Great video :) I'm writing this comment by the end of October and still nothing. I try to observe and document the T CrB at clear sky for about 2 months nothing. Hope to see it before it goes too low and disappears from my night sky here in Quebec, Canada. ;)
@@lexpo181 I'm doing the same as you and hoping that it happens. It will happen at some point, but apparently it doesn't care what the earthlings timeline is.
This was great, George! Thanks so much. For those with GoTo on their star tracker (or mount) this is less than 1' away from IC4587 in case the star is not in their database. (I was following along with you on Stellarium and happened to see IC4587 nearby, so I thought I'd mention it.) Thanks again!
Two talks about the discoverer of T Corona Borealis by an forgotton Irish astronomer called John Birmingham on May 12th 1866. He saw this saw this event with the naked eye and sent his observations to William Huggins of Tulse Hill observatory in the UK who made subsequent analyisis using an early form of a spectroscope. www.youtube.com/@Astronomy_West
Great video :) I'm writing this comment by the end of October and still nothing. I try to observe and document the T CrB at clear sky for about 2 months nothing. Hope to see it before it goes too low and disappears from my night sky here in Quebec, Canada. ;)
@@lexpo181 I'm doing the same as you and hoping that it happens. It will happen at some point, but apparently it doesn't care what the earthlings timeline is.
Cool. Were some of the first. People so geeked about the solar eclipse.
Thanks for making this and helping me find it!
Thank you for this! :)
This was great, George! Thanks so much. For those with GoTo on their star tracker (or mount) this is less than 1' away from IC4587 in case the star is not in their database. (I was following along with you on Stellarium and happened to see IC4587 nearby, so I thought I'd mention it.) Thanks again!
I will share this in the video info.
Two talks about the discoverer of T Corona Borealis by an forgotton Irish astronomer called John Birmingham on May 12th 1866. He saw this saw this event with the naked eye and sent his observations to William Huggins of Tulse Hill observatory in the UK who made subsequent analyisis using an early form of a spectroscope. www.youtube.com/@Astronomy_West
Thanks, I will watch this.