BBC Sky at Night Magazine

5. Get the whole family using a telescope

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Do you have a telescope? Has the whole family had a go yet? A few practical tips will help you to get the most out of your first family observing session.

Ergonomics are important. If you’re not comfortabl­e when looking through an eyepiece, your body will quickly feel fatigued. Set the tripod to the correct height for the observer. If you have a refractor, rotate the barrel so the eyepiece is in the right position for family members of different heights. Consider a perching stool for comfort and back support. For a reflector, have younger children stand on stepstools to look through the eyepiece; they won’t be able to observe properly if they’re being carried.

Scrunching one eye closed while observing with the other is not comfortabl­e and your facial muscles will quickly become tired. A better technique, especially for children who sometimes struggle to close only one eye at a time, is to keep both eyes open but cover one with your hand. You can also buy astronomer­s’ eye patches for this purpose and enjoy looking like a pirate astronomer!

Beginners may feel underwhelm­ed the first time they observe an object visually compared to the amazing long-exposure photograph­s we see, so it is important to manage expectatio­ns. Knowledge about the distance the light has travelled from the object to their eye, as well as other basic facts about the object, can help everyone to feel that important visual connection. The longer you look at something through an eyepiece the more faint detail you will see, so encourage people to spend a long time observing each object. This is also an opportunit­y to use averted vision, a technique of looking off to one side of a faint object so that it will appear to brighten in your peripheral vision. ▶

 ?? ?? Provide a stool so younger children can reach the eyepiece easily
Provide a stool so younger children can reach the eyepiece easily
 ?? ?? Teach youngsters to cover one eye to make observing more comfortabl­e
Teach youngsters to cover one eye to make observing more comfortabl­e

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