Category Archives: Photography

Comet A3 Abides

It’s a lot dimmer than it was a week or ten days ago. No longer naked-eye visible, especially in the light-polluted and hazy suburbs of Los Angeles.

But the iPhone can still see it, these photos being 5.3 second exposures on a tripod mounted iPhone 13. From my front porch, about 19:30, still visible with binoculars, just look to the left of the top of the palm trees and then up a bit. (Again, the big swoopy arcs of light on the far right and left sides are lens flares and reflections from the street light at the left and the bright lights on the neighbor’s house on the right.)

It’s like a little dandilion seed aflutter across the cosmos, although this one has a tail of ice and dust that’s millions of miles long.

It has been a joy to see. If you haven’t seen it yet and your sky is clear tomorrow or Wednesday, give it a shot, it’s not too late!

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A Honkin’ Huge Orange Moon Rising

Wandering into the kitchen just before 21:00 tonight I looked out of the windows into the back yard and saw the honkin’ huge Moon, orange as a pumpking, rising in the northeast.

It’s a couple of days past full moon, but still really bright, and being so close to the horizon and shining through Los Angeles’ haze and light pollution, it was far, FAR from white.

Further out in the yard the color became more prominent.

I stood out here for a while, the owls hooting in the trees, the orange moon rising, and some occasional fireworks going off in the distance, presumably in celebration of the Dodgers’ win over the Mets that sends them to the World Series against the Yankees next weekend.

If the weekend has to end (and it really SUCKS that it has to!), this (and the Chiefs’ win to put them at 7-0 and the Kings’ win over the Ducks) isn’t a bad way to enjoy it.

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Fading But Still Visible

After two nights of clouds and fog (and the constant heat waves of the summer are long gone, it’s getting chilly out there at night!), tonight was mostly clear, so it was back to the comet hunt.

I could see it with binoculars from my front porch, but took the cameras down the hill for a good view of the western horizon.

It’s up there, just to the left of that wire, and you can see that it’s dimmer than it was just three days ago.

It’s also gotten much higher. So now it can be full dark (or at least, as dark as an urban site like Los Angeles can be) with the comet still fairly high and away from any clouds or lingering sunlight immediately after sunset.

As for those wide bands of light in this image and the “X-shaped” light beams below? Internal reflections in the iPhone lens from the ton of lights in my neighbor’s yard. Why does he have to have it lit up like that every single night? There’s nothing going on there, no parties or anything in that back yard…

With the haze and light pollution and the one-day-after-full-supermoon rising behind us, it’s tough to get a lot of definition in the tail, but you can see it there. I may have to play with Photoshop to see if I can tease out more details.

All of these pictures were taken with the iPhone 13 on a tripod, which was necessary as the wind was kicking up again.

Not the same picture twice, but close.

I was trying to increase the exposure time on the iPhone to get it to overexpose the neighbors’ houses and landscape instead of underexposing the comet. Marginal results, at best.

I shot a lot of images with the DSLR and the zoom lens, but with it zoomed in I couldn’t tell if I was pointed at the comet or at some empty piece of sky near the comet. 96 pictures and just one of them scored. I need to work on that.

If you have a clear sky this weekend, take your shot and go looking for the comet about an hour after sunset. It will be above the western horizon, to the right and above the very bright planet Venus. It will help a lot if you can get away from city lights and out to someplace with a dark sky. Binoculars will help a LOT. Happy hunting!

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Purple Flowers & Green Hummingbird

First, a couple of comet notes:

  • If you only got the email version of the post from Monday where I had a link to a YouTube video of a timelapse of the comet setting, you may not have gotten the link. I don’t know why the email notices when I include a YouTube link don’t show the link, but they don’t. Just click on the email and it should take you to the website itself, which WILL show you the video.
  • Cloudy again tonight here, but I see many, many photos on social media, some of which are utterly incredible, some of which are like mine, taken with phones and of marginal resolution. But it’s amazing to see the joy that folks are showing in seeing the comet themselves and sharing their pictures, even if they’re just so-so compared to the pros.
  • The other thing I’m seeing in today’s batch of pictures in social media is that the comet seems to be fading just as fast as it brightened a couple weeks ago. With today’s full moon, haze or clouds, and light pollution from cities, while most folks could get their phones to spot it in a 3-second exposure (or longer), many could only barely see it with the naked eye. Which means if you haven’t seen it yet, be looking this weekend for your last good shot at seeing it, and if you possibly can get away from the city lights to a good, dark sky location.
  • Good comet hunting to all!

I was getting the mail the other day when I heard a familiar LOUD buzzing sound. Right in front of me, arm’s length away, attacking the purple flowers that surround the mailbox, was a vibrant, green hummingbird.

I didn’t have much time to get my phone out of my pocket and on to snap a couple of quick photos, but I got something.

I think it was so close to me (and fearless) because it was trying to remind me (in a bitchy, very passive-aggressive way) that the feeders were empty and had been that way for a couple of days. I apologized and promised to get them re-filled (which I did) and it zipped off, message (or threat) delivered.

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Knuckleheads

With a title like that you might expect this post will be about a certain Presidential candidate with a single-digit IQ and serious dementia issues, California drivers, or the Three Stooges, but NO! It’s about pumpkins, in keeping with the rapidly approaching holiday. (If I had titled the post “Orange Knuckle Heads” then that would narrow it down to just the politician and the pumpkins.)

I spotted these in the local Ralph’s last Sunday and while I’ve probably seen this particular kind of gourd in the past, I didn’t know that they were named “Knuckle Head Pumpkins” ($7.99 each, but I’ll bet you can get them for half of that at an actual pumpkin patch).

There’s total overcast here tonight so no new comet pictures, after the May Gray and June Gloom has finally turned into a full blown case of October Something-That-Rhymes-With-October grayout.

The Ralph’s also had the more conventional type of pumpkins, at least a couple, which probably indicates that they were selling well while these were…lingering. That’s not fair, these have a ton of character! I’ll have to see if they’re still there next Sunday morning.

This one seems to have some of those “warts” that have popped – are the warts hard like the pumpkin rind or soft like a huge blister such as you might get on your foot after a long hike? I didn’t poke them to find out – I didn’t want to get a reputation at the local Ralph’s for being a pumpkin poker.

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Filed under Photography, Politics

Yet More Comet A3 Images

With the hazy skies we’re having it’s a little tougher to see the comet with the naked eye, but it’s still there once you know where to look.

Finding it with a camera or binoculars however is a piece of cake starting about an hour after sundown.

These first two pictures are from my tripod-mounted iPhone 13.

Bringing out the big guns, the view from my Canon Rebel Xt with the 70mm zoom lens is amazing.

If I went out to a dark sky location the tail would be much more pronounced against a black sky, instead of being washed out by the low-contrast haze and light pollution of the LA metro area. (That red horizontal line is a jet headed toward LAX.)

(Yet another jet just before the comet set.) One thing I worked on tonight was getting the focus done correctly with the big lens, and I think that I did a lot better.

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Setting Comet Timelapse Video

Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, first visible to me above the western horizon at sunset yesterday, was visible again tonight with another night of clear-ish skies. There was a bit of haze (outright fog this morning) which didn’t clear until after noon, with enough hanging around so that I didn’t see the comet tonight until about 15 minutes after I did last night. But it was also higher above the horizon than last night, so it was a fair trade off.

Low-resolution screen capture from the video below. The comet starts to appear out of the twilight & haze on the right-hand side, then I shifted the camera once I could see where the comet actually was.

The little white things zipping by are jet aircraft heading down the coast off of Ventura toward LAX.

 

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Patience Rewarded

Ladies & gentlemen, I give you Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-ATLAS!!

It’s far enough away from the Sun so that about an hour after sunset it just popped right into view, in the binoculars at first, then easily visible to the naked eye!

These first two pictures are from my iPhone 13, normal 1x zoom first, then the standard 3x zoom. I was using a tripod and the iPhone used a 4.8 second exposure.

By the time I got the Canon with the telephoto lens set up, the head of the comet was just touching the top of Castle Peak from my front yard viewpoint.

So I hustled down the hill a few houses to where I can peek a bit more around the side of Castle Peak. (The streak at the upper right is an airplane headed down the coast off of Ventura County toward LAX.)

I only had a minute or two before the comet started setting below the mountain from the better viewpoint.

If you want to look for yourself, here’s a wide-angle view with some labels. Go outside about an hour after sunset and look due west. You might see the comet right away, like a little puff of lint or a dandilion seed floating 44 million miles away, but if not, find Venus. It will be BRIGHT. (If it’s moving, that’s an incoming 737, not Venus.) If it’s getting dark, two of the brightest other stars you’ll see in the west will be Antares to the southwest and Arcturus to the northwest. The comet right now is a little above the height of Venus and it will be creeping “upward” every night, and also getting dimmer every night as it hauls ass out of the solar system and heads back toward deep space for another 80,000 years. It’s about halfway between Venus and Arcturus. If you have a pair of binoculars, start slowly sweeping that area of the sky, and you’ll soon spot the comet, with its tail pointing up away from the Sun and the horizon. (The tail always points away from the Sun, since it’s ice and dust expelled from the comet as it heats up and then the ice and dust are blown away by the solar wind.)

The comet is probably past its brightest, but it’s now getting further away from the Sun which makes it much easiet to see. You should be able to spot it with the naked eye for at least a few days, and with binoculars for the rest of October at least. If you get clouded out in the next couple of days, don’t give up!

Happy comet hunting!

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No Comet A3 Joy

Fine – it’s the weekend!

I spent about 45-60 minutes out searching for Comet A3 with no success. The clouds were gone (which is good) and I from my spot four houses down the hill I had a good, clear view of the western sky.

The Canon (i.e., the “good camera”) should have seen it. You can easily see Venus (just to the right of the power wire in the lower left) and Comet A3 should have been at about the same height above the horizon, just above that small batch of trees silhouetted in the middle. That’s where the Bright Comet app said it should be, and that’s where the spotter charts from Sky & Telescope said it should be.

Wide angle image from my iPhone. I was standing under a street light, which is why the street and cars and houses are so brightly lit. My kindom for a BB gun or slingshot.

Normal image from my iPhone. Using a tripod so there shouldn’t be any wiggles or fuzziness in the long exposure. It’s crisp and clean, but there’s no comet there to be seen, which actually surprised me.

3x telephoto image from my iPhone. It was dark enough by this point to start seeing other stars, but still no sign of the comet or its tail. And in between sets of pictures every few minutes I was also looking with binoculars and seeing nothing.

It was a bit frustrating.

I know folks were seeing the comet elsewhere. There were hundreds and hundreds of pictures on social media, including many from the LA and Antelope Valley areas.

Tomorrow it should be a touch higher and in darker skies being further away from the Sun. I may also try to go find a spot outside of the area and away from all of the lights of the city.

We’ll see.

“Never give up, never surrender,” and all of that folderol.

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And Now Clouds

Week after week after week of “clear & a million” when Comet A3 was in the morning sky and then rounding the Sun and unable to be seen at all.

Now, we’re a day or two away from it coming out from the Sun’s glare and popping up above the western horizon just after sunset and the clouds have started rolling into SoCal.

It’s all very pretty, I love clouds, and the high, wispy ones are very delicate and beautious, but…

…with all due respect, can I politely request that they GO AWAY for the next week or two?

Which god’s dog did I kick?

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