Sunday, October 11, 2009

Sidewalk Astronomy in Portsmouth






















After a cloudy few days the sky cleared in time for some sidewalk astronomy in downtown Portsmouth. The town was packed with people enjoying a cool Saturday evening.







I set up the WO 80mm refractor on the iOptron Minitower and it tracked perfectly all evening as Jupiter swung from one side of Market Street to the other. The alignment couldn't have been better, I got about 90 minutes on the west side of the street and then another hour on the east side. At least 100 people looked at Jupiter, marvelled at its moons and took cell-phone pictures through the eyepiece, most with good success.







The most common question I got was, "Is this some kind of a special occurrence?" Using my (now coffee-stained) map of the solar system I explained how we saw different views at different times of the year, and how the planets move around the sun.







The second most common question was, "Why are the moons all in a line." I explained that if you could float *above* Jupiter, you would see the moons going around in circles, but since the Jovian system of moons is pretty much in the same plane as the rest of the Solar System, we see the orbits "edge-on" like looking at the edge of a piece of paper. Most folks understood right away.











Having some signs helped people understand what was going on. I use a whiteboard with some velcro on the back to sketch what people will see in the eyepiece.






It was a wonderful night of sharing!