Showing posts with label beginners astronomy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beginners astronomy. Show all posts

3/19/2013

A Field Guide to Stars and Planets (Peterson Field Guides) Review

A Field Guide to Stars and Planets (Peterson Field Guides)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This review is for the softcover version. I feel almost bad to give this great guide 3 stars. The book contains a lot of very good information - more so than many books several times larger. As such, it's an excellent reference for beginner and more advanced user alike. However, the book fails miserably for field use, which, ironically, it is supposed to be designed for.
The cover frays and acquires "dog-ears" in a relatively short time of field use. In contrast, the Audubon field guides use a much more resilient plastic softcover. The pages smude easily from finger oils - remember, this is a guide you should be able to use for 8 years or so (until the next edition) so these are unacceptable shortcomings IMHO. By far the biggest gripe I have with this book, however, is the the choice of red to identify galaxies, star clusters etc in the atlas charts. These marks completely disappear under red light(!!!), making the charts useless for finding deep sky objects in the field. Finally, how are you supposed to operate equipment and keep the book open? Because it lacks spiral binding, the only way to use it hands-off is to put a weight on the page you're referencing.
If you're looking for a great reference to use at home, this guide is hard to beat - in fact, I highly recommend it. However, look elsewhere for more useful star charts with deep sky objects to use in the field.

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The fourth edition of this best-selling field guide has been completely revised and updated to include the latest information from leading astronomical sources. All the time-sensitive material is new and valid through 2017: solar eclipses, phases of the moon, positions of the planets, and more. Twenty-four Monthly Sky Maps, all newly revised and in color, show exactly what you'll see when facing north or south in the night sky. Fifty-two Atlas Charts, also revised and in color, cover the entire sky, including close-ups of areas of special interest such as the Pleiades and the Orion Nebula. The hundreds of thousands of devoted users of the previous editions of this guide have been eagerly awaiting this new volume so they can continue to enjoy their hobby in the coming decades.

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12/20/2012

Firefly Planisphere: Latitude 42 Degrees North Review

Firefly Planisphere: Latitude 42 Degrees North
Average Reviews:

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My husband loves astronomy and I got him a telescope for Christmas and needed a planisphere so both of us could learn more about the stars. He is a lot more advanced that I am, but he loves this chart and I have no trouble reading it. I highly recommend this to anyone looking for some celestial reference. I did expect there to be more to it, (like more pages) but I am the novice -so what do I know?- and my husband was very pleased.

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A valuable tool for novice and advanced stargazers.

The 11 3/8 inch Firefly Planisphere is an affordable, practical tool for accurately locating night sky phenomena in the Northern Hemisphere at any time of the year -- and is now updated to include planetary tables from 2007 up to and including 2014

Charted by the month, day, hour and minute, it gives quick help on locating celestial wonders such as:

Planets
Stars
Constellations
Globular clusters
Nebulae
Galaxies

The easy to use Firefly Planisphere features:

Icons that describe star magnitudes from O to 1 (large) to 4(small). The larger the symbol, the brighter the star -making it easy to locate specific stars.
Updated planetary tables with at-a-glance coordinates for locating the brightest objects in the sky until 2014.
Times of sunrise and sunset for each day.

An easy-to-read instructional guide describes how to use the planisphere. Both the planisphere and the guide are packaged in a protective plastic envelope.


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