first observed the comet," observes Mr. Christie, “last night (Saturday) a minutes before 11 o'clock, and judge that it came to the meridian about 12. Its elevation above the horizon appeared about 10°, and the sun being at the time nearly below, its distance from the sun cannot much exceed 25°.

 

The night was remarkably light, and the moon uncovered by clouds—circumstances extremely unfavourable to the brilliancy of its appearance; and considering this, I should judge that, under more favourable circumstances, its splendour would be equal to that of any comet upon record—the head viewed with Capella (to the east of it) in brilliancy. The length of the tail, which, when the comet was on the meridian, pointed somewhat to the west of the zenith, extended about 15degrees;  and unlike the comet of 1811, it appeared to proceed immediately from the nucleus.

 

 I viewed it for some time through an excellent small reflector, by Watson, and observed, that the nucleus was much denser than that of the former comet, and that there was no separation between it and the coma, but that the body became gradually rarer, and in the upper part expanded into the tail; which appearance may arise from a very dense atmosphere surrounding the nucleus, and reaching to the rarer fluid forming the tail, if there be any distinction between the two fluids, as appears to have been the case with the comet 1811. 

I may observe, that this as in all other comets, the appearance to the naked eye is much more striking and brilliant than through telescope. The Comet passed the meridian below the Pole, at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, on Saturday, July 3, about midnight, when its place was determined as follows 

 Apparent right ascension  6h. 51m. 56S

North polar distance, corrected for re fraction 43 d 18 m  47.s

 Mean time of observation .12h 6m 56s

 

 The Comet was again observed on Monday night (July 5), but not till it had passed the meridian, when the following observations was made :

Apparent right ascension . 7h. 0m 9s

 North Polar Distance 43 d 34m 48s

Mean time of observation  12h 36m 04s

 

This was comet 1819 also known as Trailes comet that was discovered on July 1st 1819 by the German astronomer Johann Georg Trailes. The comet was an easy naked eye object reaching between magnitude 1 to 2.


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Monday, 25 May 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.