April 26th 1026 GMT
The Sun looked very quiet in hydrogen alpha light and I took
some full disc shots.
April 25th 1440 GMT
Not only was the Sun quiet in hydrogen alpha light but I
could not see the sunspot.
April 25th 1115 GMT
I tried my own binoculars on the Sun. Although the images was not too bright, I was still unable to see the sunspot. It also looked to have faded somewhat on the Big Bear images.
April 22nd 2000 GMT
The Moon and Venus were out. I took some full disc shots of
the Moon with my Mak and DSLR at 1.54m focal length, ISO 100 and 1/1000 second
exposure.
April 22nd 1800 GMT
After a cloudy middle of the day, it cleared to show both
the Sun and Moon. I checked the Sun through the review binoculars and my solar
filters. I came to the conclusion that my filters were letting too much
sunlight through and that was why I could not see the sunspot.
The
Moon was simply quite superb, at first quarter. It really looked just as
impressive as through my 127mm Maksutov. I could make out the southern craters
and most of the north. I noticed that the chromatic aberration changed as I
moved the binoculars so that the Moon was at different positions in the field
of view. However, daylight seemed to suit the Moon, as the chromatic aberration
was much less than at night.
April 22nd 0920 GMT
I decided to live up to my e-mail address and photograph the
Sun with my Mak and DSLR. I used 1.54m focal length, ISO 100 and 1/1000 second
exposure. I could make out the sunspot but further attempts to make it more visible resulted in lots of rings.
April 21st 1730 GMT
I checked the Sun in hydrogen alpha light. It looked quiet
again.
April 21st 1515 GMT
I checked the Sun in white light with my bins but did not
see any sign of the activity that I saw on the SOHO images.
April 20th 2135 GMT
I did not catch any meteors but I did catch Nu Draconi, in the top left of this image.
I caught some other stars in Draco in further exposures.
April 20th 1250 GMT
I had seen some activity on the SOHO images and it was
natural for me to check it out. The review binoculars gave me a great view the
Moon, with great contrast. There was some minor chromatic aberration. I had
some difficulty getting the solar filters on, as the caps are attached. The
view of the Sun was brighter than with my own bins but I did not see any
activity. The chromatic aberration was minimal.
April 19th 2110 GMT
I went out again with the review binoculars. I started off
with the Beehive (M44), one of my favourite objects. It did not look much
different to the view through my own bins but the lack of astigmatism at the
edge of the field of view showed the background stars. Next up was Melotte 111
and I saw a satellite pass through it. I started generally browsing around and
the review binoculars really showed their capabilities! Melotte 20 showed
better than with my bins and I was able to pick out M36, M37 and M38 in Auriga.
This was at an unfavourable elevation and with the Moon only a few degrees
away. I could also see M35. I picked off Mizar/Alcor and Nu Draconi but no
surprises there. What really surprised me was being able to see M65 and M66 in
Leo. Seeing M81 and M82 was more difficult, as I had to rest my neck. M13
looked superb, despite the poor elevation and I also saw M3 and M51. I only
regret that I had to work the next day, so would not be able to stay up after
moonset.
April 19th 1940 GMT
I was tempted to snap the Moon and Venus but had a review to
write. First Light Optics had lent me some Helios Stellar II 15x70 binoculars.
This was especially interesting, as I had bought their predecessor in 2002. My
first impression is that they were much more sturdy by design but heavier, too.
The build quality was much better than my existing bins. I first tried them on
the Moon and the general impression was favourable and the “earthshine” showed
much better than with my bins. The only negative was that there were some
yellow-orange colour fringes near the limb on the light side but these were
worse in my bins. There was no astigmatism, even at the edge of the field of
view, unlike my bins.
To both bins, Venus showed a full disc and the brighter
stars were clear and sharp. The Stellar II binoculars picked up many fainter
stars in the twilight conditions.
April 19th 0750 GMT
I
checked out the Sun in hydrogen alpha light early, as not to miss it. It was
still quiet.
April 18th 2015 GMT
It was a day of glorious sunshine. From an astronomical
point of view, I missed it due to work but at least I was earning. I was home
for a late dinner and caught the Moon and Venus in the evening sky with my DSLR
at 70mm focal length. I also took some frames of the Moon at 300mm focal
length.
April 16th 0715 GMT
There
was some hazy sunshine. I decided to take an early look at the Sun in hydrogen
alpha light, as the forecast for later was cloudy. Again, the Sun was quiet.
April 14th 2230 GMT
There was lots of haze. Jupiter was low in the south east but I could not see any moons. I was able to see the Beehive (M44) and Melotte 111 but neither were at their best and I did not fancy my chances of getting even a half-decent photo.
April 14th 1950 GMT
It
was clear, with Venus in the west. Unfortunately, I was unable to obtain an
image using the Bresser Electronic Eyepiece. I saw the planet through an
eyepiece but could not tell it from 100% phase.
April 14th 1540 GMT
The
Sun was quiet in hydrogen alpha light but it was great to see it again. I caught only part of the disc, though.
April 5th 0900 GMT
I had some detail on one quadrant shot but I had a little idea I was thinking of.
April 4th 2015 GMT
April 3rd 2110 GMT
I
aimed the camera at M35 at 70mm focal length, ISO 6400 and 7 seconds’ exposure.
Doh!! I had left the ISO on 100 for M35. I went out to check and it was
hazy around Gemini, so I aimed it at Leo’s back, once I had set the ISO to
6400.
I could not stack the M35 shots, nor the shots at Leo's back but one of the second set of shots showed Melotte 111 from a single frame.
I took a photo of Arcturus as a separator between two sets of darks and processed it to reveal a few stars.
April 1st 0900 GMT
Conditions
were not perfect, with a lot of thin cloud around. The Sun appeared featureless
in hydrogen alpha light but I took some full disc shots anyway.