Just trying out one of my astronomy typewriter journal entries.
Was wondering what it would look like on my Blog site.
Just trying out one of my astronomy typewriter journal entries.
Was wondering what it would look like on my Blog site.
So far this month the Seeing** and Transparency have been awful.
I've had a few clear blue skies, but the transparency problem has left the prominences washed out and lacking in contrast.
No doubt the Sol imaging will better itself as the weeks go by.
Yesterday evening, the sunset from our village looked amazing.
I wondered if I could catch an image of old Sol as he sank into the nearby hills.
Here is the result:
You can just make out a large prominence at about the 350 degree position on the Sun's edge.
Through the Ha telescope it looks amazing to witness the Sun dropping out of sight behind a foreground of man made objects, in this instance some hilltop sheep fencing.
** For a great article about Seeing, have a look at Damian Peach's online page:
http://www.damianpeach.com/seeing1.htm
Today's Sol image:
"Astronomy, that micrography of heaven, is the most magnificent of the sciences ... Astronomy has its clear side and its luminous side; on its clear side it is tinctured with algebra, on its luminous side with poetry".
Today's Sol image:
"Put three grains of sand inside a vast cathedral, and the cathedral will be more closely packed with sand than space is with stars"
Today's Sol imaging.
Beautiful skies this morning and early afternoon.
The little coronado PST returned some excellent eyepiece images of a large wispy prominence at the 7 oclock position.
About 12 pictures were taken in total.
Later I corrected the rotation and did a bit of photoshop editing. Here are the results:
The sky now has that clear familiar Pembrokeshire shade of twilight... towards the west I await the promise of Venus.
Today's Sol image:
"It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring."
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,...