On Jupiter, that starts with the Great Red Spot, the comically understated name for the universe’s largest hurricane. (Official celestial names rarely serve as worthy observing suggestions.) Jupiter’s coolest features may be the unnamed cloud details: Between its main dark belts, on the equator, diagonal white clouds contain breaks where one can peer deeply down and see actual blue sky, no joke. Some of us routinely seek out those amazing unnamed cobalt sky patches.
On Saturn, most observers seeking fine detail first try for the Cassini division. This inky gap between its A and B rings highlights the yawning breach separating the rings’ unique, epic beauty and their names, lazily derived from the alphabet. We often give things letters, like the six stars in M42’s stunning Trapezium and lunar craters around larger ones (Copernicus A, B, C, etc.). It’s not a bad idea, except where exceptional beauty cries out, unanswered, to try to stir a poet on the International Astronomical Union’s naming committee. As for that Cassini break, its impossibly narrow, half-arcsecond width somehow materializes whenever the air is steady. In the entire universe, no other thin dark line is more observed, sought after, or treasured.
You get the gist of my criteria. So, I’ll skip any further literary flourishes and simply list 10 examples of details telescopists try for when observing various celestial objects: