Celestron 11055, 91525, 11065 Aligning the R.A. Setting Circle Setting the DEC Circle

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Aligning the R.A. Setting Circle

Setting the DEC Circle

Before you can use the setting circles to find objects in the sky, you need to align both the R.A. and DEC setting circles. In order to align the setting circle, you need to know the names of a few of the brightest stars in the sky. If you don’t, they can be learned by using the Celestron Sky Maps (#93722) or consulting a current astronomy magazine. To align the R.A. setting circle:

1.Locate a bright star near the celestial equator. The farther you are from the celestial pole, the better your reading of the R.A. setting circle. The star you choose to align the setting circle with should be a bright one whose coordinates are known and easy to look up. (For a list of bright stars to align the R.A. setting circle, see the list at the back of this manual.)

2.Center the star in the finder.

3.Center the star in the field of the telescope.

4.Start the clock drive so that the mount tracks the star.

5.Look up the coordinates of the star. You can consult a star catalog or use the list at the end of this manual.

6.Rotate the circle until the proper coordinates line up with the R.A. indica- tor. The R.A. setting circle should rotate freely. The R.A. setting circle has a marker every four minutes with each hour labeled (see figure 4-10).

The R.A. setting circle is now aligned and ready to use. The R.A. setting circle is clutched to the R.A. gear rotation. As long as the R.A. drive is operating, the circle does not need to be reset once indexed to the correct coordinate (i.e., once aligned). If the drive is ever turned off, then the R.A. setting circle must be reset once activated. While the R.A. setting circle tracks with the drive motor, it does not move when slewing the telescope.

Figure 4-10

The declination setting circle is fixed in place and cannot be moved be hand. Once the mount is polar aligned with the DEC circle reading 90°, simply move the telescope in declination until the desired coordinance are reached.

36 • Astronomy Basics

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Contents Page E C e l e s t r o n C M- 11 00/1400 B L E O F C O N T E N T S Iv Table of Contents T R O D U C T I O N How to Use This Manual Word of Caution Schmidt-Cassegrain Optical System S E M B L I N G Y O U R C M 1 1 0 Unpacking Your Celestron CM-1100CM-1100 Setting Up the Tripod Attaching the Center Leg Brace Attaching the Central Column Central Column Electronics Console Center Leg BraceAttaching the Equatorial Mount Installing Counterweight Bar Installing CounterweightAttaching the Optical Tube to the Mount Attaching the Visual Back Installing the Star Diagonal Assembling Your CM-1100 Installing the Finder Installing the Polar Finder Moving the Telescope in R.A. and DEC Adjusting the Mount Balancing the Mount in R.A Balancing the Mount in DEC Assembling Your CM-1100 Technical Specifications Tripod L E S C O P E B a S I C S Image OrientationFocusing General Photography Hints Aligning the Finder Your First Look Daytime ObservingNighttime Observing Calculating Magnification Determining Field of View T R O N O M Y B a S I C S Celestial Coordinate SystemMotion of the Stars Polar Alignment DefinitionFinding the Pole Latitude Scales Pointing at Polaris Polar Axis Finder Declination Drift Aligning the R.A. Setting Circle Setting the DEC Circle Powering Up the Drive I N G T H E D R I V EGuide Speed Periodic Error Correc- tion BC Backlash CorrectionHC/CCD Northern/Southern Hemisphere Operation Hand ControllerDEC Reverse AutoguidingL E S T I a L O B S E R V I N G Observing the MoonObserving the Sun Using Your Setting Circles Observing Deep-Sky ObjectsStar Hopping Celestial Observing Viewing Conditions TransparencySky Illumination Seeing ConditionsCelestial Observing L E S T I a L P H O T O G R a P H Y Short Exposure Prime Focus Lunar Phase ISO Crescent QuarterFull Celestial Photography Piggyback Celestial Photography Eyepiece Projection Planet ISO Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Long Exposure Prime Focus Celestial Photography CCD Imaging Fastar Configuration Description of F-numbersMedium size to small galaxies Imaging at f/7 Imaging at f/11Lunar or small planetary nebulae Imaging at f/22 Planetary or LunarCare and Cleaning of the Optics Collimation L E S C O P E M a I N T E N a N C ETelescope Maintenance Telescope Maintenance T I O N a L a C C E S S O R I E S Optional Accessories Optional Accessories Optional Accessories Const Mag Type Proper NameNGC# Spiral Galaxy Epoch Star Name Constellation MagnitudeAstronomy Texts AtlasesGeneral Observational Astronomy Visual ObservationCelestron ONE Year Warranty