Wednesday, 13 January 2016
Friday, 8 January 2016
Rain, Haiku and Double Stars
60mm/f15 refractor - 2007 |
So much rain, so much cloud, I thought the blue skies would never return, but they have.
Over the last two months I reckon to have only glimpsed the stars on about three evenings.
The Leonids, Geminids and Quadrantids passed me by without a single meteor spotted!
I'm still waiting to see comet Catalina... oh well.
This deluge of rain has certainly messed up my night time observing, but considering the terrible floods and anguish others have experienced these past weeks, I really have nothing to complain about.
This enforced absence of starlight has allowed me to gather some of my 2015 Moon haiku.
Moonbow in the night
arcs the sky of Aberporth
sound of nearby waves.
Now the blue moon shines
only the sound of the sea
better than a dream.
Yellow moon rising
autumn stars shine in sky
we sit holding hands.
Reading by moonlight
watching the total eclipse
candlelight flickers.
Craters on the moon
spied with my telescope lens
clouds pass by below.
Reading by lunar light
watching the dark shadow crawl
eating up the sun.
Cannot sleep tonight
the full moon shines so brightly
lets go outside.
Being that the sun is once again heading north, hopefully the skies will now improve.
No definite plans for observing this month, though it would be nice to spend time with Orion and his companions before they head too far west.
One thing I will be doing more of this year is hunting out those most accesible of double stars, but not with the Schmidt telescope. I think I will try my luck with a small long focal length refractor.
Back in 1979 my first telescope was a simple 40mm f15 refractor, it revealed some beautiful colour variations in several of the most famous double stars.
Looking at double stars through a long focal length refractor takes some beating.
The amazing illustrations by the french astronomer Lucien Rudaux give an idea of what I saw as a child.
The above illustration is taken from the Larousse Encyclopedia of Astronomy. For a better look at this book click here.
This wonderful book is a must for all lovers of astronomy and astronomical illustrations.
Come on January... give us some clear skies.
Saturday, 5 December 2015
Geminids start Tonight..!
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/ |
Over the next couple of weeks, I will no doubt be out in the garden under the stars tentatively watching the night sky for the annual spectacle that is the Geminid meteor shower.
The Leonid shower last month completely passed me by without one meteor sighted.
If the weather behaves I hope to have more luck with the Geminids.
It may be cold out there, but it's always worth wrapping up warm and heading outside for those possible midnight celestial fireworks.
If you see a Geminid over the next couple of weeks.... remember to make a wish
Clear Skies
Mark
More information about this meteor shower: http://www.bbc.co.uk/guides/zsr34j6
Monday, 16 November 2015
Night Thoughts While Travelling by 杜甫
One of my favourite astronomy books, or series of books, has to be Burnham's Celestial Handbook, a three volume collection of reference material on the stars and objects in the night sky.
What I particularly like is that among all the wonderful astronomical data, the author Robert Burnham Jr also included a large amount of ancient history and folklore of the stars and constellations.
Plus there's a very a good selection of poetry relevant to the subject in question.
Whilst reading through the pages concerning Sagittarius the Archer, my eye was drawn to a beautiful translation of a poem by the great Chinese poet Du Fu or Tu Fu as I stubbornly refer to him... Though correctly his name would be 杜甫
Night Thoughts While Traveling
A light breeze rustles the reeds
Along the river banks. The
Mast of my lonely boat soars
Into the night. Stars blossom
Over the vast desert of
Waters. Moonlight flows on the
Surging river. My poems have
Made me famous but I grow
Old, ill and tired, blown hither
And yon; I am like a gull
Lost between heaven and earth.
Translation by Kenneth Rexroth
I have to say there are many translations of this great poem, many of them are bloody awful, but thankfully Kenneth Rexroth's version speaks to me.
On the next clear evening when the sky is full of stars I will copy this poem to paper, take it outside and recite it out loudly to the stars above.... I invite you to do the same...
Where have all the fireballs gone....?
It's been pretty poor astronomy wise these last couple of weeks. Lots of cloud and rain and more rain and cloud etc and blah blah..!!
Even the recent Taurid meteor shower hasn't revealed one solitary blazing fragment.... so far.
Usually by now, I have seen at least one. Not this year!
Over the last few years, November has consistently hurled several fireballs my way..
Out of all the annual meteor showers, the Taurids, as far as I can tell, seem to be the most consistent for producing blazing fireballs...
I hope to see at least one before the end of the month. Come on clouds ... CLEAR OFF!!
Jupiter rising....
Only a couple more weeks and Jupiter will be clearing the "dancing trees" at the end of our garden.
I call them dancing trees because they always seem to be moving. Just the slightest breeze and they are off...! Last night Sirius was winking on and off through the ghostly limbs of a swaying ash tree.
Sketches from 2014 |
Lets hope we get some clear night skies soon... I have some poetry to recite.
Clear poetic skies
Mark..
Monday, 28 September 2015
Eclipse watching from the astronomer's bench.
It was a cool evening with a just enough breeze to make the nearby trees gently sing with songs of the autumn leaves.
The sky was clear of cloud, the moonlight was soft, the sleepy village was at rest....such a night was made for lunar eclipses.
Since living at our present address I have photographed three lunar eclipses, at each event the camera and telescope were my prime concerns.
Tonight I decided to take only a few simple shots of the eclipse, the rest of the time I simply sat on the astronomer's bench in the garden with my lovely wife.
We both sat in the darkness, soaked up the starlight and absorbed the fading moonlight.
In the words of Helen.........
What a magical night. We took some photos, then sat gazing.
There was so much to see....the eclipse, obviously, many meteors, one which zipped through the V of Taurus.
There was so much to see....the eclipse, obviously, many meteors, one which zipped through the V of Taurus.
Orion showed off his belt and wide shoulders, Betelgeuse flashing red to compete with the Blood Moon.
This is the third total lunar eclipse we have seen from this house, and it was the first time without street lights. What a difference it made.
The Astronomer asked me how many stars I could count inside the square of Pegasus.... I could count ten. In previous years, none could be seen due to the light pollution.
We finally gave in to tired eyes and went to bed at 4.30...just as Luna was loosing her blush.
Sat on the astronomer's bench, writing up thoughts of the eclipse, by candlelight. |
We watched in silence as the Moon sunk deeper and deeper into the shadows of our planet.
Through the binoculars the Moon took on a slight pinkish/red hue, not the predicted blood red of the tabloids.
Tonight's eclipse was not as red tinged as the two previous I witnessed. The eclipse of March 2007 being especially "blood" in colour.
Who can remember the total eclipse of December 9th 1992? now that was a "blood" moon... still vividly red in my memory...
Haiku Moon
Haiku poetry and Moon watching go together, here's a recent haiku I wrote about that eclipse of March 2007.
Thursday, 13 August 2015
Fishing for Perseids
It was one o'clock, the sky was clear, the streetlights had switched themselves off, the deckchairs were out and the camera was set up on the tripod........ Time for the Perseid fireworks display.
HiTech meteor observing equipment |
Over the first hour I spotted 13 meteors, mostly short trails and about magnitude 3 in brightness.
Most of those motes of dust were headed towards the direction of Cassiopiea and Auriga.
I Dream of Perseids |
Some would say that 10 meteors an hour wasn't that many, but in that hour I was able to wander off into daydreams, or is it "nightdreams"!
Those gaps between the shooting stars allowed me time to dream of past eclipses, of splitting double stars, flying over the Moon and surfing the Milky Way....
I didn't really mind if spotted a meteor or not, to just sit and ponder the Perseids has always been as fascinating to me as actually seeing a Perseid.
I suppose this is how fishermen feel when they sit and wait for their catch.
As if on cue at 2.00am a first magnitude meteor streaked across the square of Pegasus, the brightest of the night, and its trail fit exactly between one side of the square and the other.
Within the next ten minutes I spotted another 10 meteors, mostly heading northwards towards Cassiopea.
The lurking sea mist |
After checking my timed exposures for the night, to my surprise I found one image with a definite meteor trail... its a small trail but finally I have captured a Perseid..
Perseid meteor near Mirphak |
Wishing on the stars... "Night Dreaming" |
My first ever vigil of meteor watching was at my grandmother's house.
It was the late 70's and for many years I used to spend several nights at her house in early August camped out on the garden bench.
It was great to lie out on the bench, with my shortwave radio collecting signals from the ionosphere, cushions propped under my head, and me looking up, wishing on the stars....
Farewell Perseids
See you next time in 2016
Wednesday, 12 August 2015
Chasing M22 and Bicarbonate of Soda
August 11th 2015 - 21h45m UT - Nikon D3000 |
Just before the teapot disappeared from sight, I set up the Schmidt and took a quick peek at the area
around the teapot's handle.
It had to be a quick peek, as thanks to the trees, my window of viewing below the ecliptic is pretty small towards the south.
No matter, I managed to spot Messier 22; what a lovely globular.
Through the Schmidt with a 40mm Kellner it had about it a ghostly quality. The stars within the misty globular shimmered, and every so often a twinkling would appear from within this mist.
View with 40mm Kellner eyepiece |
Through the Schmidt with a 40mm Kellner it had about it a ghostly quality. The stars within the misty globular shimmered, and every so often a twinkling would appear from within this mist.
To my eye M22 is far superior to the brighter M13.
Viewing the rest of the Universe would have to wait until tomorrow....
Capturing the globulars with Bicarbonate of Soda.
How to make a globular cluster |
I've often tried to depict globulars by sketching them with black ink and then inverting the image with Photoshop.
This method never quite leaves me with the the image I'm looking for.
After a bit of pondering I thought that as the globulars resemble tiny sparkling diamonds, or maybe glinting white sand or sugar, why not photograph that.
As my diamonds were far away in Zurich, the next best thing to hand was sugar.
After a few experiments it became apparent that the sugar granules were to large.
Globular Sugar Clusters |
As viewed through a 20mm Erfle eyepiece |
The soda is just the right consistency and texture, and once photographed and photoshopped it leaves an image fairly close to the view through the telescope.
Clear Skies
Mark
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