• 7 things nobody tells you about stargazing

    From a425couple@a425couple@hotmail.com to alt.astronomy,rec.aviation.military on Sun May 3 20:08:21 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.astronomy

    Well DUH! During full moon, you can't see Milky Way!

    from https://www.space.com/stargazing/7-things-nobody-tells-you-about-stargazing-that-make-a-huge-difference

    7 things nobody tells you about stargazing (that make a huge difference)
    News
    By Jamie Carter published 15 hours ago
    From chasing the Milky Way to using your eyes as nature intended, here
    are some often-overlooked truths that make all the difference under the
    night sky.

    a bridge silhouetted again the milky way
    Owachomo Bridge and the Milky Way. (Image credit: Jamie Carter)

    A few years ago, a friend came back from Jordan in September and told me
    I'd got it wrong.

    "I went to that desert you told me about but I didn't see many stars,"
    he said.

    This was awkward. I'd been very specific. Wadi Rum is one of the best
    places on Earth for stargazing and to see the Milky Way rCo vast, dry,
    high and almost completely free of light pollution. I'd painted a
    picture of it: a river of starlight arching over the desert.

    Night sky tonight rCo What you can see tonight
    Click here for more Space.com videos...
    "I mean, there were stars," he added. "But no Milky Way. Just a really
    bright moon."

    And there it was.

    He hadn't gone to the wrong place. He hadn't gone in the wrong season rCo September is an ideal time to see the Milky Way. He'd gone during the
    "wrong" moon phase.

    Humans adore the full moon, but few appreciate how it changes the rest
    of the night sky. It's nature's biggest light polluter. There's really
    no point poring over light pollution maps or carefully choosing a Dark
    Sky Place if you ignore the phases of the moon, because if it's bright,
    it will overwhelm all but the brightest stars.

    Space

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    Work and family schedules often dictate when travel has to take place,
    of course, but if I have the choice, I never travel to dark skies in the
    week before a full moon because it dominates the sky all evening.

    A week after our conversation, I was in the Four Corners region of the
    U.S., standing in Natural Bridges National Monument Dark Sky Park, a few nights before a new moon. Just after dark, the Milky Way appeared behind Owachomo Bridge in a perfectly dark sky. I didn't show my friend the
    photos, nor tell him how carefully I had planned my trip.

    Stargazing isn't just about where you go. It's about when you go. The importance of the moon phase is just one of many lessons that only
    emerge after time spent outside, looking up.

    What to read next
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    Skywatching word search: Can you find these stargazing events?
    1. Always check with the moon
    infographic detailing the phase of the moon as seen from Earth

    The phase of the moon is critical if you want to stargaze under a truly
    dark sky. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)
    From last quarter moon to just beyond new moon, there's a 10-night
    stretch when evening skies are free from bright moonlight. Outside that window, moonlight will gradually erase fainter stars and deep-sky
    objects. Once you understand this rhythm, you stop wasting time fighting bright skies and start planning around them. Find yourself a moon phase calendar and plan any deep-sky observing and trips to dark skies or observatories around it rCo it will make a huge difference to what you can see.

    2. You can stargaze from a city
    A truly dark sky is breathtaking rCo but it can also be overwhelming for beginners. In a city, the faintest stars disappear, leaving only the
    brightest patterns. That actually makes the major constellations easier
    to learn. Find shadow, not necessarily darkness, and think of urban
    skies as a simplified map, as a quick and easy way to brush up on the
    basics. Light pollution is a scourge, and you definitely should join the
    fight for dark skies, but don't persuade yourself that there's "no
    point" in stargazing from a city. That's like saying there's no point
    learning the alphabet because you can't yet read a novel rCo it's exactly where you should begin.

    Read more: Want to know my secret for learning the night sky? Welcome to sidewalk stargazing

    3. The sky is always changing
    lots of streaks of light stretch through the sky

    Star trails over a mountain in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil. (Image credit:
    MaFelipe via Getty Images)
    As Earth orbits the sun, stars appear to rise about four minutes earlier
    each night. Did you know that? Almost nobody does, but those nuggets of knowledge instantly unlock why the stars change with the seasons. How?
    Over a month, those four minutes each day add up to a two-hour shift. Constellations that were low in the east suddenly dominate the sky
    earlier in the evening. Stargazing has an annual rhythm that, with time
    and patience, you can internalize. Ask yourself: what constellations
    will I see tonight? If you can't think of at least three, you're a beginner.

    4. Stargazing is best done bite-size
    It's tempting to think you need a long session under perfect skies to
    get ahead as a stargazer. In reality, short, regular sessions teach you
    far more. Go outside for 20 minutes at the same time each night, and the
    sky will start to make sense. Find a constellation. Come back tomorrow
    and find it again. Every time you learn something new, revise something
    old. The learning comes through repetition, not intensity.

    5. Let your eyes adapt
    the Pleiades star cluster glistens as a patch of blue light above
    snow-capped mountains and water in the foreground below.

    The Pleiades (left) is the ideal example of how peripheral vision
    increases what you see. (Image credit: Stanley Chen Xi, landscape and architecture photographer via Getty Images)
    If you do have the time and patience to stand under the stars for over
    20 minutes, be so careful with white light. So many stargazers,
    including, in my experience, plenty of professional astronomers, think
    nothing of using stargazing apps on their smartphones pushed to full brightness. It's a rookie error. Give your eyes at least 20 minutes away
    from bright light, and the sky transforms. More stars appear. Faint star clusters become visible. If you want to use a stargazing app, put it in
    red light mode rCo white light resets everything.

    6. Peripheral vision is your secret weapon
    There's more biology in stargazing than you might think. As well as dark-adapting your eyes, it pays to use a part of your vision you
    probably never think about. Whether you're stargazing with the naked
    eye, binoculars or a telescope, looking slightly to the side of
    something faint rCo an open cluster, a nebula or a galaxy rCo makes it
    easier to see. That's because the edges of your vision are more
    sensitive to light. Once you try it, you realize how much you were
    missing by staring directly at things. The simplest example is the
    Pleiades (M45); look straight at it, and you'll see six or seven points
    of light in the shape of a baby Big Dipper, but glance to the side, and
    its brightness is suddenly obvious.

    7. Meteor showers rarely look like the photos
    streaks of meteor shower bright sparks over mountains and a starry sky.

    Geminid meteor shower. (Image credit: Haitong Yu via Getty Images)
    Oh, the headlines about meteor showers "lighting up the sky." They are
    so misleading, as are the composite stacked images created by astrophotographers after many hours of work. Meteor showers are an
    extreme form of stargazing. Seeing a bright "fireball" streak across the
    sky can be thrilling, but know this: you will likely have to spend a lot
    of time and work very hard to get much from any meteor shower. What do I
    do? In years when August's Perseid meteor shower occurs in a dark sky, I
    go camping far from light pollution and hope for clear skies. Even then,
    it can be underwhelming. Treat meteor showers as a bonus to a night
    under the stars, not a guaranteed jaw-dropping spectacle.

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    Jamie Carter
    Jamie Carter
    Contributing Writer
    Jamie is an experienced science and travel journalist, stargazer and
    eclipse chaser who writes about exploring the night sky, solar and lunar eclipses, the Northern Lights, moon-gazing, astro-travel, astronomy and
    space exploration. He is the editor of WhenIsTheNextEclipse.com, author
    of A Stargazing Program For Beginners, co-author of The Eclipse Effect,
    and a senior contributor at Forbes.
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  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to alt.astronomy,rec.aviation.military on Mon May 4 07:55:46 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.astronomy

    "a425couple" wrote in message news:F4UJR.1675832$4wI6.411220@fx24.iad...

    There's really
    no point poring over light pollution maps or carefully choosing a Dark
    Sky Place if you ignore the phases of the moon, because if it's bright,
    it will overwhelm all but the brightest stars.

    --------------------------

    That is one of the marks of the sheer ignorance of the moon landing deniers. On Earth the eye can't see stars around the moon, their absence from photos taken on the brilliantly sunlit moon doesn't disprove them.

    Another is non-parallel shadows. On Earth parallel lines like the sides of a road appear to converge in the distance. Seeing that in shadows in moon landing photos doesn't prove them fake.

    The astronauts wore life support gear that doubled their weight, I've
    examined it. How high can you jump on Earth while carrying another person? High jump records are set in gym clothes, not deep diving gear. Lunar astronauts jumped up over 3 feet from a standing start, few can match that
    on Earth.

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