Stuff in the Sky

Canuck from Kansas

Aimlessly wondering through life
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Finally had a clear night and found Comet 12P/Pans Brooks.

Always a thrill to see a new comet for the first time !
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Was also actually, to my surprise, able to capture a couple of images, but it is so low one my horizon, about 18 degrees, that it's tough to get a good image.

Sony Alpha 77 at 600 mm, 4 x 30 second exposure

Pons-Brooks - 03-21-2024-PS-Cropped copy.jpg

Zenithstar 80, heavily cropped (about 100%) to remove some color casting, unfortunately, not able to bring out the tail but you can see the nucleus, which almost appears as a double nucleus. I could be capturing a fracture, Pons-Brooks is cryovolcanic, meaning it's nucleus fractures due to solar radiation, creating fissures and causing it to spray cryomagma into space (https://www.space.com/devil-comet-hidden-spiral-icy-heart)

Pons-Brooks-PS2-cropped copy.jpg

Cheers
 

Gyrfalcon22

Life of the Party
Was not sure if you were in path of totality. It would be nice to get more practice in with solar eclipses. Years and decades in between is not conducive to staying sharp.
I totally forgot to increase the contrast in camera and use a polarizing filter. Yet, I know it was likely not to help that much. I did luck into the craziness of stacking two polarizing filters on last solar eclipse to create a strong ND/solar filter that actually worked well. But not enough of a view to worry this round.

Please post if you got anything. Day astronomy phase over.
 
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Canuck from Kansas

Aimlessly wondering through life
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Did anybody else see the north lights last night? This is semi-coastal WA. 3 hour show. I had to learn on the fly so was glad it was a long one !

I expected it to be short so I stuck with no tripod for the first 2 hours.

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Beautiful!! Been waaaaay too many years since I have been able to see an aurora. Hopefully moving a bit further north will help, I need to see them again. Thanks for posting.



Cheers
 
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Gyrfalcon22

Life of the Party
Thank you. My best ever event. I have not seen a good aurora show in a super long time and it was always just greens, but I recall some strong storms with superb naked eye viewing. The red was throwing me. Unexpected.

The moon is too strong. I wonder how it would have been in no moon sky..

Spooky to ponder.
 

Canuck from Kansas

Aimlessly wondering through life
Forum Supporter
Thank you. My best ever event. I have not seen a good aurora show in a super long time and it was always just greens, but I recall some strong storms with superb naked eye viewing. The red was throwing me. Unexpected.

The moon is too strong. I wonder how it would have been in no moon sky..

Spooky to ponder.

Spooky is a good word. When I was on Baffin Island, they were directly overhead, reds, greens, blues, sliding across the sky. Like many, I swear I could hear them, sort of hissing. Spooky is a very good word
 

RRSmith

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This subject matter is limited within the troposphere ha ha. I just returned from working Tour 1 for Tempest Tours - we started in Oklahoma City and drove about 3500 miles from the Rio Grande to I-70 in Kansas for the 8 day tour. The weather pattern was overall crummy except at the end when it went bonkers. We found this low precipitation supercell near Tribune, Kansas on April 25th. I love the structure of these storms and you can really see the rotation in this brief time lapse I did with my iPhone.



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Canuck from Kansas

Aimlessly wondering through life
Forum Supporter
This subject matter is limited within the troposphere ha ha. I just returned from working Tour 1 for Tempest Tours - we started in Oklahoma City and drove about 3500 miles from the Rio Grande to I-70 in Kansas for the 8 day tour. The weather pattern was overall crummy except at the end when it went bonkers. We found this low precipitation supercell near Tribune, Kansas on April 25th. I love the structure of these storms and you can really see the rotation in this brief time lapse I did with my iPhone.



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The skies are one of the things we really miss about the farm in Kansas, they could be soooo menacing, but sooo fascinating. Not sure we miss time in the bunker we had off the basement, an old water cistern, when the sirens went off, but do miss the skies.

Reason for edit: Had to fix "festinating", cause I have no idea what that means

Cheers
 
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RRSmith

Life of the Party
Forum Supporter
The skies are one of the things we really miss about the farm in Kansas, they could be soooo menacing, but sooo fascinating. Not sure we miss time in the bunker we had off the basement, an old water cistern, when the sirens went off, but do miss the skies.

Reason for edit: Had to fix "festinating", cause I have no idea what that means

Cheers
Our youngest daughter attended college for two years in Salina - it was always terrifying to us when she had to go into the basement during tornado warnings.
 
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