M80

Observed:  Points: 20

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Current Info for Observer

as of 04/20/2024 1:50 p.m.

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General Info

TypeGlobular Cluster
ConstellationScorpius
Right ascension16h17'3.100''
Declination-22°59'30''
Magnitude7.300
Distance27,400ly
Size8.900 arc min
Catalog Designations NGC6093, M80
Discovered 1781 Charles Messier

Generate a finder chart

The following form will generate a PDF finder chart suitable for printing using to locate objects in the sky with your telescope!

The Date is only really useful for solar system objects, as deep space objects move measurably only on a galactic timescale.

The larger the F.O.V (field of view), the more "zoomed out" the object will appear. It can be helpful to print several charts of the same object with different field of views.

Limiting the magnitude (remember, lower magnitude means brighter!) of stars and objects can make sure your chart is not cluttered with dim objects that you may not be visible to you anyway. The defaults are good, but try experimenting with raising and lowering the values.

M80

Hardin 8" Deep Space Hunter
20 points

Finally got to take my new-to-me telescope out. The moon wasn't ideal but it's storm season so there haven't been many clear nights lately. That and I was in dire need of some quiet solitude. I had intended to browse Ursa Major, but the position of the moon was problematic, in that it was glaring off of my glasses and eyepiece, so I turned my scope to Scorpius and Ophiuchus instead. After observing Mars and Saturn I moved on to the many globular clusters in the area. (And IC4665, the Summer Beehive Cluster, which isn't listed anywhere on this site but was a very beautiful open cluster.) It was interesting to see how different they all are, some brighter, some dimmer, bigger, smaller, denser, or more loose. Some of the clusters I'd already seen, but it was cool to see them through a larger telescope, many were much more well defined than I remembered.

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