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Observations of object "M35":

M35 (Open Cluster, in Gemini)
Observer: Michael Amato (e-mail: abigmick@aol.com)
Instrument: 127-mm other   Location: West Haven, Connecticut, United States
Light pollution: moderate   Transparency: fair   Seeing: fair
Time: Thu Feb 10 00:30:00 2022 UT   Obs. no.: 2332

Last evening, my brother Anthony & I did some nice observing despite interference from the moon. Some very nice open clusters that we saw were M35, M44, M46, M47. Also, in Orion we observed NGC 1980 which was a nice open cluster bathe in nebulosity. We did split the double stars Castor & Rigel & because Sirius & Sirius B are so far apart now, we were also able to split them. At high power, we studied both M42 & M43 in Orion. It was a great night of viewing!

M35 (Open Cluster, in Gemini)
Observer: Michael Amato (e-mail: abigmick@aol.com)
Instrument: 2.4-inch refractor   Location: West Haven, Connecticut, United States
Light pollution: moderate   Transparency: fair   Seeing: fair
Time: Thu Jun 24 02:00:00 2021 UT   Obs. no.: 2268

This evening, My brother, Anthony & I observed the planet Mars right in the middle of open star cluster M35. It turned out to be a beautiful sight with Mars as the newest member of M35 for one day only. It was great!

M35 (Open Cluster, in Gemini)
Observer: mihai mataringa (e-mail: mihaimataringa@yahoo.com)
Instrument: 7x50-mm binoculars   Location: Constanta, Romania
Light pollution: light   Transparency: good   Seeing: good
Time: Fri Dec 15 18:45:00 2006 UT   Obs. no.: 1601

Faint but easy object in 7x50 binos.Start from mu Gem-eta Gem-M35.Two stars resolved with averted vision.

M35 (Open Cluster, in Gemini)
Observer: B (e-mail: brilbri29@hotmail.com)
Instrument: 8-inch equatorial reflector   Location: Denver, Colorado, USofA
Light pollution: moderate   Transparency: good   Seeing: poor
Time: Thu Dec 29 16:00:00 2005 UT   Obs. no.: 1460

Not bad, for Denver. Not to exciting

M35 (Open Cluster, in Gemini)
Observer: Sriram.M.Gubbi (e-mail: sriram_gubbi@yahoo.co.in, web: http://dino.lm.com/artists/display.php?name=sriram_gubbi)
Instrument: 6-inch other   Location: Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Light pollution: moderate   Transparency: good   Seeing: good
Time: Fri Nov 11 04:35:00 2005 UT   Obs. no.: 1419

A very good cluster. It gave an excellent view through an 8 inch reflector from a dark site, the previous month.

M35 (Open Cluster, in Gemini)
Observer: Emil Neata (e-mail: forvert2000@yahoo.com, web: http://www.astroclubul.org/emilneata)
Instrument: 60-mm refractor   Location: Craiova, Romania
Light pollution: light   Transparency: fair   Seeing: fair
Time: Tue Jan 25 00:00:00 2005 UT   Obs. no.: 1149

A beautiful cluster composed of approximately 40 stars. Large and scattered.

M35 (Open Cluster, in Gemini)
Observer: Matt Evans (e-mail: matt.larie@verizon.net)
Instrument: 10-inch Dobsonian reflector   Location: Plano, TX, USA
Light pollution: moderate   Transparency: excellent   Seeing: good
Time: Mon Mar 24 01:55:00 2003 UT   Obs. no.: 790

I used Starry Night Pro to print out a star chart and practiced star hopping from the "ends" of Gemini. I set up my 10" dob in my backyard and found M35 in under a minute. I was impressed! =) Anyway, good seeing and it looked great. I could see down to mag. 11.6 (based on a drawing and comparing it to stars in Starry Night Pro).

M35 (Open Cluster, in Gemini)
Observer: Serge (e-mail: astroguy@onaustralia.com.au)
Instrument: 8-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain reflector   Location: Perth, WA, Australia
Light pollution: light   Transparency: good   Seeing: good
Time: Thu Dec 21 17:10:00 2000 UT   Obs. no.: 540

Quite large group

M35 (Open Cluster, in Gemini)
Observer: John Callender (e-mail: jbc@west.net, web: http://www.west.net/~jbc/)
Instrument: 8-inch Dobsonian reflector   Location: Carpinteria, CA, USA
Light pollution: light   Transparency: good   Seeing: poor
Time: Sat Mar 1 05:00:00 1997 UT   Obs. no.: 83

A glorious splash of stars at 48X in the 8-inch.

M35 (Open Cluster in Gemini, Est. RaDec 06h08.8m 24.20N)
Observer: Alan Shaffer (e-mail: milkyway@gte.net)
Instrument: 10-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain reflector   Location: Redondo Beach, CA, USA
Light pollution: moderate   Transparency: good   Seeing: fair
Time: Mon Feb 10 05:00:00 1997 UT   Obs. no.: 67

Nice, large open cluster Used 104X and filled the entire field. A very nice object. Always fun to observe. NGC 2158 was a faint patch at 167X.

M35 (Open Cluster in Gemini)
Observer: John Callender (e-mail: jbc@west.net, web: http://www.west.net/~jbc/)
Instrument: 50-mm binoculars   Location: Carpinteria, CA, USA
Light pollution: light   Transparency: good   Seeing: fair
Time: Wed Feb 5 04:15:00 1997 UT   Obs. no.: 46

Big, beautiful cluster. Two brighter members easily resolved in 7x50s, with several more seen with averted vision. The cluster itself definitely detectable (at least fleetingly) near the zenith with the naked eye and averted vision. Swept up in night #2 of my binocular "bug hunt."

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