Category Archives: Astronomy

Orion With A Tripod Assist

It was clear but windy tonight, Orion and its surroundings were bright, and out in the back yard I had the tripod I have with the mount for my cell phone. Normally it’s in the front yard (for rocket launches or ISS passes) or the garage, but with the flooding and nonsense going on in the garage, it ended up in the back yard, right there for me to use.

Wide angle.

Normal.

3x zoom.

Nothing fancy, just point it in that direction (-ish) and use the three basic settings for photos on the iPhone 13.

These photos picked up a fair amount of nebulosity in the Orion Nebula (the middle “star” in the “sword”), and the wider angle shots also pick up Mars, Castor & Pollux in Gemini, and the Pleiades on the lower right.

The background sky is still way too blue, reflecing all of the lights from the city off of a touch of haze.

What I wouldn’t give for a deep, dark sky.

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography

We’re Eclipsing!

The lunar eclipse is underweigh as we speak!

This was about an hour ago, and you can see that it was clear then – now we’re starting to get some clouds, just as totality starts.

Totality will last an hour or so, so I might still get some pictures. If you’re seeing this in the next few minutes and on this side of the planet, go outside and look!

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Moonlight

I think I liked this picture the best from tonight, something about the composition and positioning of the tree trunk.

That said, I like this one because you can clearly see Orion over on the left, Jupiter shining through the branches just to the right of center, and the Pleiades cluster in the lower right. That’s not a bad amount of detail for a handheld iPhone picture.

Overall tonight, the moonlit landscape and clear (and cold) sky was just amazing. If the back yard wasn’t a landscaping nightmare right now between the droughts and gopher holes all making it look like no-man’s land, I would have loved to have gotten a blanket or two and just laid out there looking for a while.

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Wide Sky, Tiny Moon

It’s actually a decent-sized moon, but when it’s 250,000 miles away (give or take) and you’re using a wide-angle lens, it can appear to be quite tiny.

See it? Up there in all of the cloud layers (rain moving in for tomorrow and Thursday) and contrails?

Zoom in far enough and you can see that it’s a bit short of being a half-illuminated moon, but well beyond the crescent phase.

I still dream that some day, some how, I get a chance to go there. It could happen!

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography, Sunsets

Selfie With Orion

I had a thought for a picture, wasn’t sure how well it would work…

Not bad! Close to what I was hoping it would look like – tough to get both me and something dozens and hundreds and thousands of light years away in focus together, especially in low light with the lens wide open and a minimal depth of field. Perhaps I can lock the focus on the stars next time and I’ll just show up fuzzy.

Which, truth be told, is not an inaccurate representation of reality in multiple dimensions!

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Filed under Astronomy, Paul, Photography

Neptune

A dozen days ago I shared some pictures of the young, crescent moon and Venus, and in passing I said:

Not seen, but also there, is Neptune, just to the left of Venus. I might be able to pick it out as a pinpoint with my 8″ telescope (Venus and Saturn will show visible disks, Saturn’s rings would be clearly visible) and it might show some blue color, but the iPhone doesn’t have a chance.

Which, of course, led me straight down a rabbit hole of detailed star maps and pushing the pixels visible in a raw iPhone 13 image.

First of all, while this may have been the full-sized image:

…when you blow it way, way up and crop the area around Venus and those power lines, you get this (you probably have to click on these images to blow them up to full-screen size to see what I’m talking about):

And it’s pretty easy to see what I had referred to as a “quadralateral of four dimmer stars” (highlighted in the annotated image below):

After searching for some much more detailed and precise online star maps (courtesy of The Sky Live) and setting the parameters to match my photos, I had a MUCH better idea where Neptune truly was at the time I took the photos.

So, there’s Venus, and there’s that asterism of four dim stars, so Neptune should be right…THERE!

“…but the iPhone doesn’t have a chance.” Color me shocked, I wouldn’t have bet on that in a thousand years, but there it is!

Dumb And Dumber Quotes So Youre Telling Me Theres A Chance

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Returning Light

There were a bunch of weeks there in December and January where, if I was leaving the office about 17:45 and driving home, it was already pitch dark outside.

Yeah, I know what causes it, that whole “seasons,” and “axial tilt,” and “winter solstice” thing. Just sayin’, it was noticeably dark, early.

Tonight, leaving at 17:40 and driving west homeward, it really was noticeable that the sun was setting through the broken clouds, right in my eyes. The cyclic nature of that “axial tilt” thing had carried us past the solstice and we’re well on our way to the equinox next month.

The weather looks okay for the weekend, which will be nice for our Superb Owl party on Sunday, but there’s a lot more rain expected next week.

Good, we need it. I don’t want to get into another drought.

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Filed under Astronomy, Critters, Photography, Sunsets, Weather

Sundog

Another “atmospheric river” is moving into Northern California and they’re expected to get clobbered this week – we’re going to catch the edge of it in SoCal, but it should still give us more than an inch of rain over three or four days. Let’s hope it’s gentle and doesn’t produce any mudslides or floods in the recently burned areas.

In advance of that storm, the sky was covered this afternoon with thin, high, wispy, icy clouds.

Looking toward the Sun as it was getting near the horizon, 22° of arc out, just above the roof and trees to the southwest, there was a rainbow-colored sundog.

Red on the sunward side, blue on the outside, there was probably another one on the opposite side of the Sun, but hidden by the house here.

There are some truly amazing images out there of extremely bright sundogs on opposite sides of the Sun, along with a 22° arc around the Sun. It’s all caused by the sunlight being scattered by the high altitude ice crystals, but watch out for fake and AI-generated images. It seems to be a favorite topic for fakes, probably because most folks don’t know what they really look like and get fooled.

When being awed by natural wonders, insist on the real thing!

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Filed under Astronomy, Critters, Photography, Weather

Groundhog Day Sunset

I don’t know if Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow or not.

Here, we had enough clouds to make sunset spectacular, with the crescent Moon now well above the brilliant Venus.

Let February begin.

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Filed under Astronomy, Critters, Photography, Sunsets

The Stars Align

That’s a classic line for a title, but a highly inaccurate one. While there are stars in view, the bright objects are not stars, but planets and our Moon.

When I first went out it reminded me of several symbolic scenes from “2001: A Space Odyssey.” (If there’s a giant 4x9x16 black alien obelisk floating out there to do something amazing and save the human race from our own incredible stupidity, NOW would be a good time! Just saying…)

The super bright object in the middle (and the upside down internal reflection from the iPhone camera above and to the left) is obviously the Moon. It’s a three-day old, 9% illuminated crescent that’s just stunningly gorgeous hanging there (see that upside down, reflected image) but still far brighter than anything else in the sky outside of the Sun.

The next brightest object, center top, is Venus, the third brightest object in the sky. It will be there for another couple of months in the evening sky. Tomorrow night the Moon and Venus will be even closer, if not lined up like a movie special effects shot. (Look for it yourself just after sunset!) We’ll see if we can see it here in LA, the weather’s supposed to be getting cloudy.

(Image: Star Walk app for iPhone)

I was curious if the bright object just above and to the left of the Moon was another internal reflection or not, but it’s apparently Saturn. I knew that it was out there, but in the twilight and slight haze (which also is making that halo around the Moon) I couldn’t see it with the naked eye. But no, that’s got to be Saturn that the camera’s picking up with a long exposure.

Not seen, but also there, is Neptune, just to the left of Venus. I might be able to pick it out as a pinpoint with my 8″ telescope (Venus and Saturn will show visible disks, Saturn’s rings would be clearly visible) and it might show some blue color, but the iPhone doesn’t have a chance.

Taking even longer exposures (this is 20 seconds, the longest my iPhone 13 will do) under the landing approach to Burbank Airport can lead to other visual visitors becoming prominent. That’s a private Cessna 550 Citation coming into Burbank at 3,725 feet and 127 knots.

And one other thing I notice in looking at these images on the big computer monitors instead of on the iPhone – take a look (full-sized images) at the Sky Walk image. Immediately to the left of the symbol for Neptune, there’s a quadralateral of four dimmer stars. You can see where Neptune is centered about midway between Venus and that quadralateral of stars. Now look at the full-sized image above, and there’s that quadralateral off to the left of Venus.

Can you see Neptune in there? Was I wrong above about the iPhone being able to pull it in? There are two very, very dim objects, one closer to the quadralateral and just above the wires, the other higher and closer to Venus. Could one of those be Neptune?

Zooming in as far as the Sky Walk app will take me, it might be the lower one, near the wire.

Intriguing…

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Filed under Airshows, Astronomy, Critters, Photography, Space