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or skyscraper make excellent targets. Point the optical tube so it lines up with your object. Objects will appear upside down and backwards in this model telescope.

Unlock the lock knobs: To move the telescope, you will need to unlock the Right Ascension (3, Fig. 5) and Declination (4, Fig.

5)lock knobs (just rotate to unlock or lock;

when locking, only tighten to a “firm feel,” do not overtighten).

Use the red dot viewfinder: If you have not done so, align the viewfinder (22) with the telescope’s eyepiece (17) as described earlier. Look through the red dot viewfinder until you

Just below the constellation Orion’s famous belt of three stars (in the middle of his sword), is The Great Orion Nebula. This wonderful telescope target is really a cosmic star factory where a glowing

gas cloud surrounds hot

young stars.

can see the object. It will be easier to locate an object using the red dot viewfinder rather than locating with the eyepiece. Line up the object using the viewfinders red dot.

Look through the eyepiece: Once you have the object lined up in the viewfinder, look through the optical tube’s eyepiece. If you have aligned your viewfinder, you will you see the object in your eyepiece.

Focus: Look through the eyepiece and practice focusing on the object you have chosen.

Try out the slow-motion flexible cable control: Practice using the right ascension control cable (3) and declination control cable (4) to move the telescope. These can come in very handy, especially when you wish to move the telescope in very small (fine control) steps.

Observe the Moon: When you feel comfortable with the viewfinder, the eyepieces, the locks and the adjustment controls, you will be ready to try out the telescope at night. The Moon is the best object to observe the first time you

go out at night. Pick a night when the

Moon is a crescent. No shadows are

 

seen during a full Moon, making it

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appear flat and uninteresting.

Look for different features on the Moon. The most obvious features are craters. In fact you can see craters within craters. Some craters have bright lines about them. These are called rays and are the result of material thrown out of the crater when it was struck by a colliding object. The dark areas on the Moon are called maria and are composed of lava from the period when the Moon still had volcanic activity. You can also see mountain ranges and fault lines on the Moon.

SURF THE WEB

The Meade 4M Community: http://www.meade4m.org

Sky & Telescope: http://www.skyandtelescope.com

Astronomy: http://www.astronomy.com

Astronomy Picture of the Day: http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.goc/apod

Photographic Atlas of the Moon: http://www.lpi.ursa.edu/research/lunar_orbiter

Hubble Space Telescope Public Pictures: http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pictures.html

Looking at or near the Sun will cause irreversible damage to your eye. Do not point this telescope at or near the Sun. Do not look through the telescope as it is moving.

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Meade 114EQ-ASTR instruction manual Surf the WEB