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John

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Posts posted by John

  1. I'm sure glad that I did not go with the "Clear Outside" forecast last night which showed heavy cloud cover from around 8:00 pm onwards.

    In the end it stayed hazy but clear through to the early hours. Transparency was poor but I was not interested in DSO's with the Io transit plus a full moon in the sky.

    The seeing could have been better at times but overall it was a very good session to have my LZOS 130 out :icon_biggrin:

    I'm generally happy to take what I can get from my back garden rather than travelling. Over the years I've done pretty well all in all with my refractors and my 12 inch dob from here :icon_biggrin:

     

     

     

     

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  2. I've just observed the final stages of Io's transit and it's re-emergence onto the backdrop of space, leaving it's shadow temporarily on Jupiter's equatorial cloud tops. Rather magical :icon_biggrin:

    I'm packing up now. Many thanks to @Kon for starting this thread as a "heads up" :icon_salut:

    Very enjoyable session despite the ups and downs of the seeing.

    stellarium-000.png.f6ab172f8199605dff3567fcf165155f.png

     

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  3. I've been distracted by some double stars, the moon (though practically full) and Neptune's tiny blue disk. Back on Jupiter again now though it's starting to sink lower so that will impact the seeing.

    Being mobbed by some Tawny Owls as well, just to add to the atmosphere !

     

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  4. Darn ! :undecided:

    Just popped out for what was to be my last peek before packing in and the seeing is the best it's been all evening ! :rolleyes2:

    In the steadier moments, the ginger colour of the north equatorial belt contrasts nicely with the greyer tone of the south equatorial belt. Io's shadow is nearly in the centre of Jupiter's disk just now.

    Now, do I have the energy for another 30-40 minutes of this :icon_scratch:

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  5. That ingress of Io was nice :icon_biggrin:

    Seeing really variable currently. One moment it's looking good and I'm about to call my other half out to take a look, the next it's like observing Jupiter under a stream of running water :rolleyes2:

    I think I'll let her carry on watching her film ......

    Nice seeing the mechanics of the solar system at work before our eyes though, isn't it ? :icon_biggrin:

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  6. The seeing has improved a bit here so I'm back at 200x again :icon_biggrin:

    Surface detail on Jupiter is clearer including a couple of nice barges on the northern edge of the north equatorial belt. Despite better seeing I've not been able to see Io's disk for a while now.

    If this seeing remains stable the shadow transit should look nice 🤞

  7. Seeing is "challenging" here as well. I can just about make out the GRS and 4 cloud belts with my 130mm refractor. As Io moved onto Jupiter's disk I was able to track it as a bright spot against the jovian equatorial zone for the first 10-15 minutes of the transit, probably due to the limb darkening effect. I have not been able see Io's disk for the past few minutes.

    For a while 200x was working quite nicely but lately the seeing and transparency have worsened a little more so I've dropped back to 171x.

    If it was not for this unfolding transit event I would probably have packed the scope away !

     

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  8. Jupiter has just risen over my neighbours roofline so I'll be able to catch the start of Io's transit.

    Seeing here is so-so. Not great conditions for seeing the actual moon's disk against the Jovian cloud tops. The shadow of Io, when it moves onto the disk, should be straight forward I think.

     

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  9. It's been a lovely day all day here (I've been fishing to make the most of it :icon_biggrin:). A few clouds about now and I'm in a similar quandary - CO shows heavy cloud cover from around 8:30 whereas the sky could well be good.

    On the basis of recent experience, I'll put a scope out. Generally lately, things have turned out better than forecast :icon_biggrin:

     

  10. 40 minutes ago, Peter_D said:

    The two objects with which my family here were uniformly impressed were the Moon and Saturn. Saturn's rings just look so strange and nearly artificial when you observe them. The Moon just looks fantastic in most telescopes imo.

    From my experience doing outreach with folks of all ages, the above are by far where the "wows" are for most of those who have not looked through a scope before.

    Many deep sky targets, even some of the famous ones, either prove invisible to the novice or elicit the response "what ? - that small faint smudge ?????"

    You say you live in / near London ?. What are your skies like for darkness ?. Light pollution kills the view of many deep sky objects rather effectively, unfortunately.

    • Like 1
  11. 1 hour ago, John said:

    Oh dear ! - clouded out now :rolleyes2:

    It was very nice while it lasted though and many thanks to David for the "heads up" on this event :icon_salut:

     

    I got another "bite" at this about half an hour ago when the sky cleared again.

    Fortunately the Tak 100 needs practically no cool down time so I could get it straight out and begin viewing without delay.

    I only got about 15 minutes but by then Callisto's shadow had been overtaken by the Great Red Spot and was lying just "behind" it on the planets disk.

    The "goldilocks" magnification on Jupiter for me tonight was 180x which the Pentax XW 5mm delivered admirably.

     

    • Like 4
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