May 222021
 

Jupiter and Saturn are finally visible over my eastern tree line in the early morning. I have to stay up longer than my usual schedule, but worth the extra time. Saturn is actually the first of the two to rise with Jupiter about an hour behind.

Jupiter
[(V)R:1258×1.3ms; G:1253×1.2ms;B:1257×1.9ms]

This image of Jupiter is, as usual, south up matching the view in most telescopes. The image of Saturn is north up just because I think that orientation looks better.
 

Saturn
[(V)R:3744×4.3ms; G:3698×4.2ms; B:2715×6.8ms]

 Posted by at 12:02
Dec 252020
 

The increasing distance to Mars, high Christmas Eve surface winds and a strong jet stream leads to a blurry, marginally acceptable image of Mars. Even so, you can still make out Syrtis Major. The clouds forming the north polar cap are visible and there may be a hint of the shrinking southern polar ice cap. As usual south is up in this image.

Mars
[(V)R:6865×0.26ms;G:6681×0.37ms;B:6105×0.80ms]

 Posted by at 15:15
Dec 222020
 

Here is my contribution to the 2020 Great Conjunction hoopla. While it is rare to see a conjunction where both celestial bodies can be seen in the same telescopic field of view, from an astronomical point of view, the event was no big deal. On average, Jupiter and Saturn have a conjunction every 19.76 years. The frenzy was only due to the apparent closeness of the two as viewed from planet Earth.

Jupiter/Saturn conjunction

Even so, I tried to get an image when the two planets were actually closest to each other at 1200 CST but even though they had cleared the trees they were just not bright enough against the sky to get a good photo. The pair would be obscured by trees before it got dark so that meant packing up equipment and heading to another location. In fact, it involved two sets of equipment since my oldest son Chris would be joining in.

I really should have taken my planetary camera off the main telescope and brought it along but that camera would have meant additional cabling, a PC, another power supply, much longer setup and a more precise telescope alignment. My DLSR doesn’t require such an extensive life support system so I brought it instead. I chose poorly. The field of view the camera saw through the telescope was huge. This meant I had to zoom in quite a bit in order to see any detail at all. But since each planet only covered a small patch of pixels, very little detail is apparent.

The annotated image identifies the three Jovian moons that are visible. Ganymede is the one that is missing. It just started to cross in front of the planet and is lost in the glare on Jupiter’s left edge.

Jupiter/Saturn conjunction (annotated).

This photo is a composite of three separate images. Saturn is roughly 500,000,000 miles further from the Sun than Jupiter, so it is much dimmer when photographed. To make it visible, the exposure is lengthened to the point that Jupiter is grossly over exposed. To make the moons visible, the exposure is lengthened even more. So the image is a composite of a long exposure for the moons, a shorter exposure for Saturn and an even shorter exposure for Jupiter.

 Posted by at 19:28
Dec 112020
 

Mars is getting lower and lower in the west by sunset. I reconfigured the PTO so I could get some pictures of the planet while it still is above the trees after dark.

As you can see, Mars is quickly getting smaller as Earth leaves it behind. The image on the right was the one taken last night. Each image is taken by the same equipment and at the same scale. It is also, by pure coincidence, the same part of the planet.

As usual, south is up in these images. Even as small as the planet is, you can see how much smaller the southern polar ice cap has gotten as the Martian summer proceeds. The clouds forming the north polar cap are still present.

 Posted by at 15:19
Nov 152020
 

I had time for another target of opportunity tonight. Here is Uranus with 4 of its 5 largest moons visible. The 5th is Miranda which is closest to Uranus and is lost in the planet’s glare. Just for reference, Umbriel is a calculated magnitude 15. The image is a 3 second exposure.

Also in the image are 3 labeled and many additional unlabeled background stars.

Uranus & moons [CV:1x3s]

If the names appear familiar, they probably are. The naming convention for moons of Uranus is they are to be named for characters from the plays of William Shakespeare or a narrative poem by Alexander Pope. So, there are moons named Juliet, Ophelia and Desdemona but those, like the rest, are much too dim to see with my telescope. Uranus has 27 known moons; none of them named Romeo.

 Posted by at 11:07