CSOG 3.0 was published on 29 November 2024, three and a half years after CSOG 2.4 was released.
This is the last release in which every edition was updated simultaneously.
New Editions
20 New editions were added. Where applicable, new objects and new or updated information was incorporated into existing content.
The new nebula editions bring further unique content to CSOG. These editions will appeals to both observers and astrophotographers alike. For these catalogs, the objects they contain and for their proper "historically first" designations, the record is finally set straight, after many decades.
New nebula editions
- Hubble Nebulae
- McDonald Nebulae & Regions
- Cederblad Nebulae
- Strohmeier Nebulae
- Courtès Nebulae
- Simeis Nebulae
- Gaze-Shajn Nebulae
- Stromlo Nebulae
- Münch Nebulae
- Sharpless Nebulae
- Herbig Nebulae
- Humason Planetary Nebulae
- Kazarian Nebulae
- Kazarian-Parsamian Nebulae
- Sharpless-Osterbrock Nebulae
- Vorontsov-Vel'yaminov Nebulae
- Van den Bergh (suspected) Supernova Remnants
New galaxy edition
New observing program
New binocular edition
Updated Content
- CSOG 3.0 is in essence a complete rewrite: only the Struve Double Stars edition was not updated. Otherwise, there is not a single file that was not edited. A lot of changes were also made 'behind the scenes', allowing for much easier updates from now on;
- For every galaxy in "by object" guides that is within the SDSS footprint, an SDSS image was added in addition to the DSS images that were already part of every observing guide. These images add a lot of useful detail, especially to the many galaxies in the Herschel edition and the Herschel 400, Herschel II, Herschel 3 and the new Herschel Sprint observing programs filtered from it;
- "By object" guides (one object, one guide) were added to the Melotte, Raab, Trumpler and Collinder star clusters editions. Other star cluster editions will follow;
- Countless updates to and corrections of existing content, along with lots of cosmetic tweaks;
- Many objects added, for example, in addition to the new editions: 295 objects added to the Named Objects edition, 798 objects added to the 12-14" Constellation edition... and much more;
- For every download, the number of included observing guides & the number of pages, the index files, planfiles and tourfiles is now displayed.
CSOG 3.0 Statistics
- 80 Editions, 2 observing aids and the "Periodicals" (Objects of the Week / Month / Season);
- 1.28 terabytes of content;
- 14180 unique observing guides (42189 pages) and 599 index files (2810 pages);
- 566 unique AstroPlanner planfiles;
- 4166 unique Autostar Tours, NexTours and EQTours;
- 4641 unique Argo Navis User Catalogs.
The Size of CSOG
CSOG is a digital publication, intended to be used on a computer (for planning and logging) and on a properly filtered and dimmed tablet at the eyepiece of the telescope. CSOG will not exist in print, unless a publisher wishes to create books for specific editions; that, of course, only with my permission and appropriate compensation.
The following analogy gives a good impression of the size of CSOG:
Say, one was to in fact print CSOG. All editions as of 29 November 2024, including all index files. No mirrored editions, only the unmirrored ones. Printed once, double-sided; some guides and index files have an odd number of pages, which would leave blank pages at the end, but for the sake of argument let's say every page were to be filled.
Given that, per the image to the left, a pack of 500 pages is 5.3 centimers (2.09 inches) in height... how high would the stack of paper be for all CSOG editions printed (every edition and every index only printed once, no mirrored content)?
42189 pages in the observing guides + 2810 pages in the index files = 44999 pages. Printed double-sided that would fill 22499.5 pages front and back. Divided by 500, that equals 45 packs of paper. Multiplying that by 5.3 centimers (2.09) inches tells us the height of the stack for all of CSOG (unmirrored) printed once, including all index files, is 2.38 meters (7.8 feet).
Were one to print all mirrored content, too, making sure to print the index files only once, the height of the stack would be 8.94 meters (29.3 feet).
That is the size of CSOG and that is why it does not exist in print.
Registration & Support
To download the Clear Skies Observing Guides, registration and a support donation is required: a modest fee to support the creation and publication of CSOG.
CSOG is a one-man-show, created, hosted and self-funded by Victor van Wulfen. It cannot exist without support.
Support donations will offset only a fraction of the time, effort and costs that have gone into creating CSOG, since the year 2001 and in its current form, since the year 2008. There is no profit and unless literally thousands of support registration will pour in, there never will be a profit.
As of the publication of CSOG 3.0 on 29 November 2024, registration and a support donation gains access to all CSOG downloads and any new editions and updated content for the period of one year (365 days) after the day of the support donation. That ought to be plenty of time to download all CSOG editions and any new content published within that one year, in all image orientation options. Once the year has expired, a new support donation will be required to continue to have access to the downloads for another year.
Registrations for CSOG 2.4 were deleted and a new registration and support donation will be required for CSOG 3.0.
All CSOG 3.0 Editions
Constellation Editions
5-6" Telescopes
8-10" Telescopes
12-14" Telescopes
Catalogs & Lists
Messier
Lacaille
Dunlop
Herschel
Caldwell
Bennett
Galaxy Editions
Hickson Compact Galaxy Groups
Arp Peculiar Galaxies
Holmberg Double and Multiple Galaxies
Holmberg Galaxies
Karachentsev Northern Isolated Pairs of Galaxies - KPG
Karachentseva Northern Isolated Triplets of Galaxies - KTG
Karachentseva Southern Isolated Triplets of Galaxies - KTS
Rose Compact Groups of Galaxies
Klemola Groups and Clusters of Southern Galaxies
Markarian's Chain
Fornax Galaxy Cluster
Dorado Group
Eridanus Cluster
Sculptor Group
Grus Galaxy Chain
Nebula Editions
Hubble Nebulae
McDonald Nebulae & Regions
Cederblad Nebulae
Minkowski Nebulae
Strohmeier Nebulae
Courtès Nebulae
Simeis Nebulae
Gaze-Shajn Nebulae
Stromlo Nebulae
Münch Nebulae
Abell Nebulae
Sharpless Nebulae
Herbig Nebulae
Parsamian Cometary Nebulae
the Veil Nebula
Pleiades Nebulae
Humason Planetary Nebulae
Kazarian Nebulae
Kazarian-Parsamian Nebulae
Sharpless-Osterbrock Nebulae
Vorontsov-Vel'yaminov Nebulae
Van den Bergh (suspected) Supernova Remnants
Deep Sky Forum's Objects of the Week
Webb Deep-Sky Society's Objects of the Month
Webb Deep-Sky Society's Objects of the Season
Cloudy Nights' Monthly Challenge Objects
Astrotreff’s Objects of the Month
Star Cluster Editions
Melotte star clusters
Raab open clusters
Trumpler open clusters
Collinder star clusters
Berkeley star clusters
Czernik star clusters
King open clusters
Stock open clusters
Van den Bergh-Hagen open clusters
Palomar globular clusters
Terzan globular clusters
Tombaugh open clusters
Dolidze open clusters
Dolidze-Dzimselejsvili open clusters
Basel open clusters
Roslund open clusters
Ruprecht star clusters
Pismis star clusters
Lyngå star clusters
Hogg open clusters
Harvard open clusters
Haffner open clusters
Pfleiderer star clusters
Observing Programs
Herschel 400
Herschel II
Herschel 3
Herschel Sprint
Astronomical Society of Southern Africa (ASSA) Top-100
Astronomical League Carbon Stars
Other Editions
Burnham's Celestial Handbook - Deep Sky Objects
Regions in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Named Objects
Binocular Editions
Double Star Editions
Struve Double Stars - STF, STFA, STFB, STT & STTA