Little Dipper

Polaris

Big Dipper

Cassiopeia

Fig. 38: Locating Polaris.

Tip:

You can check if the declina- tion is set at true 90° in step 2c. Look through the eyepiece and rapidly slew the optical tube on the R.A. axis. If all the stars rotate around the center of the field of view, the Declination is set at 90°. If the stars arc out of the field of view, slew the optical tube on the Declination axis until you achieve the centering effect.

Fig. 39: Align tick marks to set the fork arms to 00 H.A. position.

Lining Up with the Celestial Pole

Objects in the sky appear to revolve around the celestial pole. (Actually, celestial objects are essentially “fixed.” Their apparent motion is caused by the Earth’s rota- tion). During any 24 hour period, stars make one complete revolution about the pole, making concentric circles with the pole at the center. By lining up the telescope’s polar axis with the North Celestial Pole (or for observers located in Earth’s Southern Hemisphere, with the South Celestial Pole), astronomical objects may be followed, or tracked, simply by moving the telescope about one axis, the polar axis. This tracking may be accomplished automatically with the LX200GPS electric motor drive.

If the telescope is reasonably well aligned with the pole, very little use of the tele- scope’s Declination slow motion control is necessary. Virtually all of the required tele- scope tracking will be in Right Ascension. (If the telescope were perfectly aligned with the pole, no Declination tracking of celestial objects would be required.) For the pur- poses of casual telescopic observations, lining up the telescope’s polar axis to within a degree or two of the pole is more than sufficient: with this level of pointing accura- cy, the telescope’s motor drive will track accurately and keep objects in the telescop- ic field of view for perhaps 20 to 30 minutes.

Begin polar aligning the telescope by locating Polaris. Finding Polaris is simple. Most people recognize the “Big Dipper.” The Big Dipper has two stars that point the way to Polaris (Fig. 38). Once Polaris is found, it is a straightforward procedure to obtain a rough polar alignment.

To line up with Polaris, follow the procedure described below. Refer to the instruction sheet included with your equatorial wedge for information about attaching the wedge to the telescope and also about using the azimuth and latitude controls.

1.Select "Setup: Telescope" from the Autostar II menus. Press ENTER. Scroll to

"Telescope: Mount" and press ENTER. Scroll to "Scope Mounting: Polar" and press ENTER. The telescope mount is now set to the polar mode.

2.Press MODE until "Select Item: Setup" displays. Press ENTER. "Setup: Align"

displays. Press ENTER. "Align: Easy" displays. Scroll to "Align: One-Star" and press ENTER. Autostar II now prompts you to set the telescope in the polar home position.

a.Using the bubble level of the wedge, adjust the tripod legs so that the bub- ble is level.

b.Set the wedge to your observing latitude.

c.Using the Up and Down Arrow keys, rotate the telescope tube in Declination so that the telescope’s Declination reads 90°. See SETTING CIRCLES, page 50.

d.Loosen the R.A. lock, and rotate the fork arms to the 00 position H. A. : Move the forks arms so that center tick mark on fork arm base (A, Fig. 39) aligns with the tick mark on the base (B, Fig. 39).

e.Press ENTER. The telescope slews to Polaris.

f.Use the azimuth and latitude controls on the wedge to center Polaris in the field of view. Do not use the Autostar II handbox during this process. When Polaris is centered, press ENTER. The telescope is now polar aligned. See AUTOSTAR II POLAR ALIGNMENT, page 54, for more information.

At this point, your polar alignment is good enough for casual observations. There are times, however, when you will need to have precise polar alignment, such as when making fine astrophotographs.

Once the latitude angle of the wedge has been fixed and locked-in according to the above procedure, it is not necessary to repeat this operation each time the telescope is used, unless you move a considerable distance North or South from your original observing position. (Approximately 70 miles movement in North-South observing position is equivalent to 1° in latitude change.) The wedge may be detached from the field tripod and, as long as the latitude angle setting is not altered and the field tripod is leveled, it will retain the correct latitude setting when replaced on the tripod.

The first time you polar align the telescope, check the calibration of the Declination setting circle (Fig. 35). After performing the polar alignment procedure, center the star Polaris in the telescope field. Remove the knurled central hub of the Declination set-

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Meade LX200GPS instruction manual Lining Up with the Celestial Pole, Locating Polaris