What did you see in the sky tonight?
Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
Upon further investigation back here on Earth, I think I might have only just captured a suggestion of the Encke Minima (the slightly darker mid-portion of the A Ring), and not the Encke Gap (a small but actual gap just inside the outer edge of the A Ring). It could even be a mere artefact of the over-sharpening. It is good when an artefact looks like an illusion of something real.
Last edited by Nitpicker on Wed May 14, 2014 12:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
I'd say you've imaged the Encke gap. I mean, it's not like you are ever going to get a black pixel right where the gap is but there is a slightly darker line there and the Encke gap is the cause.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
I want to think you're right, but I'm not so sure anymore. It seems just as likely to be some kind of "resonance" falling out of the wavelet sharpening. I don't really know much about wavelet sharpening (yet), but I remember studying Fourier analysis up to a point, and there would appear to be enough similarities to raise my suspicion.geckzilla wrote:I'd say you've imaged the Encke gap. I mean, it's not like you are ever going to get a black pixel right where the gap is but there is a slightly darker line there and the Encke gap is the cause.
Here is the original unsharpened image, produced from almost 500 stacked and aligned video frames in Registax 5: I'd be interested in anyone's opinion, who can be bothered to mess around with my meagre offerings.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
Pretending like this is the best picture of Saturn I have ever seen and I am unaware of the Encke gap then yeah, I probably wouldn't think there is a gap there at all. Your data are garbled by the JPEG compression, though. Someone clever might be able to infer that there is a probability of a gap or darker colored ring section being at that position, though.
Just call me "geck" because "zilla" is like a last name.
Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
Oops. I've replaced my jpg with a cropped tif.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
I stared and stared and can't say for sure. I'd lean toward no after looking at the TIFF though.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
I'm going with Encke Minima, or an artefact that happens to look like it. Ahem, moving on ...
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
1 hour, 20 minutes worth of New York City star trails. These ones are coming in for a landing at LaGuardia airport to the northwest of my second-story observatory. I crafted a street light occulting disk out of a few handy objects. I do not go outside because going alone as a smallish female with non-trivial camera equipment is honestly scary. I don't think anyone would rob or hurt me, but the prospect seems much more likely than, say, being attacked by a bear in a forest at night.
Just call me "geck" because "zilla" is like a last name.
Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
Cool! Love the occulting disc. But I'm surprised you didn't consider pulling out your handgun to shoot the light dead. Probably keeps the muggers and bears (oh my) at bay, too.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
I maliciously dream of dismantling or destroying that street lamp on a regular basis. My dream is that one day a drunk driver plows into it with a car.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
In most places the power company or city utilities will install a partial shield on streetlights that shine into windows. Have you asked?geckzilla wrote:I maliciously dream of dismantling or destroying that street lamp on a regular basis. My dream is that one day a drunk driver plows into it with a car.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
I wouldn't know who to ask.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
I expect you're resourceful enough to figure it out. (Like calling the city and asking who to talk to about a broken streetlight.)geckzilla wrote:I wouldn't know who to ask. :o_O:
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
Yeah, you would expect that, I mean it's just a telephone. I would never get sweaty palms or anxiety over a telephone call.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
A pretty full Moon coming up a couple of nights ago, just visible between the top of the mountain and the bottom of a low cloud layer.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
I saw Antares this (very) early morning! Not bad! Here in Scandinavia we can only see Scorpius (the northernmost part of it) in the summer, but in the summer our skies are so light that it's hard to see many night sky objects at all. Here in southernmost Sweden it does get dark, even around midsummer, but we don't get that many hours of darkness.
Well, we get the darkness back, with a vengeance, in November, December, January, February... groan... I don't want to think about that in May!
Ann
Well, we get the darkness back, with a vengeance, in November, December, January, February... groan... I don't want to think about that in May!
Ann
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
About 15 years ago, I took a boat trip across Prince William Sound in Alaska, from Whittier to Valdez (after a bus trip from Anchorage, where the bus drove on to a train and the train-avec-bus drove through a mountain tunnel to Whittier). It was a beautiful summer day and I saw orcas, sea otters and bald eagles all doing their things, as well as some amazing glaciers and mountains. (The harsh climate was said to have helped weather away the residual damage from the Exxon Valdez accident, 10 years prior; it all looked mostly pristine to me.) I asked a deck-hand what they do with the boat in the winter and she replied "we shovel snow off it, to stop it from sinking". I hung around in Valdez, which is an interesting place, and met and got drunk with some local cannery workers. I was not much of a student of astronomy back then, and the Sun just didn't seem to want to set. I left town the next day without sleeping, astoundingly hungover. Ah, nostalgia for a mis-spent youth.Ann wrote:I saw Antares this (very) early morning! Not bad! Here in Scandinavia we can only see Scorpius (the northernmost part of it) in the summer, but in the summer our skies are so light that it's hard to see many night sky objects at all. Here in southernmost Sweden it does get dark, even around midsummer, but we don't get that many hours of darkness.
Well, we get the darkness back, with a vengeance, in November, December, January, February... groan... I don't want to think about that in May!
Ann
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
Did anyone see any meteors last night? I was totally clouded out.
Just as zero is not equal to infinity, everything coming from nothing is illogical.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
We were pretty much clouded out as well. In fact, we were trapped in Colorado Springs when they closed the road up the pass because of flood warnings, and had to take a long alternate route, making it a 3 hour return trip, instead of 90 minutes. Got back at midnight. And just captured one Camelopardalid. Didn't see anything visually.BDanielMayfield wrote:Did anyone see any meteors last night? I was totally clouded out.
http://asterisk.apod.com/viewtopic.php? ... 16#p226516
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
A nice ISS pass, just below Polaris, at about 11pm local. 210 second exposure.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
Nice middle dot, but which way is North?Chris Peterson wrote:A nice ISS pass, just below Polaris, at about 11pm local. 210 second exposure.
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
How close to the ISS's track does one need to be in order to see it well?
Just as zero is not equal to infinity, everything coming from nothing is illogical.
Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
Depends what you mean by well. If you were within 1000 km, I think you'd see it high enough, but it would need to be around dawn or dusk.BDanielMayfield wrote:How close to the ISS's track does one need to be in order to see it well?
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
Almost 1000 miles. When it was passing Polaris, it was about 300 miles north of me. Here's the ground track for this pass; the red circle marks where it is 10° above the horizon (Dane House is my location).BDanielMayfield wrote:How close to the ISS's track does one need to be in order to see it well?
Chris
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Re: What did you see in the sky tonight?
A new image of last night's ISS pass, reprocessed to give more accurate color. I also combined all the subs, giving a total exposure of 750 seconds, the central 210 seconds of which show the ISS trail. This creates somewhat longer star trails. Note the very bright red star trail a little to the right of Polaris. That's real. It's HIP 106583, a bright carbon giant. Carbon stars are the only stars that show very saturated color, a consequence of their low temperature (this one is around 3000 K) and peculiar carbon rich atmosphere.
Chris
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