spambot wrote:Very clever but how were Vesta & Ceres spotted? Were they expected? How were they identified. How many other enabled objects appeared because of the digital time-lapse?
Hi, I'm the photographer.
Thanks to NASA for choosing my photo, it made me very happy after so many days of conjunction hunting!
I've been following this conjunction and trying to catch both asteroids for a few days. I used stellarium to plan the field of view needed to catch both asteroids. Once at home I used stellarium again to match the stars against the sky-chart and find both Ceres and Vesta. I checked and double checked. At my website I also labelled a couple of reference stars that were useful to spot the asteroids on that day.
Curiously the asteroids were visible in the photo until dawn, I never ever photographed an asteroid without a dark sky so I was surprised.
What I really liked was to be able to get the Pleiades, the Hyades, Jupiter, Venus, Ceres and Vesta in the same photo. I like conjunctions and that's quite a gathering to me!
To make the photo I took a 30'' exposure at F5.6 ISO1600 using a Canon 5DII, 50mm lens and a Polarie tracker. Taken at 06:40am, it's still dark at that time in the South Hemisphere.
I had to use F5.6 because I had comma at F4 and that could make spotting the asteroids problematic.
Thank you for the comments!
Edit: If anyone wants the full-res version of the photo to hunt for Ceres & Vesta using sky-charts just ask me by email (from my website) I'll be happy to send you the file.
You need the date,time & location: June 27th 2012 at 6:40am from Buenos Aires, Argentina.
I hope somebody else goes asteroid hunting!
[quote="spambot"]Very clever but how were Vesta & Ceres spotted? Were they expected? How were they identified. How many other enabled objects appeared because of the digital time-lapse?[/quote]
Hi, I'm the photographer.
Thanks to NASA for choosing my photo, it made me very happy after so many days of conjunction hunting! :D :D :D
I've been following this conjunction and trying to catch both asteroids for a few days. I used stellarium to plan the field of view needed to catch both asteroids. Once at home I used stellarium again to match the stars against the sky-chart and find both Ceres and Vesta. I checked and double checked. At my website I also labelled a couple of reference stars that were useful to spot the asteroids on that day.
Curiously the asteroids were visible in the photo until dawn, I never ever photographed an asteroid without a dark sky so I was surprised.
What I really liked was to be able to get the Pleiades, the Hyades, Jupiter, Venus, Ceres and Vesta in the same photo. I like conjunctions and that's quite a gathering to me!
To make the photo I took a 30'' exposure at F5.6 ISO1600 using a Canon 5DII, 50mm lens and a Polarie tracker. Taken at 06:40am, it's still dark at that time in the South Hemisphere.
I had to use F5.6 because I had comma at F4 and that could make spotting the asteroids problematic.
Thank you for the comments!
Edit: If anyone wants the full-res version of the photo to hunt for Ceres & Vesta using sky-charts just ask me by email (from my website) I'll be happy to send you the file.
You need the date,time & location: June 27th 2012 at 6:40am from Buenos Aires, Argentina.
I hope somebody else goes asteroid hunting!