Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Comet Holmes November 16 & December 1, 2007




Compare the size of comet Holmes in the above photo I took Saturday night, December 1, to the photo on top taken November 16. The magnification is the same in both photos, about 18 power.
4.5" F/5 reflector, Pentax K1000, Fuji 800 film, 2 minutes.



The view last night, December 4, was amazing. The electric company decided to cut the power for a while to do some transformer maintenance. I guess they figured everyone was sleeping.

Everything went dark just moments after I stepped out of the shower. All the electric power was out for miles around for almost 2 hours. I dressed for my observing session with only a red filter flashlight. My eyes were well adapted to darkness as I stepped out near midnight into a totally dark neighborhood with a sky filled with stars. Comet Holmes was an easy naked eye object almost directly overhead and as big as the Moon!

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Halloween Comet Holmes


I took this photo of Comet Holmes and Melotte 20 (the Alpha Persei Star Group) on October 31.

Comet Holmes is bigger than the Moon in this photo when you include the bluish outer coma.

Pentax K1000 camera, 100mm@F/2, Fuji Superia Xtra 800 film, 1 1/2 minutes.
Click on the photo to enlarge for the best view.

Comet Holmes November 7th

This photo was taken on November 7th with 4

Comet Holmes Continues to Amaze


Comet 17P/Holmes is still naked eye, just 1/2 degree northeast of Alpha Persei as I write this on November 18th.

It is larger than the Moon now with lower surface brightness. It is out almost all night long.

This photo was taken on October 29 with my 4.5" reflector, Nikon digital camera, and an 8 second exposure.
Be sure to click on the photo for a full size view.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Comet Holmes November 7th


I took this photo on November 7th with 4.5" F/4 reflector, Pentax K1000 camera, Fuji Superia Xtra 400 film, 30 second exposure.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Comet Holmes in a Super Outburst!


The last time this happened comet 17P/Holmes was hundreds of thousands of times brighter than usual when discovered on November 7, 1892 in London England by E. Holmes. This outburst is bigger. This comet is one million times as bright as just a few days ago before the outburst. No comet in history has ever had an outburst like this. Comet Holmes is a 2.5 magnitude naked eye object in Perseus. It could stay pretty bright for weeks.
Photo of comet 17P/Holmes with 12.5" telescope. For this photo I used 18mm eyepiece, Nikon Coolpix 4500 digital camera, 2 second exposure.
This photo looks very much as it appeared in the telescope. Note the starlike center and the fan of dust within the coma.

Sunday, March 4, 2007

March 3, 2007 Lunar Eclipse


Last night I took this photo of the total eclipse of the Moon.

At sunset it was mostly cloudy but a break in the clouds less than an hour later allowed me to shoot this photo before the end of the total phase of this eclipse. I used an 80mm F/5 refractor & Nikon Coolpix 4500 digital camera, 2 second exposure with 18mm eyepiece.

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Winter Bald Eagles





Bald Eagles can be seen from here at times. Usually soaring over the Maurice River at some distance but now and then they soar right overhead as they turn east to glide up the Maumuskin Creek. These are recent digital photos of a 2 year old immature eagle and an adult eagle flying right overhead.

Sunday, February 4, 2007

2003 Halloween Aurora


On Halloween night 2003 a bright aurora filled the sky with color. From South Jersey red and green rays and bands danced in the sky even low in the south. This photo was taken as I pointed the camera to the south in the constellation Aquarius. Mars can be seen at left center. The red color in the camera lens and the brightness of Mars near opposition seem reduced the reddish color usually seen. The Water Jar of Aquarius & Alpha Aquarii are seen at upper right. Notice that the red rays appear to converge at a point near zenith. When viewing aurora in the north the rays most always appear to converge at a point below the northern horizon.

2001 Leonid Meteor Storm


This is one of my photos from the fantastic Leonid Meteor Shower on November 18, 2001. This photo was taken at Belleplain State Forest in southern New Jersey A meteor is seen streaking thru Canis Major. At times rates were higher than 1000 per hour. This qualifies as a meteor storm, the best since 1966!

2002 Leonid Meteor Shower


On November 19, 2002 despite a full Moon in the sky the Leonid Meteor Shower was great. At times hundreds of meteors per hour fell. Although most of these meteors were faint there were some bright ones. I took this photo of a bright red Leonid meteor just before dawn at Belleplain State Forest in southern New Jersey. It was published in the March 2003 issue of the "Reflector", newsletter of the Astronomical League. Also seen is Venus (through clouds), Mars, & Spica.

Thursday, February 1, 2007

The Tail of a Comet


Comet McNaught is putting on a grand show in the southern hemisphere. I saw comet McNaught C/2006 P1 only once on January 10, 2007 before it headed south. I easily saw Mcnaught with the naked eye. It had a short bright tail.
The comet was so bright, and so close to the horizon, that the Earth's atmosphere made the comet's head red, white, & blue!
After passing close to the Sun on January 15th this comet became the brightest comet in over 40 years and began to display a huge dust tail. By many accounts this comet had the grandest tail since Donati's Comet in 1858. The tail swept to the north and could even be seen from South Jersey when the head of the comet was only visable south of the equator. I took this photo on January 20th along the Maurice River showing the Moon & Venus below three rays or streamers from the tail of comet McNaught. Click on the photo for more detail.