June 29th 2000 GMT Moon
I tried using Pro mode on my phone camera and took some
lunar shots in hope. Maybe, just maybe, it was a shade better than my effort on 25th but still no craters.
June 29th 0545 GMT Sun
I had a totally unexpected clear sky! It had been 100% cloud
cover and the forecast for the day was far from good. Even better, the Sun did
not disappoint. There were what appeared to be two large sunspots but the
professional observatory images showed that they were large groups, each with a
prominent central spot. Although it was only four days previously, it had
seemed a long time since I had seen anything.
June 25th 1935 GMT Moon
I found that there was more I could do in Pro mode than I
thought. I also tried shooting a shorter video so I could transfer it to my
laptop. I like to try lots of things out. My wife says I am very trying.
The video didn't load into Registax. One of the photos showed some "seas" so must go down as a limited success, although it was worse than my first-ever astronomical photo taken on December 31st 2003, which showed craters.
June 25th 0830 GMT Solar Session
It was not a good Session, just like the captain of a
football team might say when they are 5 nil down at half time!
As Friday, I had trouble finding the Sun but this time
trouble extended to complete zilch. The intermittent cloud did not help. A
Binocular scan showed that I wasn't missing a lot, as all sunspot activity had
faded below Binocular resolution.
A hydrogen alpha session similarly showed a bland, red disc.
I took some shots, more in hope than expectancy. I caught some features on camera, though.
June 25th 2345 GMT Visual Session
When astronomers think of summers past, they think of
observing in shorts and T-shirts while browsing the delights of the Milky Way
and it's surroundings. Chocolate lovers undoubtedly think of Galaxy. That is
where I started. The brightest galaxy visible in the northern hemisphere is the
Andromeda Grand Design Spiral Galaxy. It was far from its autumn best but its
fuzzy shape was like seeing an old friend after many years.
Being the only galaxy that was realistically visible to my
binoculars, I moved on to other objects. The open star cluster Melotte 111 was
surprisingly still visible in the west. Moving southwards, the Wild Duck
cluster was prominent but looked more like a globular star cluster. With nearby
M26 looking fainter, it looked like a smaller, fainter patch of light. The open
cluster Melotte 20 showed its main stars, despite almost hugging the horizon.
On the subject of globular star clusters, through powerful
binoculars they look just like a Galaxy. M13 was a neck-breaking view as it was
high in the sky. I was able to see M3 and M15. They were lower in the sky but
much fainter.
I did not try to capture the double stars in Draco, as they
were almost overhead. The Lyra double stars, Epsilon and Delta were even harder
than M13. Alberto in Cygnus, a great colour-contrast double star looked
magnificent, as usual. The final double star was the well known Mizar/Accor
pair.
I had a browse around the Milky Way and I could see it
without binoculars.
The highlight of the session came at 0011 GMT when a very
bright meteor appeared west of Lyra and Cygnus and it moved slowly before
breaking up near Cassiopeia. Being brighter than Venus, it met the official
definition of a fireball.
June 25th 2335 GMT Constellation Shoot
Venus and the Moon had long gone. It was just about as dark
as it gets, only 4 days into summer. I set my DSLR at 35mm focal length, ISO
1600 and 15 seconds exposure. I took multiple shots of Cassiopeia and Aquila. A
test shot of Sagitta suggested that I might get away with not decreasing the
exposure time at 80mm focal length.
At 0011 GMT, I caught a meteor (left) and satellite trail (right) in the same photo! The meteor was probably an Anthelion, which is not a true shower but several meteors are known to originate from a patch of sky opposite the Sun.
At 0019 GMT I caught a meteor trail pass the Coathanger asterism.
My Aquila shot also caught Delphinus.
A second shot showed the Milky Way in the same area of sky.
Not only did my Sagitta shot work but I caught the Coathanger in the top right. It is not a true star cluster, as the stars are all at different distances and not associated with each other.
I reverted to 35mm focal length and aimed at Bootes, hoping
to catch a few Bootid meteors.
At 0113 GMT, I caught a meteor near Arcturus.
I did not manage to photograph Bootes, as it did not fit in the frame but I caught Corona Borealis.
June 24th 2040 GMT Moon and Venus
I took some full disc snaps of the Moon and Venus. My webcam
had no charge, so I did some experimental shots with my camera phone with the
intention of stacking. The Moon was a bit disappointing, although it showed some surface details.
My disappointment with my Moon photo disappeared when I saw my Venus shots. These shots showed a more realistic view of the phase at about 30%, unlike the 45% that my camera phone suggested.
I was unable to get the videos of the Moon to work because the files sizes were too large. The best of the Moon and Venus shots together worked well, though.
June 23rd 2110 GMT Moon and Venus
I did a repeat of the shot the evening before. I was tired
and did not want to carry my telescope outside. The only difference was that
the separation between them was too great to capture with my longer focal
length lens, so I took the shots at 35mm focal length.
I tried to overlay the photos of Venus and the Moon onto the original but it did not work as I hoped. Im preferred the original.
June 23rd 1110 GMT Sun
Do not underestimate the difficulty of finding an object and
focussing on it when it is about 60 degrees above the horizon. Add in a lower
quality finderscope and broken camera and it becomes much harder! I finally
managed to get a few solar images but was dubious about their quality. As it was, the final result was not needle-sharp but showed a lot of detail that I cannot capture in binoculars.
June 29th 2000 GMT Moon
June 29th 0545 GMT Sun
June 25th 1935 GMT Moon
I found that there was more I could do in Pro mode than I
thought. I also tried shooting a shorter video so I could transfer it to my
laptop. I like to try lots of things out. My wife says I am very trying.
The video didn't load into Registax. One of the photos showed some "seas" so must go down as a limited success, although it was worse than my first-ever astronomical photo taken on December 31st 2003, which showed craters.
June 25th 0830 GMT Solar Session
It was not a good Session, just like the captain of a
football team might say when they are 5 nil down at half time!
As Friday, I had trouble finding the Sun but this time trouble extended to complete zilch. The intermittent cloud did not help. A Binocular scan showed that I wasn't missing a lot, as all sunspot activity had faded below Binocular resolution.
A hydrogen alpha session similarly showed a bland, red disc. I took some shots, more in hope than expectancy. I caught some features on camera, though.
June 25th 2345 GMT Visual Session
When astronomers think of summers past, they think of
observing in shorts and T-shirts while browsing the delights of the Milky Way
and it's surroundings. Chocolate lovers undoubtedly think of Galaxy. That is
where I started. The brightest galaxy visible in the northern hemisphere is the
Andromeda Grand Design Spiral Galaxy. It was far from its autumn best but its
fuzzy shape was like seeing an old friend after many years.
Being the only galaxy that was realistically visible to my binoculars, I moved on to other objects. The open star cluster Melotte 111 was surprisingly still visible in the west. Moving southwards, the Wild Duck cluster was prominent but looked more like a globular star cluster. With nearby M26 looking fainter, it looked like a smaller, fainter patch of light. The open cluster Melotte 20 showed its main stars, despite almost hugging the horizon.
I had a browse around the Milky Way and I could see it without binoculars.
The highlight of the session came at 0011 GMT when a very bright meteor appeared west of Lyra and Cygnus and it moved slowly before breaking up near Cassiopeia. Being brighter than Venus, it met the official definition of a fireball.
June 25th 2335 GMT Constellation Shoot
Venus and the Moon had long gone. It was just about as dark
as it gets, only 4 days into summer. I set my DSLR at 35mm focal length, ISO
1600 and 15 seconds exposure. I took multiple shots of Cassiopeia and Aquila. A
test shot of Sagitta suggested that I might get away with not decreasing the
exposure time at 80mm focal length.
I reverted to 35mm focal length and aimed at Bootes, hoping
to catch a few Bootid meteors.
June 24th 2040 GMT Moon and Venus
I was unable to get the videos of the Moon to work because the files sizes were too large. The best of the Moon and Venus shots together worked well, though.
June 23rd 2110 GMT Moon and Venus
June 23rd 1110 GMT Sun
Do not underestimate the difficulty of finding an object and
focussing on it when it is about 60 degrees above the horizon. Add in a lower
quality finderscope and broken camera and it becomes much harder! I finally
managed to get a few solar images but was dubious about their quality. As it was, the final result was not needle-sharp but showed a lot of detail that I cannot capture in binoculars.
June 22nd 2045 GMT Moon and Venus
There was a patch of clear sky. The Moon and Venus were still quite close in the sky. I caught them with my DSLR at100mm focal length, ISO 100 and 1/200 second exposure. I zoomed in to 300mm focal length to try and catch each object on its own.
The phase of Venus showed as slightly less than 50% but the actual phase was probably somewhat smaller.
Just after 2100 GMT I could not resist another shot of the Moon and Venus. this time with my phone camera.
.
June 22nd 1735 GMT Sun
June 21st 2105 GMT Moon and Venus
The Moon and Venus were much closer in the sky. I could not
detect the phase of Venus, although the lunar phase showed quite well for a
camera phone.
June 21st 1815 GMT Sun
June 20th 2110 GMT Moon and Venus
There was very heavy rainfall between my solar viewing and
bedtime. I tried some closeup shots of Venus and the Moon using my 'phone
camera. I did not catch the phase of Venus at all and the lunar shots showed
the phase but no surface detail. The shot showing both worked quite well, given
the limited technology.
June 20th 1735 GMT Sun
June 18th Lunar Reprocess
It was a cloudy Sunday, so I had another go at reprocessing
another lunar close-up. Despite placing sample points on features and the
limb of the lunar disc, I ended up with another fuzzy image.
June 17th Lunar reprocess
I had an awful weekend with lots of cloud. Apart from
writing,I decided to experiment with sracking lunar closeups again. I tried
aligning on multiple features but this attempt did not work.
June 16th 1110 GMT Sun
The date brings back many memories for me, relating to
fishing. For many years I went fishing and it was fishing that lured me into
writing for magazines. Time has moved on and I would say that my time as a
fisherman was mostly successful. Whilst, ideally, I would still like to go, the
reality is there is only room in my life for one major hobby. So instead of
hauling fish out on the first day of the season (I never failed to catch a fish
on opening day), I was knocking spots off the Sun.
The Sun was a bit more active than on my previous
observation, so I recorded the sunspots I had seen through my binoculars and
filters. New hobby, new life, new writing.
June 14th 1200 GMT Sun
I did not habitually carry my Mak and DSLR into work.
However, a pair of binoculars and filters was a different matter. It was a way
of recording sunspots by my traditional means. I saw three sunspots, which was
interesting enough, although showed a quieter sun than the previous few weeks.
On the other hand, it was nice to be able to observe anything at all, given the
awful winter and early spring viewing conditions we endured in south west
England.
June 13th 0610 GMT Sun
Insomnia is a curse. Most of us suffer it at some point in
our life and astronomers are no exception. It explains why some of our
observations are made and photographs taken at apparently strange times of day
or night. I knew that late morning or lunchtime, tiredness would hit me like a
sledgehammer but I had been awake for a while and had breakfast and the Sun had
cleared the neighbouring rooftops and our fence, ready to full victim to my Mak
and DSLR. I got 5 frames ready to stack later and came back inside to start
work.
June 9th 1110 GMT Sun
June 8th 2035 GMT Venus
It was early dusk and Venus was high in the south west
but getting lower in the sky. I snapped it with my DSLR at 300mm focal length,
ISO 100 and 1/200 second exposure.
June 8th 1130 GMT Sun
A solar binocular scan showed just a single sunspot, despite
there being several on the professional observatory images that were almost as
prominent.
June 7th 1210 GMT Sun
June 4th 1200 GMT Sun
With bad hay fever and a sore back, I limited my solar
activity to a Binocular scan. The two sunspots to the right of the solar disc
had rotated off, leaving a single sunspot visible, although there were some
fainter ones around below the limits of my binoculars.
June 3rd 1215 GMT Sun
My back and hips were sore after moving the lawn, one of the
disadvantages of being in my late 60s. Fortunately, my eyesight was good enough
to spot three sunspots through my binoculars, which are much lighter than my
telescope.
June 2nd 2130 GMT Moon
The Moon was 2 days before full and very low in the south
east. I took some closeups with my webcam, then full disc shots at 1.54m focal
length, ISO 100 and 1/500 second exposure.
Unfortunately, the webcam session produced only corrupt files.
Apart from a chunk of the Moon missing, it came out OK.
June 2nd 2030 GMT Venus
I snapped Venus with my DSLR at 300mm focal length, ISO 100
and 1/200 second exposure. I managed to nail the half phase.
June 1st 1949 GMT Moon
I did a visual session on the Moon before sunset. It was low
in the south west and a large gibbous phase, nearly full. Despite the daylight,
I could see lots of detail. The Ray systems of Tycho, Copernicus and Kepler
were very prominent. Plato, the walled plain or lava-flooded crater showed
well, with the lunar Alps on show. Linne, a bright crater near Kepler was very
bright. I could also see a few small craters near the terminator.
June 1st 1245 GMT Sun
The day started with 100% cloud cover but cleared later, leaving a thin haze. It was transparent enough to see three sunspots through my binoculars and filters.
No comments:
Post a Comment