Where to Find Celestial Objects Visible from Light Polluted Areas

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To locate celestial objects in light-polluted areas, the Orion Nebula (M42) is recommended as an accessible target, particularly during winter when the constellation Orion is visible. It can be found by star hopping from Orion's belt, using the three stars of the sword as a guide. Observers should expect the nebula to appear as a gray cloud rather than in vibrant colors seen in photographs. Binoculars can enhance the viewing experience before using a telescope. The discussion highlights the challenges of light pollution but emphasizes that interesting astronomical sights can still be found.
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I would like to try to locate some cool objects in the sky with my telescope... but I guess I need some objects that are visible with moderate light pollution... I don't live in a city.. but close enough where I get a good amount of pollution.. as well as many highways lined with lights obscuring my views... On a clear night I can see a decent amount of stars... probably a total of 75-150 i would estimate

anyway, how would I go about pinpointing a location of a nebula or some other object of interest? I have spotted out the moon and Mars as they are obviously easy targets... I have an orion 8" dob with 6 eyepieces and a barlow... but I am unsure how to navigate to exact points in the sky.. I suppose maybe star hopping? any advice?
 
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A lot of people read this but I got 0 responses... can anyone help me out?
 
Sorry kleinma...been busy lately. Hopefully someone can help.

Certainly, as winter approaches, the constellation Orion will be creeping up into view. The Orion Nebula (M42) is an easy target* and an interesting one (with a nice set of 4 bright stars hiding in the middle).

* - bright (as far as these things go) and easy to locate by starhopping from Orion's belt/sword...the sword is 3 stars in a line extending down from the belt (which is also 3 stars in a line) and the nebula is in the middle of the sword. Try with binocs (35 or 50 mm lenses) first if it helps.

That's the first one I found when I started out (and I lived in a light polluted area too).

Note that it will just look like a gray cloud (rather than the colorful photos you can get with cameras & long time exposures), but you may recognize the structure from such photos.
 
Originally posted by Phobos
Sorry kleinma...been busy lately. Hopefully someone can help.

Certainly, as winter approaches, the constellation Orion will be creeping up into view. The Orion Nebula (M42) is an easy target* and an interesting one (with a nice set of 4 bright stars hiding in the middle).

* - bright (as far as these things go) and easy to locate by starhopping from Orion's belt/sword...the sword is 3 stars in a line extending down from the belt (which is also 3 stars in a line) and the nebula is in the middle of the sword. Try with binocs (35 or 50 mm lenses) first if it helps.

That's the first one I found when I started out (and I lived in a light polluted area too).

Note that it will just look like a gray cloud (rather than the colorful photos you can get with cameras & long time exposures), but you may recognize the structure from such photos.

thanks for the response phobos...

I know the nebula your talking about... as I have a nice Hubble poster of it hanging on my wall.. i will take a look for it.. i have spotted orions belt no problem in the past with the naked eye.. stands out around here since there arent a ton of stars in the sky...

really makes me wish i had a killer telescope though...
I drool over the meade 14" lx200GPS... too bad i don't have 4.5k to drop on it
 
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