February 29th 1910 GMT Jupiter's moons
It was hardly clear but I poked my head out the back door
and saw Procyon and Sirius. Jupiter was high in the west and I tried to capture
its moons.
February 24th 2110 GMT Moon
Despite a clear late afternoon, it was very hazy and only
the Moon and brighter stars were visible. I used my DSLR at 300mm focal length,
ISO 100 and 1/1600 second exposure.
February 24th 1600 GMT Sun
The sky unexpectedly cleared and the Sun was low, two low to
catch with my telescope. I saw the two sunspots I had seen in the past few days
but the smaller one was probably invisible as it rotated closer to the edge of
the solar disc.
February 23rd 2200 GMT Moon
It was clear so with a nearly full moon. there was
only one object worth photographing. As the Moon was high in the sky, I needed
to be a contortionist to photograph it. I gave up and used my star diagonal.
Apart from a bit of light loss, it increased the focal length of the telescope.
It meant that I could not get the whole lunar disc into the field of view.
My first set of shots were with my Mak and DSLR at about 1.65m focal length, ISO 100 and 1/500 second exposure. I tried stacking the two attempted full disc shots but it didn't work. However, I managed to stack 5 shots of each set.
I moved around the lunar disc, taking regional shots at about 5m focal length, ISO 100 and 1/50 second exposure.
February 23rd 1250 GMT Sun
It was not perfectly clear but I was able to see the sunspot
pair I had seen 3 days before plus the small, faint one that I missed.
February 22nd 1850 GMT Moon
The Moon was approaching full phase and it appeared very
bright. For once, the Corsham microclimate had worked in my favour! I ended up
photographing it with a very short exposure of 1/2000 second. I used 300mm
focal length and ISO 100.
I made an audacious attempt to photograph Jupiter's moons
handheld at 300mm focal length, ISO 6400 and 1/25 second exposure. I had managed to get it to work before and, although some images showed a nice, round Jupiter, I could not find any moons, despite my digital wizardry.
I then used my phone camera to attempt to capture the Moon and Jupiter at a very widefield setting. I moved to 1.0 zoom and snapped the Moon with Sirius and Procyon.
I checked the brightness of Betelguese and it held steady at magnitude 0.6, the same as my previous estimate.
February 20th 1220 GMT Sun
Was it really a whole week since I had seen the Sun? With
the 2023 weather persisting into late February, maybe it was no surprise!
Fortunately, despite hazy conditions, I was able to see two large sunspots,
although I did not see a slightly smaller one that was visible in the
professional observatory images.
February 18th 2010 GMT Moon
Conditions were very similar to the evening before. I
discovered why my last Moon photos were overexposed.
February 16th 2335 GMT Moon
The sky cleared unexpectedly. The Moon was low in the west.
I tried several shots with my DSLR at 300mm focal length. ISO 100 and various
exposures down to 1/1000 second.
I also saw Betelguese in the west and estimated its
magnitude at 0.6.
With bright moonlight and some thin cloud, it was not a
night for deep sky photography. I had a binocular scan around the sky. The
Hyades were close to the Moon but I could still see most of the brighter
members of the cluster. The Pleiades were very close to the Moon and I could
only see six of their stars. Melotte 20, one of my favourite star clusters,
stood out quite well but I could not see M35. Moving east, I saw Melotte 111,
the large star cluster between Leo and Bootes. I also saw the Beehive cluster
in Cancer. Although it's stars were faint, under the conditions, the amazing
pattern was still visible. I saw the double star Mizar/Alcor in the Plough. I
saw the bright star Vega low in the east. The nearby double star Epsilon Lyrae
split easily.
February 12th 1905 GMT Moon and Jupiter
I snapped the two objects together with my phone camera.
I composed the above image with separate ones of Jupiter and its moons and the Moon to obtain this composite image,
February 12th 2045 GMT Jupiter and Pleiades
Conditions were a bit worse than the evening before. I set
my DSLR camera at 300mm focal length, ISO 6400 and 2 seconds exposure.
I tried for Jupiter's moons and then the Pleiades.
February 12th 1730 GMT Moon
The Moon, as the day before, was at a thin crescent phase but had grown a bit and I was able to photograph more details. I used my DSLR at 300mm focal length, ISO 100 and 1/250 second exposure.
February 12th 1200 GMT Sun
Had I been at home, I would have taken my Mak out for a
detailed image. I had my binoculars and filters at work with me and that gave
me a chance to get something out of the clear day. I saw some sunspots and drew
them, as one does.
February 11th 1930 GMT Photo Session
It was not clear enough to photograph some faint
constellations I was hoping to. I did some close-ups instead. Most photos were
taken at 300mm focal length, ISO 6400 and 2 seconds exposure.
First up was Jupiter, in an attempt to capture its moons.
I then photographed Orion's belt.
Next was the Great Nebula.
It was very murky near the southern horizon but I decided to
try something ambitions and went for the Tau Canis Majoris cluster. I caught some stars in that part of the sky but couldn't say I nailed the shot.
February 11th 1730 GMT Moon
February 10th 0945 GMT Sun
It had been 8 days of continuous cloud and rain. I was
starting to think I would fail to get a single decent image in the whole month.
The cloud was still there but thinned enough to let me see some sunspots
through my binoculars and filters. It was a large sunspot group, with three
large and two small ones. After a frustrating week and a bit, it was amazing to
see something at last!
February 1st 1910 GMT Jupiter
Again, the weather forecasters let me down. I was hoping to
try out my new camera, the same model as my older one, which was still working
but with poor focus.
I set my camera at 300mm focal length, ISO 6400 and 2 seconds exposure, my usual settings for Jupiter's moons. Initial indications were less than encouraging.
With a bit of processing, I managed to show the moons but much haze still remained.
February 1st 1215 GMT Sun
The weather forecast was for clear sky but it did not
mention some thin cloud. So, despite some sunspots being visible on the
professional observatory images, they did not make it through to my binoculars
and filters. I was also reluctant to try photographing the Sun, due to cloud
ruining my previous attempt.