Wednesday, October 22, 2008

I've moved to NotThePainter.com

This blog has moved to NotThePainter.com. All the content here has been kept around on the off chance that someone has deep linked to it. Thank you for reading.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

3 hour old full moon

Canon Powershot S3 IS, hand held. Moon was 3 hours old, just rising above the trees.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Moonrise at Coast Guard Beach


ntbt

Original NexStar 8 hand controller

This is a photo of an original NexStar 8 hand controller LCD panel, showing the graphite FFC (Flat Flexible Cable) attached to the glass pane of the LCD display.

Zodiacal Light

So I had read about the Zodiacal Light in one of the astronomy magazines and now that I live in a good dark place I was wondering if I could see it. What is the Zodiacal Light? From the wikipedia page:
The zodiacal light is a faint, roughly triangular, whitish glow seen in the night sky which appears to extend up from the vicinity of the sun along the ecliptic or zodiac. In mid-northern latitudes, the zodiacal light is best observed in the western sky in the spring after the evening twilight has completely disappeared, or in the eastern sky in the autumn just before the morning twilight appears.
I did some quick googling and found that the best time to see it is 2 to 3 hours before sunrise and certainly when the moon is goon. It is so faint, they say, thay any light pollution or moon will make it impossible to see. Sunrise was at 6:49AM so I set the alarm for 4:45AM and it fails to go off, but fortunately Jeannette had also set hers, she has a conference is Boston this weekend, so her alarm woke me. I dressed quickly and dashed out of the house, driving to Coast Guard beach, a local beach in the Cape Cad National Seashore that faces north east.

I drove down the road with high beams on, to make sure that I didn't hit any coyotes, turned into the parking lot and got out.

There it was. The only dark adaptation I had was from driving down a dark road. It was clear that it wasn't the Milky Way, that was visible to the right and all across the sky.



I stayed and observed for a bit, quickly grabbing M41 just beneath Sirius and of course M42 in Orion. I was pleased to see how gorgeous M42 was. I look at it a few weeks ago as it rose one evening and it was too low to show its glory. High in the sky, well, it was wonderful as usual.

But back to the Zodiacal Light. I primarily brought the binoculars to give me something to do while I dark adapted. I knew I wasn't going to wait half an hour to get fully dark adapted so playing around the the Canons gave my pupils a few minutes to expand. The light extended from the horizon (obviously) and rose about half the way towards zenith, going up at a slight angle to the right, maybe 60 to 70 degrees. It was not colored at all. I can see how it would be mistaken for a false dawn except the shape was all wrong, it was a soft triangle.

What I saw wasn't as bright as the internet photo above, nor was there a birdhouse, but that shows approximately what I saw. I'll try and take my own photo of it one of these days.

What causes it? Quoting the wikipedia again:
The zodiacal light is produced by sunlight reflecting off dust particles which are present in the solar system and known as cosmic dust. Consequently, its spectrum is the same as the solar spectrum. The material producing the zodiacal light is located in a lens-shaped volume of space centered on the sun and extending well out beyond the orbit of Earth. This material is known as the interplanetary dust cloud. Since most of the material is located near the plane of the solar system, the zodiacal light is seen along the ecliptic.

And curiously, Dr. Brian May's, thesis, A Survey of Radial Velocities in the Zodiacal Dust Cloud, was on the Zodiacal Light. Dr. May wrote the thesis in the early 70's but abandoned astrophysics to become the lead guitarist for the rock band Queen.

Saturday, October 4, 2008

The Veil and M32

Midway through the Red Sox game I paused the DVR and headed outside for an hour of observing. My goal was to ensure that I had captured The Veil Nebula a few weeks ago when I wasn't sure I had grabbed it.

I bundled up and reclined my beach chair. The Veil was at a comfortable 50 or so degrees up, just about perfect for binocular viewing. Any lower and you are looking through too much air, any higher and the seating gets uncomfortable.

I followed my pointer stars in the chart from the wonderful Sky and Telescope's Pocket Sky Atlas. Lets see, draw a line from those two naked eye bright ones, then look for a row of three, then two real close to each other. Then down a bit.

I had only been outside about 10 minutes when I finally saw the very dim glow of the NGC 6992 / NGC 6995 complex. This is definitely what I saw a few weeks ago. I very carefully confirmed all the stars in the chart against the plethora of stars in the sky. Yes, I had it.


(Image from Wikipedia, you should click the link if you want to see a huge image of the Veil)

I then tried for the other 2 "parts." Both NGC 6979 and 6960 should have been easy pickups, the pointers are obvious, but alas, no matter how much I tried they never jumped out at me. Oh, I'll go on record saying that with averted vision I saw a haze where 6979 is, and once, just once I thought I saw a brightening for 6960.

All in all I'd say it was a pretty good outing for a pair of 50mm binoculars without OIII filters! I hate getting all ready and then not doing some more, so even with the lure of the Sox calling, I spun the chair around and looked a The Pleiades, no counting stars, no splitting doubles, just looking how pretty it is!

I then reclined fully and went up to Andromeda. I've seen the galaxy a lot this time, but tonight I wanted M32. Again, carefully, I looked at the star patterns and sure enough, there was a very small dim spot that didn't appear stellar, just where the chart said it should be. Yay!

And for a bonus, I also got to see what I guess was a tumbling satellite. It moved very slowly through the star field, flashing very brightly about every 5-6 seconds. It took about a minute to traverse M31. What a nice bonus.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Venus

Ahhh, the joys of cell phone astrophotography. Cropped and brightness / contrast adjusted, that's all.