Thursday, 10 June 2021

A mobile view of the partial solar eclipse.



A misty start to the day, with a steady drizzle of Atlantic rain..!  

It looked as if we had no chance of seeing the partial eclipse. 

Too many clouds in our village, we decided to go mobile.

Telescope, tripod and camera at the ready we headed off towards our local town of Cardigan.

A slight detour had us passing through the village of Boncath, where luckily the Sun was peeking through the mist.

In all, we were able to capture maybe ten images, in a one minute solar viewing gap.

Then old Sol was once again obscured by mist.

Luckily the gap in the cloud coincided closely with the maximum eclipse phase. 

Sol and Luna looked great together, dancing in the misty filtered sky.



Tuesday, 8 June 2021

Let the Hydrogen - alpha experiment begin.




After nearly a twenty year wait, I finally get my hands on a hydrogen alpha telescope.

It's going to take a bit of fiddling and tweaking to get a decent image, but so far so good.



I managed to take a few very basic afocal camera shots today, crude but with promise!

Also, this daytime solar astronomy lark is handy for topping up the vitamin D levels!


Friday, 14 May 2021

"Can you speak Venusian"

An amazing array of astronomical eccentrics. 

Or "Independent thinkers", as Sir Patrick Moore used to call them.




Well worth watching on a cloudy evening.


Wednesday, 12 May 2021

Astronomy typed memories from 2006

 


I well remember taking these observations, the telescope used was a tiny 40mm refractor. 

Even though the telescope was really a toy, it still returned some lovely images of the lunar surface.



Tuesday, 11 May 2021

Sunspots AR2822 and AR2823.



A quick solar capture from this morning's observing session.  

The Nikon D70 and the Tal1 refractor are a good combination. 


Great to see such a prominent grouping, in the form of AR2822. 

Wednesday, 11 November 2020

Mars 2020 apparition... A few drawings.


The 2020 Mars apparition has so far  been a bit tricky.  Many nights of bad seeing, and lots of cloudy evenings. 

On the whole I have only been able to capture the odd evening of Mars viewing. 

But those evenings you see above, more than made up for the lousy weather.


Sunday, 9 August 2020

Welcome back Mars.

August 9th 2020 : 04h00mUT 76mm O.G. x112 Antoniadi I


Early this morning the world of John Carter, Tharks, Synthetic men and dreamers finally came back to life.

It has been a long wait, at least four years since I last had a decent glimpse of this most wonderful and enchanting of planets.

My 76mm refractor revealed with ease the white bright polar caps, the gibbous planetary phase, a hint of Mare Sirenum, and most interestingly a whisper of light over two small areas of the Tharsis region.

To my mind one of those small light areas might be connected to nearby Mons Olympus, the highest volcano on the martian surface.
Was I seeing the Nix Olympus "The Snows of Olympus"?

I made a quick sketch, said hello to John Carter, and dreamed the astronomer's dream, for maybe another half hour.
The night was now fast giving way to the day, I slowly packed away the telescope, and made a few notes.

This was my first observation of the 2020/21 apparition, the planet was 15.6 arc seconds in diameter.
From now until October, Mars is just going to increase in size.

The next few months are going to be exciting.

Welcome back Mars, you have been sorely missed.

Clear Martian skies

Mark.

Friday, 1 May 2020

Is the climate changing?



An entry from one of my favourite astronomy books "The Stars Night by Night" by Joseph H. Elgie.

This is his journal entry for May 1st 1907!  113 years ago to the day....WOW!

Climate change concern has been around for longer than I thought !


Also note how climate change was apparently an "old, old question" even back in 1907 !

Friday, 3 April 2020

Henry Hatfield's Spectrohelioscope - 1985




I love this whole video, from the subject matter, to the pace of Henry Hatfield's delivery, a classic.

Thank you to the amateur astronomer Martin Mobberley for putting this video on YouTube.

N.B. If you ever want to read a great biography about the late great Sir Patrick Moore, Martin has written the definitive story of his life. (two volumes)
www.amazon.co.uk/Martin-Mobberley

Well worth reading.

Tuesday, 31 March 2020

Trawling the old photos

Staying at home for obvious reasons at the moment, with plenty of time on my hands to trawl through some old astronomy pictures and sketches.

Over the next few days/weeks/Months! I will put on several posts of bygone astro images.

Here are a few to start with:


Above photo showing the projection method of observing the Sun. 

The telescope used was a 6 inch Tal2 reflector, a great white light solar scope. 
Also really good for observing Saturn.

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Notice the four distinct craters along the terminator between the five and six o'clock positions:

Crater names: from left to right: Furnerius, Petavius, Vendelinus, Langrenus  (the chain of four).
Best seen around third day after a New Moon.

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Above photo taken at a friends smallholding, some five years ago.. I think! 
I wrote an Englyn poem to compliment the photo.

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Final image, a sunspot picture I took, using my trusty old Tal1 reflector. 

It may have only been a 4 inch reflector, but it delivered some beautiful views of the Sun (with proper filters fitted.) 

Plus some great views of Mars at opposition.

Sadly though, this telescope was not much use for observing Jupiter. 


Clear Skies, Stay safe.

Today's Sol Image.

A quick Sol image, before the clouds moved in. Sparrows chirping in the hedgerow, fairly mild weather, with the odd gust. Much c...