How can I start in astronomy?
Getting to know the night sky
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How can I start in astronomy?

- Most newcomers to astronomy can easily get lost when first looking up.
O - What you may need is a map to help you find your way – many available, you can even access a map of the sky on the software, internet or apps for anytime and anyplace from the UK or other places at your holiday location.
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BSL Vision
Which is the good astronomy software?
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Cartes du Cuiel

- Cartes du Ciel is a free and open source planetarium program.
Prepare different sky maps for particular observations.
o - Download: Free
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Stellarium

- Stellarium is a free open source planetarium for your computer. It shows a realistic sky in 3D, just like what you see with the naked eye, binoculars or a telescope.
o - Download: Free
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For the beginners or newcomers
- Stellarium is a planetarium software that shows exactly what you see when you look up at the stars. It’s easy to use, and free.
- I could recommend to download the Stellarium for all ages.
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BSL Vision
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Starry Night Software

- Fully planetarium software includes a 30,000+ object, up-to-date, cross-referenced database built from various source catalogues for amateurs and professionals.
o - Download: Purchase

- It is easy: you just have to look up!
o - When your eyes dark-adapted it won’t take you long to notice that the stars can be joined up to form patterns
O - You might recognise one straight away.
o - You may be able to see the giant saucepan-shaped Plough, balanced on the end of its handle.
o - But the Plough isn’t a constellation – it’s an asterism, a small pattern of stars immediately obvious to the naked eye.
o - Astronomy gives us the skills we need to observe these stars, constellations and planets with the naked eye, or to use binoculars and telescopes to observe deep-sky objects like nebulae, galaxies and globular clusters.
o - Deep Sky Objects are celestial objects that exist outside our solar system.
o - A dark sky is always good and sometimes absolutely necessary – but some objects can also be observed under a light-polluted city sky.

- If you’re lucky you’ll be able to stargaze from your back garden.
o - It might not be the ideal place.
o - Your garden could be surrounded by other houses, tall buildings and trees, which all reduce the amount of sky you can see.
o - And light pollution coming from nearby streetlights, pubs, shops and factories, and neighbours’ security lights, can take even more of your view away.
o - But you could even just walk around the corner to your local park or school playing field – it’ll make a big difference to what you can see.
O - Or enter a postcode or place name to find stargazing destinations or venues hosting forthcoming stargazing events – you can visit the GO Stargazing website for more information at what’s going on in your local.
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BSL Vision
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