Serious Home Observatories
peatbakke writes: "Here's an interesting article about the affordability of backyard observatories. Rich kids get all the fun at the moment, but it's getting better." Getting away from city lights may be the hardest part, though.
you could use a program like Celestia and look into the heavens from your own computer monitor.
Here is a two great sites filled with reviews and tips on astro. grear.
e views.com/
http://www.cloudynights.com/
http://www.scoper
http://www.intellipool.se/ - Intellipool Network Monitor
If you're into immediate gratification, the most recent 500 observations are also available. The Yorkshire weather isn't always cooperative, so it might be a while before you get your image.
It's not the same as putting your eye to the lens, but I don't have room for a 46cm telescope, and viewing conditions are far from ideal anywhere in New Jersey!
"Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever." --Napoleon Bonaparte
Whenever I go outside to observe in my suburban light polluted neighborhood, there is a pesky street light. With my neighbor's permission, I shine a laser pointer ($16 - from my local mega office supply store) at the photo diode switch located as a knob on top of the lamp. I use a tripod, cloths pin, and some tape/rubber bands to hold the pointer in place. The photodiode holes are ususally oriented toward the west.
There are people working to try to limit obnoxious outdoor lighting. They are the folks and associates of the International Dark Sky Association at http://www.darksky.org
We already have a 30 foot dome, a 30" Dobsonian, 12" reflecting binoculars, and more.
http://www.astronomycentre.org.uk/
The point the society is trying to make is that 50%-70% of the light from outdoor lighting is wasted (points to the sky, not the ground). This causes light pollution and doubles electricity bills. Their solution has been to design alternate lighting fixtures that fit ordinary light poles.
The kinds of skies that I grew up with can't be found anywhere on the East coast of the US, including places like Vermont and New Hampshire. The combination of air pollution and light pollution has pretty much destroyed astronomical viewing conditions in all but the most remote places.
This problem is not confined to the most densely populated areas, either. If you go to Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado, they'll tell you about how the views from the various overlooks have degraded over the past few decades due to air pollution. Mesa Verde is in a location that's pretty "country", 9 miles from the tiny town of Cortez, and 35 miles from the only slightly larger town of Durango.
This level of pollution translates into poor astronomical viewing, and it's much worse when you're not that far out in the country.
Astronomy clubs in New York go to pathetic viewing locations in small parks along highways north of the city, where you can still barely see the Milky Way with the naked eye.
The bottom line is that the country which you so fondly fantasize about barely exists in the U.S. any more.
Check them out.
It's a serious problem for anyone that wants to see stars without leaving all of civilisation. Check out the difference:
The night sky from a Dark site
The night sky from a city.
FreeBSD for the impatient.