Wednesday, 27 April 2022

Today's Sol prominence image.





Lots of solar activity today.

Unfortunately also lots of slow moving Sun blocking clouds also.

It's a good job that the solar telescope is lightweight and easy to set up. 

I had just enough time earlier  this morning to capture a few images. 

At the moment as I write, the hazy sky is loitering and hiding the Sun's face.

SFI: 150 - SN: 126 - K-Index: 1

Head in the clouds.

Today, whilst looking through some old phone pictures, I found these cloud captures from back last October.

I remember that day being a typical Pembrokeshire day i.e rain, sleet, sunshine and wind. 

Four seasons rolled into one! 




"Head in the clouds" was an accusation often thrown at me as a kid. 

Yes I freely admit to being a total "head in the clouds" sort of person, both then and now.  

To ponder the Universe with cloud company has to be in the top ten of things to do.




Here's great book to familiarise yourself with all things clouds:

The Cloud Appreciation Society web site is well worth a look.
https://cloudappreciationsociety.org/




Sunday, 24 April 2022

The silent tick of the cycling solar clock.

Aren't sundials amazingly elegant and simple in their design. 

They hold a consistent simplicity that echoes the clockwork of the stars and planets that reside above. 

We humans love our patterns and cycles, the cyclical ebb and flow of the seas, the cycles of lunar phases, the changing of the seasons, the change of night to day and back again. 

What could better display our ancestors fascination with cycles, than that of the humble sundial.


Apparently the earliest known sundials date back to at least 1500 BC !  

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sundial


Fascinating to think that humans were busy figuring ways to connect to the cycles of the Cosmos from at least 3500 years ago, and probably way before that.

The above sundial was spotted today at a nearby church, I wonder how many other churches have sundials hidden away in their grounds?   

I will have to make a trip soon to a church I know in our local town, which has a sundial fixed vertically to the church wall. 

I will endeavour to take a picture and put up a blog post about it.


The above picture shows that the time was 1.30pm GMT, not bad considering my phone's timekeeper was at 2.47pm BST. 

It seems this sundial was 17 minutes slow... 

Considering the sundial is circa 1500BC technology, I think I can live with the 17 minute variance!


Thursday, 31 March 2022

Today's Sol ~ 31/03/22

Today's Sol ~ 31/03/22
 


If you can't explain it simply, 

you don't understand it well enough.

Albert Einstein


Tuesday, 22 March 2022

Blue Sky Sol ~ Hazy Seeing.

Hazy skies this morning, though still a lovely blue, solar seeing wasn't up to much.

After a major fight with the Samsung S6, I was able to capture one clear shot. 

Prominence detail was poor, the insertion of a black photoshop disc did help a bit in the final picture.


Saturday, 12 March 2022

This morning's Sol images.


Blue skies this morning, that was until about midday!

Then in came the clouds, and as I write this (15h37mUT) the wind is picking up and it looks like a storm is looming.

I managed these images earlier on, so today wasn't a total solar loss.


Opera glass to the Moon

I didn't manage to sketch the recent Full Moon, but I had a go at the gibbous Moon, as seen with my opera glasses.  It was a cold night,...