January 28th 1050 GMT Sun
There was a lot of thin cloud around, with some patches of
blue sky. For a change, especially as it was a weekend, I photographed the Sun
with my Mak and DSLR at 1.54m focal length, ISO 100 and 1/500 second exposure.
January 26th 2000 GMT Moon
It had seemed decades since I had attempted a moon shot with
my telescope. Conditions were far from perfect, with lots of moving cloud. I
took some shots at 1.54m focal length, ISO 100 and 1/500 second exposure.
January 24th 2100 GMT Moon and Jupiter's moons
Had it been a normal Wednesday evening, I might have
ventured out with my telescope but I had an early meeting the next day.
I tried to use manual and live view focus to try to get
Jupiter's moons. I used 300mm focal length, ISO 6400 and a second exposure. I
did not use my usual exposure time of 2 seconds, due to moonlight. Although the shot worked, I only caught one moon.
I changed the ISO setting down to 100 and the exposure to
1/1000 second to try to capture the Moon.
January 24th 1900 GMT Moon and Stars
There was moonlight being scattered by cloud and not much
was visible.
The Moon and Jupiter were too far apart in the sky to
photograph, even with my phone camera totally zoomed out.
I tried photographing the Moon with the bright stars Sirius
and then Capella.
January 22nd 2150 GMT Moon and Jupiter
It was nor quite clear, with most objects looking somewhat
hazy. I snapped the Moon and Jupiter with my phone camera.
January 18th 1700 GMT Moon and Jupiter
Aside from the cold and rapidly falling temperature, I wanted to catch the Moon and Jupiter when they were very close. I caught them together at 300mm focal length and tried various combinations of settings to catch features on the Moon and Jupiter's moons, although the sky was too bright to guarantee success. Unfortunately, nothing worked.
January 18th 1210 GMT Sun
The lunchtime sky was clear, enabling me to see three
sunspots with my binoculars and filters. They had moved since my previous
viewing three days before.
January 17th 1930 GMT Moon and Jupiter
Conditions were clearer than the evening before. The Moon was much closer to Jupiter. I photographed them first with my phone camera then with my DSLR at 70mm focal length at various settings I then zoomed in to 300mm focal length, again using various settings to photograph the Moon separately and even tried Jupiter's moons hand-held, something I had done only once before successfully.
When processing I got off to a bad start as the phone camera shot was blurred and Jupiter appeared as a curve.
I had more luck with the DSLR shot of them together.
There was just a hint of cloud belts om Jupiter.
Unfortunately, neither the ,moon shots nor those of Jupiter's moons worked.
January 16th 1725 GMT Moon and Jupiter
After a cloudy lunchtime and cloudier afternoon, there was
some clear sky at dusk.
I snapped the Moon and Jupiter with my camera phone then followed up with my DSLR.
I did not manage to catch the close alignment on my DSLR but I caught the Moon and Jupiter separately and overlaid them onto the above photo to create a composite image.
January 16th 1910 GMT Binocular Session
January 15th 2150 GMT Phone Camera Shoot
It was not perfectly clear but I tried fiddling about with
my phone camera settings, setting the ISO to 800 and increasing the sensitivity
to +2EV. I aimed at Orion and Sirius.
I was lucky to catch a meteor, brighter than Sirius flash
from the horizon through Canis Minor. It was a great sight and one of the
things that make astronomy interesting.
January 15th 1200 GMT Sun
The midday sun was in a clearer patch of sky than the day
before. A binocular scan revealed 4 sunspots, two more than the day before.
January 14th 1045 GMT Sun
January 13th Astronomical Mug
January 11th 1220 GMT Sun
January 10th 2050 GMT Constellations
January 10th 1230 GMT Sun
January 9th 2055 GMT Orion and Betelguese
January 9th 1215 GMT Sun
January 6th 2050 GMT Binocular Session
It was my first night-time binocular session of the year.
Conditions were somewhat hazy, dissuading me from any photography.
Jupiter was high in the south. I could see a Moon on each
side.
The Pleiades (M45) were disappointing, showing a maximum of
20 stars. The Hyades all showed, as the main cluster members are quite bight. I
cannot get the whole cluster in my field of view, so had to scan round the area
to see each star.
The Orion Great Nebula (M42) showed
surprisingly well, given that the Pleiades didn't. However, I could
not make out M35, the star cluster in Gemini.
Melotte 20 showed its main stars but was probably in an area
of haze.
January 6th 0115 GMT Betelguese
Conditions were cloudy and hazy but some stars were visible.
I could not see the Pleiades but Betelguese and the nearby bright stars were
clear. Possibly Betelguese may have faded a bit but I thought its brightness
was nearer magnitude 0.4 than 0.5.
January 5th 1215 GMT Sun
The pale winter Sun hung low in the south. My binoculars
revealed four sunspots but the professional observatories showed several more
that might have been visible in my telescope or from the southern hemisphere,
where the Sun is higher in the sky this time of year.
January 5th 0650 GMT Moon and Venus
The Moon had rotated closer to Venus in the dawn sky than
the previous morning. I snapped them with my phone camera.
January 4th 0720 GMT Moon and Venus
The Moon was approaching Venus in the dawn sky and was
within range of my phone camera.
January 3rd 2040 GMT Betelguese
January 2nd 1350 GMT Sun
January 1st 0210 GMT Moon and Regulus
An hour after my Moon shot, it cleared a bit more and I saw
it close to Regulus, the brightest star in the constellation of Leo. I snapped
it with my phone camera.
January 1st 0110 GMT Moon
The old year had not long given way to the new.
Astronomically speaking, 2023 had been poor, with lots of cloud.
Rather like the solar session the day before, there was lots of moving cloud. I snapped a few photos of the Moon with my DSLR at 300mm focal length, ISO 100 and 1/320 second exposure.
Unfortunately, I did not get any useable photos.
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