January 30th 2120 GMT Comet 2022 E3 ZTF
January 27th 1925 GMT Moon and Jupiter
January 27th 1855 GMT Moon and Jupiter
The sky was partly clear, with thin cloud scattering
moonlight. I had missed the best evening for this shot but the moon and Jupiter
were within camera range and I did a quick shoot before dinner.
I set my camera to 40mm focal length, ISO 100 and tried various
exposures. I then changed lenses and used 300mm focal length and various
exposure times to shoot the two objects separately.
Unusually, I managed four shots in or near focus, so I stacked them to produce a composite moon shot.
Jupiter showed a hint of cloud belts, although the disc was very small.
I then followed my mission in an attempt to capture Jupiter's moons and the Orion Nebula at 300mm focal length, ISO 6400 and various exposures without a tripod! I had, after all, promised myself and my astronomical audience that I would try new things out, even if, in theory, they were not feasible! I caught a hint of a moon but Jupiter was horribly mis-shapen!
I combined the shots of Jupiter and the Moon together and separately to produce a final image.
January 24th 1715 GMT Moon and Venus
I used a conventional and reliable method
of conjunction/close approach shots. I photographed the Moon and Venus each at
300mm focal length, 1/200 second exposure and ISO 100. I took one of Jupiter,
well, just in case!
I did not get anything useful from the Venus shot but the moon shot was OK-ish.
I then adjusted the focal length to 70mm and caught the Moon
and Venus together. I overlaid the moon shot, after resizing to get the final result.
January 24th 1205 GMT Sun
I bin scanned the sun in a clear sky. A sunspot group. that
appeared as a single large sunspot to my binoculars, was close to the solar
limb and about to rotate to the far side of the Sun.
January 22nd 1305 GMT Sun
January 21st 0155 GMT Binocular Session
Unfortunately, cloud rolled in and left a haze behind. I saw
Comet 2022 E3 ZTF and it appeared faint and diffuse, again looking more like a
globular cluster or galaxy. No sign of a tail.
I further browsed around the sky, potting Melotte 111,
Melotte 20, the Beehive (M44), M35 and Melotte 20. I also saw Epsilon and Delta
Lyrae, the double stars in Lyra. Whilst I enjoyed my short session, none of the
objects showed at their best. The Beehive Cluster, one of my favourites, looked
best, as it was well clear of the horizon.
January 20th 1840 GMT Meteor Hunt
So after the amazing experience of seeing a comet for the first time since July 2020, it was back to the more mundane and routine activity of hunting for meteors. So, the Gamma Ursa Minorids were still active and the sparseness of the shower was demonstrated by my failure to nail a single one the evening before. Now maybe one of the many commercial rockets going into low Earth orbit could release a few marbles or pebbles to give us meteor addicts something worth seeing!
I got something but it was a UFO at 2309 GMT.
January 20th 0600 GMT Comet 2022 E3 (ZTF)
The comet name sort of rolls easily off the tongue, somewhat
easier than the tongue twister Hale-Bopp. I forgot how exactly many comets I
had seen but this was something between my 20th and 30th.
At the time of viewing with my 15x70 binoculars, it seemed to be a faint fuzzy patch that could easily
be mistaken for a galaxy or globular star cluster, except that I knew that
there were none in that part of the sky. The globular cluster M3 and the galaxy
M51 were further south and east. To be honest, seeing any comet at all without
the use of a large telescope is an event for amateur astronomers. However, I
did not expect it to inspire the general public, as NEOWISE F3 did in 2020, nor
Hale-Bopp and Hyukutake in the late 1990s. Still, I could tick the box to say
I’d seen it.
I also had a look at the double stars Albireo, Epsilon Lyrae
and Delta Lyrae, at least one of which I would hope to photograph later in the
year.
January 19th 1830 GMT Meteor Hunt
I aimed my camera at Ursa Minor again with my usual
settings. I returned to the warm while hoping to get something interesting on
“film”.
January 19th 1200 GMT Sun
I only have a short lunch break at work but the sky was
clear and the Sun was active, so I did a few full disc shots with my Mak and
DSLR at my standard settings. I could see quite a few sunspots through my
finderscope, so things looked promising.
January 18th 2100 GMT
I left a camera out to search for meteors. Then I hoped! Alas! My hope was in vain.
January 17th 1920 GMT Meteor Search
I aimed a camera at Ursa Minor as the evening before. As the evening before, I did not capture any meteors.
I also checked Betelguese and thought it had brightened a bit to magnitude 0.2.
January 17th 1205 GMT Sun
It was a very similar session to that of the 15th. The Sun was low, even in the ,middle of the day and covered by thin, hazy cloud. Despite this, I was able to see six sunspots and did a drawing based on my binocular observations.
January 16th 2100 GMT Meteor Hunt
This was a long shot but there was a minor shower, the Gamma Ursae Minorids in progess. I reset my camera to my usual meteor hunting settings and hoped. Alas, it was not to be but I did catch one in an earlier session.
January 16th 2100 GMT Constellations
I set my DSLR at 35mm focal length, ISO 800 and 15 seconds
exposure. I aimed at Orion, then switched later to Gemini.
Although I did a meteor shoot later, it was at 2047 GMT that I caught a meteor on one of the constellation shots, near Orion.
January 16th 1720 GMT Venus
I arrived home and aimed my phone camera at Venus. I used
10x zoom, ISO 800 and minimum exposure settings, at least what I could control.
The result showed a full disc, which was quite accurate. The real proof would
come later in the year when the disc would get larger and the phase smaller.
January 15th 1110 GMT Sun
Conditions were not perfect. Had they been perfect, or near enough, I would have used my Maksutov and DSLR. The good thing is that the gaps in the cloud were better and more frequent than the day before. I was able to get a clearer and more accurate view of the Sun. Fortunately I have large binoculars and a white light filter to match. I saw six sunspots, at least one of them was probably a multiple one that would be split by a telescope.
Jan 15th 0000 GMT Constellations
The weather forecast was clear but it was a cloudy evening
with odd showers. I saw Orion and set up my camera at 35mm focal length ISO 800
and 15 seconds exposure. Shock horror! It was cloudy when I went out! It
partially cleared a few minutes later. I kept moving the camera around and
attempted shots of Taurus. Auruga and Cassiopeia.
Part of the first set of shots revealed the Hyades and Pleaides star clusters, with Mars.
My single shot of Auriga was cloudy, so the result was underwhelming.
The Cassiopeia shot was composed from 5 photos. I had to include a TV aerial in order to get the Perseus Double Cluster to the top left.
January 14th Sun Reprocess
January 14th 1410 GMT Sun
January 14th Sun Reprocess
January 13th 1650 GMT Venus
January 12th Sun Reprocess
January 10th Sun Reprocess
January 9th 2140 GMT Betelguese
I observed that Betelguese had faded to magnitude 0.3,
although that was still much brighter than average.
January 7th 1740 Moon with Phone Camera
January 2nd 2040 GMT Moon, Mars and Aldebaran
January 2nd 1450 GMT Moon
In contrast, my second “live” action of the month was
straight out of the reinvention book. The waxing gibbous moon was hanging low
in the east. I took a shot with my ‘phone camera and boosted the zoom to 10x. I
was as interested in overcoming my prejudice against the beastly instruments,
as I had been to maximise the potential of my DSLR.
If there was a trick to this shot, I had not found it.