July 31st 0050 GMT Moon
I snapped it at 300mm focal length, ISO 100 and 1/400 second exposure.
Also snapped Jupiter at 1/100 second exposure and Saturn at 1/50 second exposure.
Jupiter showed a disc but Saturn did not show.
I also saw a meteor flash from Andromeda to Taurus at about
magnitude 1.
July 22nd 2220 GMT Moon and Jupiter
July 21th 2155 GMT Moon
July 18th 2110 GMT Moon
July 18th 1030 GMT Sun
July 18th 0030 GMT Narrow Field
July 18th 2350 GMT Meteor Hunt
July 17th 2240 GMT ISS and Meteor Hunt
July 17th 2030 GMT Moon
July 16th 1320 GMT Sun
I snapped the Sun with my DSLR and filters at my usual settings.
July 15th 2250 GMT Meteors and Deep Sky
After what had seemed years, it was finally dark and clear
enough to do some binocular scanning of some well-known deep sky objects. I
used my 15x70 binoculars and saw about three satellites, one appearing like a
meteor when viewed through my binoculars. Seeing the Andromeda Galaxy M31 was
like seeing an old friend after a few yonks, where a yonk is Pi years
(3.14159). It was not at its best but I could see the central region surrounded
by a more diffuse, larger region. Melotte 20 was very low but I saw some of it
through a tree. I had a go at M4, the globular cluster in Scorpius and it was
one of those “did I see it or not” conundrums. By contrast, M13 in Hercules
stood out very well. The Wild Duck cluster M11 in Scutum showed well. I tried
for M81 and M82 but it was optimistic. M29 in Cygnus posed a different set of
problems. The Milky Way background made it difficult to detect a foreground
star cluster but I love the Milky Way in Cygnus anyway, so it was an enjoyable
sight. Unfortunately, it was high enough in the sky to cause strain in my neck
and shoulders. Due to the sound of drunks, I did not venture into the area
surrounding our house, where I could see the area around Sagittarius. Never
mind, I had a nice eyeful of sky.
In parallel, I aimed my DSLR at Cassiopeia, with the
intention of catching meteors, with a chance of early members of the Perseid
shower or possibly some constellation shots as a by-product. I used my
usual settings of 18mm focal length, ISO 6400 and 6 seconds exposure, taking
repeat shots with my intervalometer.
I did not catch any meteors but managed an image of Cassiopeia and Cepheus, after a lot of stacking and processing. Polaris is towards the top left and Deneb to the top right.
July 15th 2100 GMT Moon
I waited until deeper into dusk and used my DSLR at 300mm
focal length, ISO 100 and 1/500 second exposure.
July 14th 1830 GMT Moon
I snapped the Moon in daylight, as I had an early start the
next day. I used 300mm and ISO 400 and various exposures. The best was taken with an exposure of 1/500 second but, even then, it was not that good. Enough said!
July 14th 0930 GMT Sun
I saw a small sunspot on the Learmonth images and tried to capture it with my usual settings.
June 13th 2035 GMT Moon
I snapped the crescent moon at 300mm focal length, ISO 40 and 1/200 second exposure.
July 11th Lunar Reprocess
July 8th 2030 GMT Venus
I saw Venus in the early dusk sky. I took several frames at 300mm focal length and ISO 400 with various exposures. The best results were at 1/200 second exposures. The longer exposures produced multiple images.
July 8th Moon January 18th 2020 Reprocessed
July 7th Auriga Reprocessed
July 2nd 0855 GMT Sun
The Sun entered a clear patch of sky, as the Moon had
earlier that morning. I used my usual settings and could see the sunspot in my
camera viewfinder. Unfortunately, all shots were slightly out of focus. I recorded the sunspot but was somewhat disappointed with the final result.
July 2nd 0810 GMT Moon
The last quarter moon was visible in the south west.
Took some images with my DSLR at 300mm focal length, ISO 400 and 1/500 second
exposure. The result was rather grainy, although it showed most features.
July 1st 1210 GMT Sun
Conditions were cloudy but apparently better than the day
before. As I could see the large sunspot through my viewfinder, there was a
very high probability that I had caught it on camera. I used my normal solar
settings.