Steve Gottlieb
February 1st, 2014, 04:55 PM
Everyone knows about the blazing orange-red SN in M82 (now at maximum), but there's also a fairly easy one at the tip of NGC 3348 (mag 13.5-14). This one was of course quite easy last night with my 24-inch in fairly dark skies (SQM 21.4) about 80 miles north of the Golden Gate bridge and seen immediately at low power.
The challenging object is a faint supernova in M99. Nothing was seen at 200x, but bumping up the magnification to 375x, a very faint "star" was visible just southwest of the core. I most likely would not have noticed it without knowing the location beforehand.
I would guess a magnitude in the 15.5 range is reasonable and coupled with the location, makes this a pretty tough target. I don't know if this is one the rise or fall or just buried behind dust. In any case, fairly high magnification is necessary because of the location so close to the core.
The challenging object is a faint supernova in M99. Nothing was seen at 200x, but bumping up the magnification to 375x, a very faint "star" was visible just southwest of the core. I most likely would not have noticed it without knowing the location beforehand.
I would guess a magnitude in the 15.5 range is reasonable and coupled with the location, makes this a pretty tough target. I don't know if this is one the rise or fall or just buried behind dust. In any case, fairly high magnification is necessary because of the location so close to the core.