Help a 16 year old trapped in a 60 year old body find peace in this lifetime...
This should help:
http://astro-tom.com/telescopes/setting_circles.htmIf your mount has setting circles, then these can be used. This guide shows how to use them, though the setting circles on most smallish mounts are pretty useless:
http://www.skyatnightmagazine.com/feature/how-guide/how-master-setting-circlesGOTO computerised mounts have made a lot of this redundant. Align your mount (some don't even
require aligning) and the select the target and GOTO it.
In the last few years the software available to the amateur astronomer has come on in leaps and bounds. Plate-solving is now
available free of charge. This software slews the scope to any part of the sky, uses the imaging camera to take an image of a section of the sky and then identifies the stars in the image. The star centroids are calculated and then matched to the software's database. From that, the software then calculates exactly where in the sky the scope is pointing, and it updates the users planetarium program. Some applications go a bit further- for example I use
Sequence Generator Pro. It can take an image off the 'Net, or from a previous night's session which it then plate-solves to identify where in the sky the image is. It then slews the scope to the approximate region of the sky, takes an image, plate solves that and then finesses the scope's position to exactly centre it to the original image. All completely automatically. Applications such as this make finding targets very easy- switch the mount on, take a quick picture of the sky and then slew straight to the target.
My mount goes one further- it will slew all over the sky and take a large number of images (30+). These will all be automatically plate-solved and the mount will then build a sky model which will take into account flexure within the mount itself, flexure and movement within the 'scope & focuser and the refractive index of the air. It's possible to also hook up a barometer, temperature probe and humidity sensor to allow it to accurately calculate the changing refractive index of the atmosphere based on those variables.
It's a measure of how fast this stuff is progressing. Tools like plate-solving and automated sky-models were the domain of professional observatories only a few years ago.
Of course, all of the people designing and buying this kit are secret members of the shadowy New World Order that keeps the idea of a flat Earth hidden from the sheeple......it's only plucky heroes like tradosaurus that are willing to risk life and limb by lifting the curtain on such nefarious schemes....