Wednesday, June 6, 2018

still dusk

Last night with Big Blue, for a quiet evening.  Seeing not very good, some haze, but good all the same.  It was dusk past 9:30, so I started out on bright Venus, then moved on to some other bright stars:

Venus: Still dusk.  Looks like a ball half stuck in mud.  170x & apodizing mask.

Porrima = STF 1670: Very pretty yellow-white, near equal; close split at 170x.  Star disks improved with apodizing mask.  [AB seen; sextuple system, lots there, most very wide.]
12H 41M 39.60S -01° 26' 57.9" P.A. 2 SEP 2.55 MAG 3.48,3.53 SP F0V+F0V DIST. 11.68 PC (38.1 L.Y.)

Gemini was standing upright on the western horizon, with Venus like a bright ball Pollux was dribbling...

Hu 740: Near Spica.  7th & 11th 3" -- too faint to see, still dusk.  Try again with the 20-inch
13H 19M 44.11S -11° 40' 22.7" P.A. 274 SEP 3.6 MAG 7.31,11.35 SP A2 DIST. 245.1 PC (799.52 L.Y.)

BU 932: 0.4" -- seemed out of round with apodizing mask; should go back with the 20-inch [a trend here...]
13H 34M 40.48S -13° 12' 51.5" P.A. 66.1 SEP 0.42 MAG 6.30,7.29 SP A0V DIST. 148.15 PC (483.27 L.Y.)

BU 935 = 86 Vir: Pretty orange star but @ 553x seeing wont allow split of 3 delta mag, 1.2" B.  27" away is equal 11th mag CD pair which I see as a grey smudge but can't resolve.  Need to go back with the 20-inch.
13H 45M 56.33S -12° 25' 35.6" P.A. 306 SEP 1.2 MAG 5.66,8.47 SP G8III DIST. 124.69 PC (406.74 L.Y.)

BU 114: ! Nice near equal, slightly yellow white stars, ~10th mag.  In finder it is shown with another widely separated equal pair.
13H 34M 17.72S -08° 37' 07.4" P.A. 173 SEP 1.4 MAG 8.05,8.18 SP F8V

STF 1763 = 81 Vir: near equal orange stars, ~3", 9th mag. Nice!
13H 37M 35.30S -07° 52' 16.6" P.A. 39 SEP 2.8 MAG 7.79,8.08 SP K0III DIST. 195.69 PC (638.34 L.Y.)

STF 1750 = 72 Vir: Wide split, yellow-white A and ~10th mag B, 3 delta mag.
13H 30M 25.72S -06° 28' 13.0" P.A. 17 SEP 30 MAG 6.14,10.74 SP F2V DIST. 53.22 PC (173.6 L.Y.)

STF 1755: Orange and blue, wide, 2 delta mag
13H 32M 21.99S +36° 49' 05.6" P.A. 130 SEP 4.2 MAG 7.34,8.10 SP G5III DIST. 206.61 PC (673.96 L.Y.)

STF 1757: Orange-yellow, half a delta mag, pretty; ~1.5"
13H 34M 16.38S -00° 18' 49.8" P.A. 140.8 SEP 1.72 MAG 7.82,8.75 SP K4III DIST. 26.56 PC (86.64 L.Y.)

Jupiter: 32mm plossls in binoviewer on high power mode (173x).  GRS nearing the end of its transit; with the SEB curving upward on the opposite limb.  A dark brow in the southern cap, along with a couple white gaps; the cap boarder was curved.  The NEB had a narrowing of its band on the same limb edge where the SEB bent upward -- strange. There was a shadow transit on going, though the shadow was not crisp, small -- I guess Io.

So ended a very pleasant night.

Monday, June 4, 2018

alone on the peak

Saturday night I went up to Fremont Peak for a night's observing.  The 80-something percent waning moon rising at midnight kept everyone else from coming out, deep-sky obsessed as most observers are.  Seeing was predicted to be excellent, so I set my mind to observe very close doubles, the planets, and even the moon using the 30-inch Challenger telescope.

It gets dark very late now.  I arrived at 7:30 and opened up, setting a fan behind the mirror to help it cool off.  Then I had dinner and relaxed.  I didn't bother with the setting circles -- I'd need to star hop anyway.  I aligned finders on Jupiter and had a look for a while.  No great red spot, and no moon events -- three were staggered on one side and a fourth, Callisto probably, was way off to the other side.  There was a nice dark barge in the SEB, which seems to have been there every time I've looked the last couple of weeks.  Some white gaps toward the faint southern cap.  The purple festoons riding on the SEB were subdued: they looked more like rolling fog than whipping flags.  There was a thin dark band between the NEB and the northern cap; the band is usually swirled about by the GRS.  Three white separations in the northern cap region.  Most of this was viewed using my binoviewers with the 32mm plossls.

Then I moved on to my program.  Seeing was a disappointing 6-7/10, only getting better after 1am.  Transparency was 4/5, some haziness in the air, also a disappointment -- though the 2700 foot Peak put me above most of the muck in the valleys.  SQML was 21.04 at it's best around 11pm.

Ho 50: It took me a damned long time to star hop (stupid English cross-axis mount and non-RACI finders), and once I got there I found I set the secondary in the wrong position so had to start all over again.  The pair split immediately at 457x.  A little diffraction but no doubt a small blue point just outside the first ring.  Using the 8-inch aperture mask (effectively 8-inch f/18!) had a nice star image of A but B disappeared -- it became an averted vision, threshold object.  Barlow here was no help to show it better.  An 8-inch magnitude limit is 13.4 on a perfect night; so given my conditions I'd say for sure B is in the ~11th magnitude range.  I sketched the star field and used my best estimates of it's magnitude with other stars in view.  Using Aladin now I find SDSS J111314.92+410057.3 is 15.3g, which I say is brighter than H0 50B, and SDSS J111328.37+410828.1 at 16.6g , which I describe as "about as bright."  There are differences in how one perceives magnitude when it is closer to a brighter star, and my stellar magnitude estimation skills are not developed, but I think Ho 50B is fainter than the current data, and if the older data say it should be fainter, then it may well be variable. However, later in the night, I estimated Ho 50B to be as bright as STF 1964D, which is 9.02.  In any case, fainter than stated....
11H 13M 40.09S +41° 05' 19.8" P.A. 35 SEP 3 MAG 6.47,8.36 SP K2III DIST. 114.03 PC (371.97 L.Y.)

UC 2059: I observed this star a few days ago using my 12.5-inch from home, since it's plotted in CDSA and I was casually taking in that section of sky.  At that time I wrote: "Pretty well separated, 1.5 delta mag, not remarkable as I hoped given the odd designation."  Checking Stelle Doppie later I had only seen the AB pair.  There is also HSD1574 Aa,Ab is 0.2" and 11.06; Cou 1422 Ba,Bb is 0.6" and nearly matched 11.20, 11.50.  When I looked Saturday with the 30-inch, I wrote: "Bright star and pair of 11th magnitude stars very close -- but best I could get was an elongation with the seeing; tried 1219x without success."  I did not remember the A star was a 0.2" though at 11th mag I don't think I had a chance at Ab.

3, Beta CrB = JEF 1: Tried out the hexagon mask I made.  At low power the mask sends the diffraction spikes into six directions.  Tried 915x; the diffraction pattern turns into a kind of grid, 6x6 bright squares distorted into an overall wing shape.  I can focus a brighter roundish point but I cannot tell if this is an out-of-roundness due to the binary or just a weird misshape due to the seeing, which is causing the whole image to dance around.  Later in the night, when seeing was somewhat better, I tried again at 457x, and again suspected an out of roundness but nothing I could certainly claim.
15H 27M 49.85S +29° 06' 19.8" P.A. 149.5 SEP 0.31 MAG 3.68,5.20 SP A5+F2 DIST. 34.28 PC (111.82 L.Y.)

Cou 610 = The CrB: Fractured and dancing seeing.  915x, at full aperture and with 8-inch aperture mask, I see a slight out of roundness.  This one should have been a clean split if the seeing was better.
15H 32M 55.78S +31° 21' 32.9" P.A. 199 SEP 0.8 MAG 4.27,6.29 SP B6VNNE DIST. 115.07 PC (375.36 L.Y.)

STF 1964: 457x: Seeing and barlow too messy.  Bright pair wide separated resolves to the double-double.  Ho 50 is about as bright as the Struve B star, which is 9.02

MS Serpens: When marking close doubles in my cut-out copy of Uranometria, I marked "MS Serpens" as T CrB, the famous nova, since Uranometria did not plot T CrB and "MS" seemed to be in the right spot.  The nova is double, supposedly, 0.3" separation.  I thought I might have found it since my notes read: "!  Presents as a wide 1 delta magnitude pair at 457x.  The brighter star just shows an extremely faint point very close split, which widens with the barlow at 915x.  Seeing dependant and almost averted only, though can hold direct vision.  The slightly orange A star loses color with magnification."  However, as I review Aladin now, I cannot find a double star in this section, and the data for T CrB is uncertain.  Besides that the star hop to this area was arduous, and I was not certain of it.  So this one is a mystery.  WDS J15595+2555AB?  JEF 2?  I don't know...  I even made the mistake of writing this as "M 5 CrB" in my logbook... [Later edit: MS Ser and T CrB are not the same stars; seems T CrB at minimum 10th magnitude did not meet the plotting cut off for Uranometria.  I have AAVSO finder charts printed for both, and will give them a go next time I have a chance.]

How frustrating!  After nearly four hours of observing I have only six observations to show for it.  I've said before, I really want to love this telescope, but the physical effort to move it, and the trouble I have using the finders, makes it very frustrating.  I never zipped up my jacket, I was sweating making the effort.  Some of these observations I will try again in my 20-inch for comparison....

I looked at Saturn for a while, trying to use my binoviewers -- but maybe because it was so late, or the scope's damnable eyepiece position was so awkward, I had trouble merging my vision.  I also discovered I still had the 8-inch aperture mask on (did that hinder my MS Serpens view too? I was too tired to remember).  I looked at Mars for a while, which was a few degrees below the moon (which rose through a mist an hour earlier, turning it bloody).  Polar ice, and a wide dark jagged band, but not a good view.  The moon looked ok, but was extremely bright, such that when I tried to move about the observatory I could barely see because my eyes had lost all sensitivity.

I had a look at Antares through the 6-inch refractor finderscope, thinking if anything could split it this would -- yet it did not.  I tried different magnifications, but no split.  It should not be so hard!  The airy disk changed from blood red to a neon green, to taunt me.  Finally, it must be time to stop, so I did.

Monday, May 28, 2018

Ho 50 mystery

I've become a little perplexed about Ho 50, which I've observed two times now over the last couple of weeks, each time failing to see an 8th magnitude B only 3" from the 6th mag A.  So I was out again last night to have a go at it and some others.  Seeing was ok 7/10, transparency 3/5 with some haze.  All with big blue at 553x.

UC 2059: Pretty well separated, 1.5 delta mag, not remarkable as I hoped given the odd designation. [AB seen.  I should give it another chance in dark skies; HSD1574 Aa,Ab is 0.2" and 11.06; Cou 1422 Ba,Bb is 0.6 and nearly matched 11th mag with it's pair...]
11H 01M 45.73S +36° 40' 41.6" P.A. 46 SEP 45.3 MAG 7.49,10.70 SP F0 DIST. 74.74 PC (243.8 L.Y.)

Skf 59: Orange-yellow star with very wide separated very faint B, need averted vision.
10H 54M 44.78S +36° 45' 31.7" P.A. 59 SEP 34.1 MAG 7.44,11.50 SP F2V DIST. 98.62 PC (321.7 L.Y.)

Ho 50: Tried again and can't see B.  553x, good disk with momentary perfection.  Turned off drive to see where west and north were, checked north with averted vision, no.  6mm ortho with occulting bar -- still no.  B must be variable?
11H 13M 40.09S +41° 05' 19.8" P.A. 35 SEP 3 MAG 6.47,8.36 SP K2III DIST. 114.03 PC (371.97 L.Y.)

Arg 101: White star 8th mag, with very faint 2 delta mag very wide B.
11H 51M 09.51S +33° 22' 30.0" P.A. 274 SEP 46.2 MAG 6.27,9.28 SP AM DIST. 65.49 PC (213.63 L.Y.)

HU 729: White star resolves to disk with seeing, but B not there.  Apodizing--no.  Tougher test than Ho 50; need to try on a moonless night.
11H 47M 50.02S +49° 49' 22.7" P.A. 348 SEP 1.6 MAG 7.14,10.89 SP A2V DIST. 147.93 PC (482.55 L.Y.)

STT 243: ! Super tight split ~1", faint, white, 1 delta mag.  M109 is nearby just in of FOV; this pair just beneath its core [I thought a greyscale change I was seeing was the galaxy, but M109 is too far to be in the FOV.]
11H 59M 48.70S +53° 23' 52.1" P.A. 8 SEP 1.1 MAG 9.08,9.67 SP F8 DIST. 342.47 PC (1117.14 L.Y.)

STF 1630: ~2", half a delta mag, faint pair, nice. 
12H 18M 53.81S +56° 22' 06.0" P.A. 169 SEP 2.4 MAG 9.50,10.26 SP G0 DIST. 105.71 PC (344.83 L.Y.)

STT 249: @738x very slightly notched elongation / overlapped disks.  Tough to set focus and the FOV is very tiny.  [AB,C is 12th mag 13"]
12H 23M 50.80S +54° 09' 30.5" P.A. 257 SEP 0.4 MAG 8.21,9.18 SP G5 DIST. 436.68 PC (1424.45 L.Y.)

HU 1136: Tried real hard, up to 885x, but can't say I have it.  Thought I had a condensation in the diffraction when seeing settled but not consistent and not a point.  While A is the same mag as Ho 50 A it seems brighter -- maybe H0 50 really is variable.
12H 05M 39.70S +62° 55' 59.3" P.A. 217 SEP 1.9 MAG 6.27,10.24 SP K1III-IV DIST. 117.92 PC (384.66 L.Y.)

Sunday, May 27, 2018

nice night

First clear weather in a couple weeks, but it stays light so long I only got an hour and a half in, from 10pm to 11:30pm.  Still a varied and interesting night with Big Blue.

First, I had a peek at Venus before it set behind a tree; slightly gibbous phase with some shading.

While setting up and collimating, I saw a bright object in northern Bootes which shouldn't be there.  Looking at it more closely, I saw it move smoothly and slowly, and then rapidly fade out.  Must have been an Iridium flare!

I bengan doubles at 553x.  Seeing was quite good 7/10 and improving to 8/10 later.  There was a marine haze in the air:

STF 1483: Two near equal wide split, fairly faint, 9.5 mag.
10H 54M 30.84S +47° 29' 35.8" P.A. 243 SEP 2.2 MAG 9.52,9.61 SP G5 DIST. 52.85 PC (172.4 L.Y.)

STF 1467: Orange star with extremely faint wide split B.  Needed averted vision to notice it as a smudge but could see it with direct vision as a small blue point when seeing stills.  2 delta mag.
10H 45M 15.60S +44° 58' 11.2" P.A. 292 SEP 4 MAG 8.58,10.76 SP K0III DIST. 239.23 PC (780.37 L.Y.)

STF 1465: Near equal well split ~3".  9th-10th mag.
10H 43M 13.35S +44° 37' 41.6" P.A. 12 SEP 2.2 MAG 9.79,10.10 SP K2

STF 1525: Near equal faint, 9th-10th mag, 3".  Twin of STF 1465 but different PA
11H 19M 29.37S +47° 28' 12.6" P.A. 174 SEP 2.3 MAG 9.90,9.93 SP F5 DIST. 325.73 PC (1062.53 L.Y.)

STF 1541: Pretty yellow-white and slight blue, 1-1.5 delta mag, wide 4".
11H 27M 39.46S +46° 17' 33.4" P.A. 27 SEP 7.8 MAG 7.97,10.13 SP F8 DIST. 89.29 PC (291.26 L.Y.)

Ho 50: Tougher than it would seem.  A resoles to disk, no diffranction, but B is not present even with seeing, averted vision, etc.  Second time to try and fail.
11H 13M 40.09S +41° 05' 19.8" P.A. 35 SEP 3 MAG 6.47,8.36 SP K2III DIST. 114.03 PC (371.97 L.Y.)

Ho 378: !! Pretty cluster in the finder (~ 12 stars loose and poor, wide magnitude range, triangle shape).  Fine split 1 delta mag 1", ice blue A and slightly yellow B.
11H 04M 57.29S +38° 24' 38.2" P.A. 236 SEP 1 MAG 8.25,9.14 SP F7V DIST. 136.05 PC (443.8 L.Y.)

Hzg 8: Very wide separation 1.5" mag. [this is AC of 51 UMa; AB is Ho 377 which is 6.04,11.60 and 8.2", and which I need to go back to give another go!].
11H 04M 31.28S +38° 14' 28.9" P.A. 84 SEP 150.6 MAG 6.04,7.56 SP A3III-IV DIST. 78.86 PC (257.24 L.Y.)

During the above session while looking in the finder a triangular squadron of satellites zipped through the view -- at least I think they were satellites.  They were grey and small and a little large.  Maybe they were birds, but the configuration seemed far too regular to be birds...

Now that the moon had cleared the meridian tree I had a view using my binoviewers, using 32mm plossls -- first time to try them out as my low power view.  OMG WOW! the view was stunning.  The moon was near full but I quickly adjusted to the brightness and could merge focus.  The detail was beyond photographic.  Most impressive was, as I noticed last time, the shade gradients in the mare and even the hills, the rays criss-crossing the surface, and especially the abundance of small white recent impact craters.  Schroeder's Valley was in a low light angle and was just amazing.  Even though this is the lowest power, it only gives about 2/3rds of the moon.  Nevertheless it is totally worth the view.

I next tried Jupiter with the 10mm eyepieces in the binoviewers and had I think the best view I've ever had.  Used the apodizing mask for the best view.  There were huge purple festoons breaking like waves in the center.  The GRS was near the center of the band, and a thin brown band was swept underneath it then sprayed behind the spot.  Dark barges, white ovals, and even an Io shadow transit.  For sure binoviewers are a great way to view the moon and planets.

Monday, May 14, 2018

doubles near bear toes

Last night I opened up the shed to let Big Blue cool off, wondering if it would be possible to observe.  Chunks of marine layer fog were drifting to the north, occasionally straying overhead.  It turned out there was enough sky to observe, with occasional fog drifting through, threatening to shut me down any moment.  While transparency was poor such that I missed seeing some fainter stars, seeing got better over the time I observed, which was exactly one arc of my equatorial platform.  I thought conditions tonight would be the same, but no such luck, so I get to write last night's observations down.

STF 1427: 277x.  8th magnitude orange star and a very wide 1 delta mag B.  Suspect a faint star ~2-3" from A; using 553x does not show it, but I really suspect it.
10H 22M 00.53S +43° 54' 19.3" P.A. 214 SEP 9 MAG 8.18,8.54 SP F5V DIST. 105.04 PC (342.64 L.Y.)

Shy 552: Perfect triangle of widely separated stars looking like Leo's rump.  8th, 8.5, and 9th mag. [Not all three stars in the system, is a binary pair.]
10H 16M 38.13S +41° 16' 33.0" P.A. 6 SEP 107.1 MAG 7.40,8.78 SP F5+F8 DIST. 55.8 PC (182.02 L.Y.)

A2142: !! Very fine, split, ~1-1.5".  8th magnitude and 1.5 delta mag B, close split, very nice pair.  Seeing is getting better  In the finder this is one of a triangle of equal magnitude stars.
10H 05M 43.55S +41° 02' 42.7" P.A. 296 SEP 1 MAG 7.97,8.83 SP F0 DIST. 137.55 PC (448.69 L.Y.)

STF 1405: 8th and 10th magnitudes.  B is blurry with direct vision and flashes with averted.  Wide split; A is white with a little yellow.
10H 05M 55.92S +39° 34' 55.7" P.A. 252 SEP 22 MAG 7.30,11.76 SP A9V DIST. 105.82 PC (345.18 L.Y.)

Sma 75: Wide finder pair, white and slight yellow.  In the scope there are some more faint stars about, so it is likely a small cluster. [7 stars in the system.]
10H 43M 32.89S +46° 12' 13.9" P.A. 88 SEP 288.4 MAG 5.21,7.35 SP F5III DIST. 37.09 PC (120.99 L.Y.)

Jupiter: Really the first time I tried to look.  I swung over before it went behind the meridian tree, though it was so low it was being apodized by the lattice running along the top of my fence.  Weird moon configuration; all on one side but two were offset from the center and stacked on top of each other. 

STF 1425: ! Very faint pair, ~4-5" orange and blue, 0.5 delta mag.
10H 21M 34.14S +46° 09' 07.6" P.A. 358 SEP 4.8 MAG 9.89,10.74 SP F5 DIST. 144.51 PC (471.39 L.Y.)

While looking in the finder, two satellites went zooming across the view, close together and next to each other...

Kui 50: I see one star but cannot find the pair, which is supposed to be 4" separation... [B is 12.6 mag, out of reach of Big Blue especially in poor transparency.]
10H 28M 03.88S +48° 47' 05.6" P.A. 22.6 SEP 3.82 MAG 6.40,12.60 SP F9V DIST. 22.91 PC (74.73 L.Y.)

STT 229: !! Just wider than a thin hair split of equal white stars, ~8th mag.  0.63"!  [in 40 years it will be 0.2"...]
10H 48M 02.55S +41° 06' 35.8" P.A. 255.4 SEP 0.63 MAG 7.62,7.92 SP A5IV DIST. 165.56 PC (540.06 L.Y.)

Eng 45: Finder split, white, 0.5 delta mag.  [AB seen; BC 14th mag]
11H 11M 48.95S +42° 49' 55.6" P.A. 247 SEP 135 MAG 7.24,8.30 SP F8+G5 DIST. 46.77 PC (152.56 L.Y.)

Ho 50: Pretty light orange star but can not find the 3" separated pair even with apodizing mask showing a perfect star image...  [This one should have been doable...]
11H 13M 40.09S +41° 05' 19.8" P.A. 35 SEP 3 MAG 6.47,8.36 SP K2III DIST. 114.03 PC (371.97 L.Y.)

Saturday, May 12, 2018

bit of escape

It was quite a long work week so I was looking forward to observing Friday night.  Since I have weekend plans I reserved the Challenger.  Weather was predicted to be clear but seeing was to be poor -- a jetstream flow moving in.  Sometimes it's hard to judge the accuracy of the forecasts, so I went to the Peak anyhow.

I arrived after 7pm after fighting traffic on the way down.  Ric was there set up for some astrophotography.  I opened up the Challenger to let it cool down and had dinner.  At 9pm I started the routine, aligning the finderscopes etc.  I had hoped to chase some close doubles, but after starhopping (always somewhat of an ordeal) to STT 277 in Bootes, found the seeing was truly awful; bloated stars and dense diffraction.  I applied more power and could see elongation in the mess -- it's 0.2" separation, equal 8th magnitude -- but no way to resolve, not this night.  I was encouraged, though, that the scope should be able to resolve the pair on a better night.

I switched to some low power sweeps of the Virgo and Coma clusters, not with any particular intent, just for sight-seeing.  There was one striking group with two large ellipticals, a small round one in the middle, and a long diffuse edge on up in the corner, somewhere in Virgo.

But by 11pm the wind gusts were continuing, and getting stronger, and the Challenger would start to move with the wind.  I would be on the floor trying to star hop somewhere, and by the time I climbed the ladder the scope had moved well off course.  It was getting dangerous so I closed up around 11pm.

I slept in the van, fitfully at first.  At around 3:20am I woke to sounds of screeching tires -- I saw some headlights on the road.  Seems some thrillseekers were racing up and down the Peak at top speed to see how fast they could take the turns.

Since I couldn't sleep I got up and found my Vixen 2.1x42 binos and sat on a bench to take in the Milky Way, which had risen well up by then.  I scanned the dark lanes in Scorpius, up to Aquilla, and up further to Cygnus.  Nice star clouds and fields of stars.  Not really great like at a truly dark sky, but nice anyhow.  Saw a couple meteors, one with a smoke trail.  Jupiter, Saturn, and Mars made their arc; at the start of the night Venus was high in the west.  With that I was able to go back to sleep until nearly dawn. 

I will heed the weather forecast better in the future, though I was nice to have a bit of escape.  As I was driving down I realized I had forgotten all about work, so the night out did its trick.

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

beautiful doubles in UMa

Monday night had a window of relatively clear skies, and surprisingly good seeing.  I used Big Blue to chase down some close / wide delta mag doubles in UMa, and totally enjoyed the night -- I really needed it!

23 UMa / STF 1351: 270x.  Lovely yellow-white and 3x fainter wide B, white.  A third star further out. [It is a triple system, but since AC is 11th mag, did not see that.]
09H 31M 31.57S +63° 03' 42.5" P.A. 268 SEP 22.9 MAG 3.65,9.19 SP F0IV DIST. 23.82 PC (77.7 L.Y.)

Tau UMa / H V 75AB: 270x.  Very wide; A a light yellow orange.  Pretty.  [Did not see the true pair, which is also 11th mag.]
09H 10M 55.05S +63° 30' 49.0" P.A. 36 SEP 52.1 MAG 4.68,11.42 SP AM DIST. 38.73 PC (126.34 L.Y.)

For the rest of the night, at 553x:

Arg 21: Two very faint stars, wide separation, ~0.5 delta mag, to south of an orange star.  Roof currents affecting the seeing. 
08H 55M 51.01S +64° 58' 21.6" P.A. 107 SEP 21.4 MAG 10.01,10.45 SP G0

BU 408: !! BU 408 is the fainter star in a pair pair of near equal stars in finder view, red-orange color.  In the scope the B is a blue star 3" out from the orange star.  Seen as near perfect disks.
08H 59M 00.62S +63° 25' 42.8" P.A. 344 SEP 2.8 MAG 7.35,9.59 SP G5 DIST. 196.46 PC (640.85 L.Y.)

STT 199 / 37 Lyn / Arn 71: Yellow with very faint wide reddish B, ~4 delta mag.  Seen in same field with 37 Lyn, which I think is the STT 199 star, which is brightest, paired with the next brightest star wide separation.  Arn 71 I think is the faintest star making an equilateral triangle with the other two.
STT 199 = 37 Lyn; AB: 09H 20M 43.76S +51° 15' 57.8" P.A. 138 SEP 5.6 MAG 6.19,10.00 SP F5V DIST. 27.45 PC (89.54 L.Y.).  AC is 10.66 mag and 128.4".  Arn 71 is AD, 7.89 mag and 231" -- so I had 37 Lyn and Arn 71 reversed in my description above.  An interesting system!  Galaxy NGC 2841 is just below Arn 71, but I could not see it in the light pollution -- the STT 199 system is the trio of stars in the upper right corner of this image]


STT 200: !! Light orange A, B a deeper orange, maybe because it's 2-3x fainter.  B resolves from within A's diffraction when seeing settles, ~1".  Wow!
09H 24M 55.67S +51° 34' 26.1" P.A. 337 SEP 1.2 MAG 6.53,8.57 SP G0IV DIST. 129.2 PC (421.45 L.Y.)

STT 209: ! Light orange-yellow disk with faint diffraction ring.  Extremely faint blue B ~4"; can see it direct vision but it flashes forth with averted.  10th magnitude seems to be the limit tonight (transparency 3/5)
09H 53M 17.23S +50° 37' 16.3" P.A. 309 SEP 4.9 MAG 7.41,10.31 SP G8IV DIST. 196.85 PC (642.12 L.Y.)

Had a look at high proper motion star Groombridge 201 through the finder, and made a quick sketch.

STT 210: !! Yellow A and white B, very tight.  Faint, seeing needs to be perfect to see B in the diffraction. 
10H 02M 35.64S +46° 21' 42.5" P.A. 256 SEP 1.2 MAG 8.52,9.07 SP G5 DIST. 228.83 PC (746.44 L.Y.)

Cbl 38: Three stars in a row, middle is the brightest; one closer is 1 delta mag, the second on the other side is 1.5 delta mag. [Likely did not see, though it could have been the fainter, more widely separated star.]
09H 50M 29.75S +45° 05' 01.3" P.A. 11 SEP 53.1 MAG 7.46,11.71 SP F3VN DIST. 101.42 PC (330.83 L.Y.)

STF 1491: Orange and blue, pretty wide, ~3 delta mag.  [AB seen; AC 14.9 mag, FYM 406]
10H 58M 50.42S +61° 42' 56.4" P.A. 30 SEP 14 MAG 8.39,11.33 SP K0 DIST. 1052.63 PC (3433.68 L.Y.)

STF 1512: Pretty near equal bluish-white stars
11H 09M 13.09S +62° 29' 51.0" P.A. 52 SEP 10 MAG 9.29,9.52 SP A2 DIST. 448.43 PC (1462.78 L.Y.)

STF 1469: White and 2x fainter B, wide.
10H 47M 43.86S +65° 27' 36.4" P.A. 324 SEP 10.6 MAG 7.74,10.42 SP F8V DIST. 86.88 PC (283.4 L.Y.)

ES 1905: White with 3x fainter, 11th mag, B.  Very wide.  How suspect it was binary? [AB seen.  BC would be a challenge for the 20-inch, 11.6/13.4, 3.9"]
10H 30M 16.09S +63° 20' 55.4" P.A. 67 SEP 42.4 MAG 8.59,12.64 SP K0 DIST. 226.24 PC (737.99 L.Y.)

STF 1407: Near equal faint 10th-11th mag white stars, 4"
10H 09M 01.98S +64° 26' 40.6" P.A. 51 SEP 4.9 MAG 10.17,10.63 SP K7 DIST. 176.06 PC (574.31 L.Y.)

STF 1398: Near M81 & M82!  Did not see the 11th mag, 3" B star, tried really hard.  To the south is a tight = red pair. 
10H 01M 32.06S +68° 43' 05.1" P.A. 103 SEP 3.1 MAG 8.09,11.39 SP F0 DIST. 159.24 PC (519.44 L.Y.)

STT 233: White with 3-4x fainter B, well separated.  ~10th mag.  Seeing needs to still.  [AB seen; AC 12th mag 38"]
11H 18M 46.75S +66° 41' 03.3" P.A. 333 SEP 4.7 MAG 7.16,10.20 SP A8IV DIST. 124.38 PC (405.73 L.Y.)

STF 1514: Extremely fine!  It is at the base of a kite asterism, the fainter star of four; the three arcing the top of the kite are equal magnitude.  STF 1514 is a very tight 1.5" but clean split, 1 delta mag.  Nice!
11H 11M 38.55S +66° 06' 48.0" P.A. 344 SEP 1.4 MAG 9.49,10.64 SP F2

STT 222: Extremely faint star, B seen with averted vision, PA to north. 
10H 38M 19.89S +60° 07' 30.1" P.A. 336 SEP 4.3 MAG 7.00,11.70 SP F8 DIST. 75.41 PC (245.99 L.Y.)

STF 1519: !! 1 delta mag, tight 1.5" faint yellow stars.
11H 15M 36.65S +59° 46' 43.4" P.A. 290 SEP 1.4 MAG 9.03,9.95 SP F5 DIST. 250.63 PC (817.56 L.Y.)

STT 235: !! Nice!  Yellow and orange, 1.5 delta mag, split when seeing shows perfect disks.  The stars both show albedo effects, look like suns / globes with shadowing. 
11H 32M 20.76S +61° 04' 57.9" P.A. 39.7 SEP 0.92 MAG 5.69,7.55 SP F8V DIST. 27.99 PC (91.3 L.Y.)