ActiveOutdoorsOutdoor Tech7 quick hacks to improve your stargazingNot seeing enough stars? Here’s how to get more from the night skyWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
ActiveOutdoorsOutdoor Tech7 quick hacks to improve your stargazingNot seeing enough stars? Here’s how to get more from the night skyWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
Not seeing enough stars? Here’s how to get more from the night sky
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: Pexels / Pixabay)
(Image credit: Pexels / Pixabay)
Are you finding stargazing confusing? There’s a lot more to seeing stars than simply buying a telescope and looking up, and if you’re not going about things properly then you could be in for some long, cold nights of disappointment.
Naturally a great way to avoid disappointment from the start is to ensure that you have the right equipment. Our article onhow to choose your first telescopewill ensure that you don’t start out with a piece of kit that’ll frustrate you from the outset, and from there you should check out our guides to thebest telescopeand thebest telescope for beginners.
Even if you’ve chosen wisely, you may still find yourself failing to get great results, but that’s where we can help. Whether you’re not sure what you’re doing, or if you’re ready to take the next step to more serious stargazing, these top tips will help you navigate the night better.
1. Understand the Moon
(Image credit: Unsplash / Ganapathy Kumar Ve)
(Image credit: Unsplash / Ganapathy Kumar Ve)
If you go stargazing when there’s a full Moon you won’t see many stars however dark the location. So look at the currentMoon Phaseand get yourself to a dark sky location in the period between Last Quarter Moon and a few days after New Moon for the darkest skies and the most stars.
2. Check the weather
You want a clear view, particularly if you want to learn to navigate the night sky. Cloud not only makes it impossible to see stars in relation to one another, but they make it impossible to appreciate the night sky as one. Save yourself wasted time and check the weather before you go out using apps likeScope NightsandClear Outside.
3. Choose a dark sky site
(Image credit: Light Pollution Map)
(Image credit: Light Pollution Map)
You can go stargazing from anywhere on the planet – even in a brightly-lit city – but the number of stars and objects you can see are greatly reduced. Find a dark sky using websites likeDark Site FinderandLight Pollution Mapand you’ll be treated to a sky full of stars. However, it’s actually easier to begin your stargazing journey in a city where there’s a lot less to learn!
4. Dark adapt your eyes
(Image credit: Pexels / Đặng Quang Huy)
(Image credit: Pexels / Đặng Quang Huy)
The white light from a smartphone will ruin your night vision. Stay away from it for about 20 minutes and you’ll see things like star clusters and galaxies more clearly – both naked eye or through binoculars/a telescope.
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5. Practise what you know
Do you know where the Plough is? Go find it each time you stargaze and use it as your anchor. If you know where everything is in relation to a constellation you know then you’ll learn how to navigate the night sky much faster. For example, from the Plough you can go ‘arc to Arcturus’ and ‘spike to Spica’, that will allow you to easily find two of the brightest stars of spring – and the Milky Way rising underneath between April and October.
6. Use a smartphone app
There are dozens of excellent ‘planetarium’ stargazing apps that use augmented reality and the GPS on your phone to show you what stars your phone is pointed at. They’re best used not just to wave around at the night sky, but to learn something new.
7. Change locations
(Image credit: Unsplash / Evgeni Tcherkasski)
(Image credit: Unsplash / Evgeni Tcherkasski)
What you see in the night sky will differ according to when you stargaze – both time of night and time of year – but also where you are on the planet. If you live in the southern hemisphere then you’ll see new constellations the further you get south. For example, go to the Canary Islands at 28º North and you’ll see the core of the Milky Way – in Sagittarius and Scorpius – rising in summer, something that’s tricky to see from the UK.
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