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Herschel II home page

ABOUT THE PROGRAM PROJECT HISTORY
A NOTE ABOUT NAVIGATING CRITERIA FOR CERTIFICATION
THE MANUAL CONTACTS
AWARD WINNERS

INTRODUCTION

August 1997 saw a new addition to Astronomical League's roster of certificate observing programs -- the Herschel II developed by the Rose City Astronomers of Portland, Oregon. Consisting of 400 of the 2,478 deep sky objects catalogued by William Herschel in the late 1700's, the Herschel II is the next level observing project after the Ancient City Astronomers' Herschel 400 program. The Herschel II observing program is an advanced level project focused on improving observers' technical skills by taking thorough field notes and developing accurate technical object descriptions.

The Astronomical League sponsors observing lists of many types of astronomical objects including the sun and moon, double stars, and deep­sky objects. Many astronomers have observed the Messier list of deep­sky objects, catalogued by Charles Messier in the late 1700s. A subset of dedicated observers has continued onward to the Herschel list, a demanding set of 400 deep sky objects from William Herschel's catalogue of 2478. Observers' skills are pushed to the limit for this long­term observing project, and Herschel certificates are prized possessions among serious amateurs as an indication of the advanced level of their amateur capabilities.

PROJECT HISTORY

Once again, necessity is the mother of invention. After several local observers completed the League's Herschel 400 program, the excitement of logging object No. 400 and receiving that certification was dampened by a "what's next?" letdown. Their thirst for more led them to thinking about developing a program for themselves; the initial idea progressed to developing a club program, and then culminated in talks with the Astronomical League and Ancient City Astronomers about developing another level of the Herschel 400 to be used by everyone.

Over two years later, the program presented here represents the work of more than two dozen observers and hundreds of hours of research, analysis, observation, documentation, distillation, and dedication. Amateur astronomers from across the country participated in the data gathering and selection process of the final 400 objects selected from an original list of 600 potential objects. This plan allowed for rejection of up to one-third of the objects so that the program would exclude impossible-to-get targets. Many local-area observers defied the notorious weather of western Oregon and Washington to collect samples from every section of the sky. The resulting program is a challenging undertaking for those observers already familiar with the sky, navigational techniques, taking field notes, and operating equipment/instruments.

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

The 400 objects in this program consist of 323 galaxies, 41 open clusters, 21 nebulae, 9 planetary nebula, 3 cluster-nebula, and 3 globular clusters. Most of the objects are between magnitude 11 and 13. In the data gathering phase of the project, approximately 80% of the objects on the list were observed with scopes between 8" and 13" aperture. One of the initial hopes for this program was that it could be completed using a scope of 8" aperture. While an 8" aperture scope under good dark skies will be able to do a good portion of the list, a 10" aperture scope or larger will probably be needed to complete the whole program. Since many of the objects are in fields containing numerous other objects, some even superimposed on top of each other, identifying the correct object under these circumstances is a major challenge.

A NOTE ABOUT NAVIGATING

By the time observers undertake a project of this depth, they are quite familiar with the sky, along with locating very faint objects. Technology has added many wonderful options for amateur astronomers today, and we will be seeing even more to come. At this point, observers have probably experiment with different types of equipment and developed a preference. This program honors those preferences and is meant to accommodate the equipment and direction that observers have chosen. To that end, the Herschel II program leaves the choice of how to navigate to the object totally up to the observer, whether it be star hopping, geometric placing, stellar off-setting, right-angle sweeping, setting circle methods, or computerized locating programs. With this same advancement of technology, the observation of an object also takes on different forms -- from viewing through the scope and standard eyepieces to viewing the object on a screen with CCD imaging. The Herschel II program leaves the choice of how to observe the object up to the observer as well. Accordingly, the certificate issued will include an alpha-numeric designation that will indicate "M" for a manual search or "DA" for a device-aided search. Specific definitions of manual and device-aided are attached.

THE MANUAL

The Herschel II Program Manual is available for $18 (plus postage) through the Astronomical League Observing Program. The focus of the Herschel II is the taking of thorough field notes and developing them into complete, technically accurate, object descriptions. To support that goal, the manual includes recommendations, guidelines, technical information, examples, and sample forms to aid the observer in developing this skill. Besides descriptions of the 400 objects, it includes a planning guide and an index, a field reference section, and a skills challenge section.

CRITERIA FOR CERTIFICATION

You must be a member of the Astronomical League, either through membership in an affiliated astronomical society or as a Member-at-Large.

  • Observe the 400 objects listed in this manual and record your observations.
  • Develop object descriptions that will include at a minimum:
    • Date
    • Time
    • Site
    • Seeing
    • Transparency
    • Instrument
    • Eyepiece
    • Object descriptions of the 400 objects in your own words.

Complete an index of observations in NGC order showing the page number of your descriptions next to the NGC numbers on the list.

Fill out the "Submittal Form, found in the guide in total and send it in with your descriptions and index.

CONTACTS

Email: Carol Huston or Candace Pratt

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This labor of love was not a simple one, and many have worked to varying degrees to see its completion. Some people performed more than one task and have contributed to the hobby of amateur astronomy. Although William Hershel deserves the primary credit for his labors to bring these objects within easy reach, the people listed below and on the credits page worked long hours, by day and night, to bring this subset of Herschel's work to you.

Project Leaders and Manual Developers/Authors: Candace Pratt and Carol Huston
The Herschel II program development team of editors, contributors, and data gatherers!

Thanks!

 


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