September 29, 2009 on 8:20 pm | In Jupiter, Planets | Comments Off

Here Jupiter with the GRS on September 29th.   Conditions were better than average with humidity and temperature being very pleasant. 

  JupiterA_RGB 09-09-29 20-20-15_CompTxt.jpg 

September 29, 2009 on 10:37 am | In Mars, Planets | Comments Off

To use the change in weather, I had to do Mars this morning.  Jupiter did not work out last night but this morning the seeing was good, but the humidity really was high.  I barely made it for one image before I started noticing a drop in luminace in the capture program as my primary started to show signs of condensation.  The 12 Volt hair dryer did wonders!  Here the image from this morning.  Aetheria visible on the evening limb, Syrtus Major extending on the right to the equator on the right half of the image and Nodus Alcyonius noticeable in between.

  MarsB_RGB 09-09-29 05-50-50_CompTxt.jpg 

September 28, 2009 on 7:14 pm | In Jupiter, Planets | Comments Off

Finally some good seeing conditions!!  I made 6 images over the span of 1/2 hour.  Than changed the barlow and used the Celestron Shorty plus with my 1 1/2″ extension tube and made two more images.  the increased size of the image required me to drop the exposure time from 1/77 sec to 1/19 sec and had to adjust the gain also.

The top thumbnail links to the animation showing Jupiter’s rotation for 1/2 hour and also shows the moon Ganymede orbitting behind Jupiter while it looks like it is appraoching the planet from the left.  Callisto is passing in front of the disk closing in on the preceding limb. (black dot)  Europa is moving accross the disk towards the CM in the Equitorial Zone.  Some of the images also had Io on the right of the planet, but I did crop that out, since not all images had this.

  JupiterB_RGB-09-09-27-20-47.gif 

  JupiterC_RGB 09-09-27 20-58-16_CompTxt.jpg 

September 24, 2009 on 8:41 pm | In Jupiter, Planets | Comments Off

Following Tuesday evening we had some terrible storms.  However we did not get the worst.  Other areas of Atlanta were much worse of than we were.  In addition, my house is at a high elevation compared to many other areas, so we did not have any flooding at all.  Thursday night, the sky opened up again, but unlike the West side of the state, 60 miles East of Atlanta we had mediocre tranparency, but because I had “image fever” I did setup again and the result is not much better than the bad images of  Tuesday.  Here one of my images of Thurday evening.

 JupiterA_RGB 09-09-24 20-42-46_CompTxt.jpg 

September 22, 2009 on 9:34 pm | In Jupiter, Planets | Comments Off

We have had over two weeks of rain, clouds and other terrible weather. This as the first night where I could see some stars. The transparency was terrible but stability was OK, so I setup and probably made the worst image of this season. You can call it the “Image of Desperation” :-)

JupiterA_RGB 09-09-22 21-31-44_CompTxt.jpg

September 15, 2009 on 8:14 am | In Jupiter, Planets, Uncategorized | Comments Off

The beginning of September was quite exciting for me.  The final version of the Jupiter Scar animation was made and contained data from July 19 until September 9th and contained images from the following individuals:  Anthony Wesley, Damian Peach, Donald Parker Joel Warren, Paulo Casquinha, Stephen Keene, Mike Salway, Michael Phillips, Trevor Barry, Christopher Go, Tomio Akutsu, Stefan Buda, Brian Combs, Fabio Carvalho, and Zac Pujic, while Hans Joerg Mettig provided the polar projection conversions.  Thanks again guys!!  Different versions of the animation made it on SpaceWeather.com (August 7, 2009), Sky and Telescope, and even on NASA’s APOD (September 8, 2009 Picture of the day).

Since NASA misstated their activities around the confirmation of the scar in the APOD, I decided to make a small movie of the events around the scar and included the animation to give a true timeline.  Here the short movie (3 1/2 minutes and 20 MB)

hs_2009_23_a_web_print.jpg

September 12, 2009 on 6:29 pm | In Planets | Comments Off

I got up early to give Mars anoter try.  Transparency was pretty bad and the Mars images were very bad.  Than when I was ready to pack it up I saw Venus shining through a large opening in the trees.  Since I have not tried Venus, I decided to give this a try.  Venus at 13 degrees was a lot lower in the sky than Mars and the transparency and seeing were a lot worse, but there was a lot more light work with.  So here my first image of Venus under pretty bad conditions.

 VenusB_RGB 09-09-12 06-28-34_CompTxt.jpg   

September 7, 2009 on 4:52 pm | In Jupiter, Planets | Comments Off

Another night with great comparative “great”  seeing.  (Can’t wait for it to really get good :-) )  Anyway, this was also the first night with my new WO barlow.  I figured that this barlow gets me an f/15 instead of the f/13 with the other.  I also did some experimentation with capturing at different gamma levels as well as a little difference im my processing.  Here four images from tonight’s session.  These images show the GRS on the preceeding side of the planetary disk, while the remnants of the Impact scar start coming up on the rising F-limb.

JupiterA_RGB 09-09-07 21-39-01_20090907_213932_CompTxt.jpg  JupiterB_RGB 09-09-07 21-46-34_20090907_214704_CompTxt.jpg 

JupiterC_RGB 09-09-07 21-59-35_20090907_220004_CompTxt.jpg  JupiterD_RGB 09-09-07 22-12-19_20090907_221248_CompTxt.jpg 

September 5, 2009 on 4:50 pm | In Jupiter, Planets | Comments Off

Another night of good seeing in the forecast.  This time I captured I captured three images while the GRS is rising on the following limb.

JupiterB_RGB 09-09-04 21-50-16_CompTxt.jpg  JupiterC_RGB 09-09-04 21-55-43_CompTxt.jpg  JupiterD_RGB 09-09-04 22-06-33_CompTxt.jpg

September 4, 2009 on 4:25 pm | In Jupiter, Planets | Comments Off

Well, finally the streak of bad weather, cloud covers and rain stopped and we had a day of better than everage conditions, so I took the opportunity to image Jupiter again.  Here two images of four which I took showing Jupiter with Io half way between the rising limb and its shadow just on the planets surface, while the Bird’s Strike is ready to leave the disk on the preceding limb.

JupiterA_RGB 09-09-03 21-29-37_CompText.jpg   JupiterD_RGB 09-09-03 21-43-47_CompTxt.jpg 

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