

- #Skysafari plus see object elevation android#
- #Skysafari plus see object elevation pro#
- #Skysafari plus see object elevation software#
You could be right, but check again the number of stars we are talking in either Plus or Pro and what I see under the best of conditions at my camp and I would still like to see even the most seasoned amateur astronomer pick out many of the additional stars listed in Pro let alone Plus from those layers upon layers, upon layers of nothing but stars ! No doubt there are many that are a lot more skilled than I but. It's a skill that takes a while to develop. Matching the stars that you see with your own eyes - whether with no optical aid, through binoculars and finderscopes, or through big telescopes - with the stars shown on a chart or a photo is an essential skill for anybody who spends much time doing astronomy. The issue is not your eyes, but rather your brain. For me, the Pro is better because of I'm view objects not in the Plus database and star hopping with stars not in the Plus database.Īnother fun fact is that if you are viewing into the Milky Way in a real black, SQM-L black, sky there are so many stars in the FOV that you can’t tell what many of them are anyway even if you are using goto, at least my feeble eyes couldn’t, lol ! So the pro or even the plus, which is what I use, is just leading us on into deep space, pointing us to what / where ? If you can pick out these fainter and fainter stars for their use such as a guide in star hopping etc., you are pretty da*n good but thats just my feeling, my humble opinion, I could be wrong ! Again, lol ! Normally it's $49, on Black Friday, it was $28, I couldn't resist.īoth the Plus and Pro are excellent. Sky Safari Pro runs fine on a Walmart 7 inch ONN tablet. For star hopping, the additional stars can be useful. But if there's one star or DSO you want to view that's not on the list, you may regret not having the pro version. This is likely to be of little interest to most beginners.

Most double stars are actually multiple star systems. The Pro provides info for most known pairs within in single star system. The Plus provides info on one pair of a multiple star systems, it might be the one that's visible. The Pro Version provides more information about multiple star systems. This is of interest to beginning amateur astronomers. The Pro Version has a significantly more detailed moon map.

But true nonetheless.įor me, the main downside of the Pro version is the extra storage required.Įdited by Tony Flanders, 23 December 2019 - 05:19 PM. It's sobering to think that a typical amateur, equipped with a modest-sized telescope under mediocre skies, can observe more stars than the 2.5 million contained in the Tycho-2 database. In such cases, it's very helpful to have extra stars to pinpoint the objects' location. I can imagine that also being of importance to people with Go To scopes who wish to observe faint or small objects that aren't immediately obvious even when you know they're somewhere inside the field of view. With the Plus version, there are likely to be many fields of view where Sky Safari shows just one or two stars, which makes star-hopping through the main eyepiece more challenging. With the Pro version, Sky Safari will show all the stars visible through the eyepiece of the main telescope. What matters to me and other star-hoppers is the extra stars, not the extra deep-sky objects. I really don't see the value in Sky Safari Pro despite it requiring merely $15 more than the Plus version except to the shareholders of Simulation Curriculum that want to sell us an unnecessary depth of objects that few can ever see.
#Skysafari plus see object elevation software#
I now use Celestron CPWI that has even fewer objects but that lesser detailed software will still outlive me.
#Skysafari plus see object elevation android#
Lastly, how many folk have scopes and seeing conditions capable of observing beyond magnitude 14 objects? A camera will allow a bit more depth of vision under ideal conditions, but I see no point in cluttering my Android tablet screen with objects I can never see. I find Sky Safari Plus bewilderingly complex for such a tiny screen once you start to "swipe and pinch" to more deeply zoom in. Now consider that most use a 7" tablet device (or smaller). Whilst Sky Safari Pro offers an extra 10 million objects, that begs the question how many is an amateur astonomer likely to observe in a lifetime? If he/she (properly) observes 100 per night, and enjoys 10 clear nights per month, the regular 3 Million objects in Sky Safari Plus will still take him/her 250 years!
