The Astronomy Thread

Kajiimagi

<Aristocrat╭ರ_•́>
3,826
7,217
I was finally able to catch the other comet! This is C2025 /A6 Lemmon. I could not find it with the naked eye but I was able to see it with the Seestar.

Comet A6 Lemmon.jpg
 
  • 10Like
  • 1Solidarity
Reactions: 10 users

Kajiimagi

<Aristocrat╭ರ_•́>
3,826
7,217
Do you run red lights outside at night I steady of normal?
I have a red filter flashlight to use but mostly no. I set the Seestar up before dark because it's easier to set up in the daylight. Then I turn it off and wait for dark. I have these little gloves? that only go on 2 fingers that have a small battery in them and the ends are LED flashlights. I use them to set up everything when it's dark. With the Seestar , after you set the phone up with what you want to shoot, there isn't much to babysit so I usually go inside and come out every 45min-hour to reset the image (to avoid tracking errors so bad). ZWO did release a wedge but that looked like too much work. If I wanted to do all that I would have kept the big ass 12" Meade scope I had.

 
  • 2Like
Reactions: 1 users

BrutulTM

Good, bad, I'm the guy with the gun.
<Silver Donator>
15,458
-406
Did anyone see Halley's comet in 1986? I was 9 years old and I remember my dad going out early in the morning to try to see it through his rifle scope but I don't think he ever did. You couldn't get as much good advice about when and where to look as you can now. I'll be 84 next time it comes around if I make it that long. I am lucky enough to live in a great place to look at stars.
 
  • 4Like
Reactions: 3 users

Kajiimagi

<Aristocrat╭ರ_•́>
3,826
7,217
Did anyone see Halley's comet in 1986? I was 9 years old and I remember my dad going out early in the morning to try to see it through his rifle scope but I don't think he ever did. You couldn't get as much good advice about when and where to look as you can now. I'll be 84 next time it comes around if I make it that long. I am lucky enough to live in a great place to look at stars.
Yep my mom took my brother and me out to the middle of a field and we looked at it through binos. In a way she really got me interested in astronomy. She'd let us stay up late even on a school night to look at meteor showers (as long as we got up on time to go to school). That stuff really sticks with you.
 
  • 1Like
Reactions: 1 user

BrutulTM

Good, bad, I'm the guy with the gun.
<Silver Donator>
15,458
-406
I will leave this to you big brains to figure out.


My only thought when I hear something about quantum physics is that they could tell me absolutely anything because I have no way of detecting bullshit when everything about quantum physics sounds like bullshit.
 
  • 5Solidarity
  • 1Like
Reactions: 5 users

Kajiimagi

<Aristocrat╭ರ_•́>
3,826
7,217
My only thought when I hear something about quantum physics is that they could tell me absolutely anything because I have no way of detecting bullshit when everything about quantum physics sounds like bullshit.
Yep, it all sounds like magic. Which usually means we don't know enough (yet).
 

Burns

Avatar of War Slayer
8,675
16,767
Did anyone see Halley's comet in 1986? I was 9 years old and I remember my dad going out early in the morning to try to see it through his rifle scope but I don't think he ever did. You couldn't get as much good advice about when and where to look as you can now. I'll be 84 next time it comes around if I make it that long. I am lucky enough to live in a great place to look at stars.
According to Wiki, the 1986 pass was in one of the worst possible positions for viewing (opposite side of the sun) and only got to an apparent magnitude of 2.1. Whereas, if any of us make it to the 2061 viewing, it will be much closer, on the same side of the sun as the earth will be on, getting to a projected apparent magnitude of -0.3 (roughly as bright as Vega, Canopus, Alpha Centauri, Arcturus).
 
  • 2Like
Reactions: 1 users

Furry

Email Loading Please Wait
<Gold Donor>
26,111
37,435
I will leave this to you big brains to figure out.


I've been shitting on pretty much everything quantum since the start of this forum. It's only useful as a form of mathematical estimation of reality. The people who try to say it actually represents reality are one and all retarded.
 
  • 2Like
Reactions: 1 users

Hekotat

FoH nuclear response team
12,822
12,871
Did anyone see Halley's comet in 1986? I was 9 years old and I remember my dad going out early in the morning to try to see it through his rifle scope but I don't think he ever did. You couldn't get as much good advice about when and where to look as you can now. I'll be 84 next time it comes around if I make it that long. I am lucky enough to live in a great place to look at stars.


The only one i got to see was the Hale Bopp comet. I was a freshman in high school and the sky was still very dark where I lived, id walk to my friends to get a ride to school and wed just stare at it. Sadly there is too much light pollution today compared to back then.

Used to be able to just sit outside and watch shooting stars. I miss seeing the stars.
 
  • 1Like
Reactions: 1 user

Kajiimagi

<Aristocrat╭ರ_•́>
3,826
7,217
In case anyone wonders why I never post planets with my little telescope, this is why. It's 'supposed' to be Saturn. No need to tell me, I know it looks like shit. The other pic is NGC 925 a galaxy 30 million light years away.
 

Attachments

  • 1761964660408.jpg
    1761964660408.jpg
    76.5 KB · Views: 19
  • NGC 925 .jpg
    NGC 925 .jpg
    28.8 KB · Views: 19
  • 7Like
Reactions: 6 users

Big Phoenix

Pronouns: zie/zhem/zer
<Gold Donor>
48,914
106,926
It's not easy to take pictures of distant planet, especially because they're very bright. What camera did you use ?
Any picture you take from an eye piece is going to look meh at best even with the most expensive camera.

The way people get good pictures is by very long exposures, stacking photos and then Photoshop.
 

Furry

Email Loading Please Wait
<Gold Donor>
26,111
37,435
Any picture you take from an eye piece is going to look meh at best even with the most expensive camera.

The way people get good pictures is by very long exposures, stacking photos and then Photoshop.
That’s true for most objects in the sky, but for the really bright ones like the closer planets not so much. It comes down to precise focus being more important. I’ve never messed with his type of telescope, but it’s design being targeted to cleaning up fainter images might be less than ideal for planetary imaging.