Book contents
- Front Matter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Opening thoughts
- Acknowledgments
- Part 1 Getting to know the sky
- 1 Beginning with the Big Dipper
- 2 Magnitude, color, and distance
- 3 A word on binoculars and telescopes
- 4 Learning to see
- Part 2 Getting to know the variables
- Part 3 Suggested variables for observation throughout the year
- Part 4 A miscellany
- Index
4 - Learning to see
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Front Matter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Opening thoughts
- Acknowledgments
- Part 1 Getting to know the sky
- 1 Beginning with the Big Dipper
- 2 Magnitude, color, and distance
- 3 A word on binoculars and telescopes
- 4 Learning to see
- Part 2 Getting to know the variables
- Part 3 Suggested variables for observation throughout the year
- Part 4 A miscellany
- Index
Summary
Learning to see is the most important skill in all visual observing, and variable star observing provides very good training in seeing. Quickly, without looking up, describe to yourself in detail the wall behind you. How are the pictures arranged? Which are colored? Where is every lamp outlet? Think of all else that is relevant.
Chances are you may have had difficulty remembering everything, but if you are alert you can train your mind to observe closely these common scenes and remember them. If you have trouble visualizing what is on the wall in your room, will you have better luck with a field of stars in space?
Let's carry this a step further. Suppose you've just walked into your friend's house, and all of a sudden the lights flash on and 15 people yell “Surprise!” Do you think you might have an easier time remembering who was there and where each was standing? Apparently, when the unusual happens, it causes your mind to snap into an increased state of sensitivity. Your mind is capable of increased observational skill when it concentrates. Your mind and eye will be very important in your career as an observer.
Seeing is an art to be developed, a beautiful capability within you that must be nurtured and cultivated. When it blossoms, the quality of your observations, whether they involve describing the wall of your room or the brightness of a star, will increase dramatically.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Observing Variable StarsA Guide for the Beginner, pp. 14 - 16Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989