Further Adventures with Comoving Stellar Companions

Further Adventures with Comoving Stellar Companions

Noting that Leo Minor contains four SHY binary stars, I decided to seek out the other three after observing SHY 552 in my first adventure with very wide binaries and other comoving stellar companions. 😉 SHY 552 has a relatively cozy separation of 106.9 arc-seconds. My...
A Shy Double Star in the Little Lion

A Shy Double Star in the Little Lion

A few weeks ago I was consulting Sky Safari and StelleDoppie to identify objects of binocular interest in Leo Minor and found a likely double star in the upper northwest corner of the constellation boundary with Ursa Major, near Tania Australis. Only a WDS code (no...
Double Duty with Phil Harrington

Double Duty with Phil Harrington

April and May suburban skies lack bright bounty for binoculars because the Milky Way is mostly out of sight as we look upward out of the spiral disk of our galaxy, rather than into it as we do in winter and summer when it is high overhead. The Milky Way is the visible...
The Bear and the Gazelle

The Bear and the Gazelle

Perusing constellation boundaries is one of the pleasures of binocular astronomy for me. I’m reminded of the waggish remark on the golf course when a ball has been driven well off the fairway and the helpful comment is made, “A person should really play...
A Carbon Night in Hydra

A Carbon Night in Hydra

Hydra is the largest constellation in the night sky (1302.84 square degrees). It can be challenging for suburban observers in mid latitudes (like Kansas 😉) because its northern border is at 7 degrees of declination, well to the south, and neighboring houses and trees...