November 28th Jovian Moons, Deep Sky and Betelguese
I snapped Jupiter’s moons with my DSLR at 300mm focal
length, ISO 6400 and 2 seconds exposure.
I changed my settings to 70mm focal length, ISO 6400 and 8 seconds exposure. I took a few frames of some deep sky targets.
I started with the Hyades.
Then the Orion Great Nebula (M42) but the skyglow near the
horizon was bad.
Lastly, M35 in Gemini.
November 22nd 1220 GMT Sun
I bin scanned the Sun in poor conditions and caught a single
sunspot.
November 22nd 0700 GMT
I snapped the Moon in the dawn sky. It was a thin crescent,
the day before a new moon and I used settings of 300mm focal length, ISO100 and
1/200 second exposure.
November 20th 1830 GMT Meteor Hunt
November 20th 1200 GMT Sun
November 19th 1235 GMT
November 19th 0030 GMT Meteor Hunt
November 18th 1830 GMT Meteor Hunt
It was clear, so I set a meteor trap. I set my camera at my usual settiings of 18mm focal length, ISO 6400 and 6 seconds exposure, set to take photos every 12 seconds. I aimed at Perseus, with the Pleiades. There was the Taurid meteor streams active in the area, so a chance to catch some.
At 2205 GMT, a strange, unidentified object appeared.
I processed a single frame of Perseus to get this shot.
GraXpert kept crashing my computer, so I just processed another single frame in GIMP.
November 18th 0695 GMT Moon
I snapped the Moon with my DSLR at 300mm focal length, ISO 100 and 1/500 second exposure.
November 17th 1200 GMT Sun
November 13th 1750 GMT Planetary Moons and Meteor Hunt
I switched lenses and set my intervalometer to hunt for
meteors at my usual settings of 18mm focal length, ISO 6400 and 6 seconds
exposure. Unfortunately, it was cloudy near the horizon where I was expected
both Northern and Southern Taurid meteors to appear.
I aimed at Perseus instead but found the area very hazy, so
I switched to Cassiopeia instead. A single frame came out OK-ish.
Moving the camera up produced a better result.
At 1927 GMT, a faint meteor, probably a Taurid, appeared in Cassiopeia.
At 1936 GMT, I caught a UFO>
Were it not for the small white dot, where no stars were known at its position, I would have thought it was an almost head-on meteor, but I recorded it as unidentifed. It was 2000 GMT.
It seemed a mere 6 minutes later that "ET" decided to put in another appearance. Unless there is a more earthly explanation.
At 2009 GMT, another UFO appeared!
At 2014 GMT, a rather strange pattern appeared.
June 13th 1150 GMT Sun
It looked as if the microclimate of Corsham, being at the
top of a hill had won out. I was just starting to do a sunspot drawing from
poor conditions when it cleared enough to do a proper “white light” shoot with
my 127mm Maksutov and DSLR at 1.54 metres focal length, ISO 100 and 1/500
second exposure.
November 12th 2250 GMT Moon
November 9th 2030 GMT Moon
I snapped Jupiter then the Moon at 300mm focal length, ISO
100 and 1/1000 second exposure. The Jupiter snaps were blank but I processed a decent lunar image.
November 8th 2000 GMT Moon
November 8th Cassiopeia September 23rd yet another take
November 7th Cassiopeia September 23rd another take
November 6th Cassiopeia processed from September 23rd
November 6th 1005 GMT Sun
November 4th Perseus Reprocess
November 4th 1055 GMT Sun
November 3rd Eclipse Reprocess
One of the most annoying things that can happen when you replace your laptop is that a lot of devices and software no longer work. Who hasn’t got a drawerful of old webcams and imaging devices? Such also is the case with Microsoft ICE that I used for stacking still images. I had tried Registax a few times but my image files were just to big and it ran out of memory.
I tried Autostakert and used the previous month’s solar eclipse as a trial. It sort of worked. The resultant image was somewhat sharper but the whole process took over an hour! It reminded me of the old days of long DeepSkyStacker runs. Add to that having struggles with re-installing the Windows version of the video editor. Well, such is the life of the modern astronomer, who spends more time on their laptop than under the stars!
November 2nd 0915 GMT Sun
November 1st 0915 GMT Sun
With a dark and stormy end to October. It was to some
surprise that there was a patch of clear sky. Unfortunately, a chest infection
meant that going outside with my telescopes would have been against medical
advice, to say the least. That did not deter me from taking a “regulation”
shoot of the Sun with my DSLR and filter.