Wednesday, 25 February 2015

The King 2015



The Planet Jupiter and three of its Galilean Moons: a composite photograph of several images taken with my QHY5v planetary camera attached to my 127mm Meade Refractor with a 2.5 x Barlow lens
Jupiter is a giant gas planet. Its atmosphere is made up of mostly hydrogen and helium gas, similar to our Sun. The planet's surface is covered in thick red, brown, yellow and white clouds.  Jupiter is a very windy planet. Wind speeds range from 192 mph to more than 400 mph. The temperature in the clouds of Jupiter is about minus 145 degrees Celsius . The temperature near the planet's center is much, much hotter. The core temperature may be about 24,000 degrees Celsius. 

 Jupiter has an extremely powerful magnetic field.  Deep under Jupiter's clouds is a huge ocean of liquid metallic hydrogen. As Jupiter spins, the swirling liquid metal core creates the strongest magnetic field in the Solar System. At the tops of the clouds (tens of thousands of kilometers above where the field is created), Jupiter's magnetic field is 20 times stronger than the magnetic field on Earth. The interaction  between Jupiter and its inner moon Io creates am immense power source that generates radio signal bursts at 25MHz.. I might try to record these signals using the LVST.

For more information about the Lowestoft Very Small (radio) Telescope (LVST) follow the link:

The Planet Jupiter has just passed opposition and is shining brightly, high in Northern Hemisphere skies for much of the night.  Having been proper poorly with 'man flu', the telescope has remained in its case and Jupiter has shone upon our backyard ignored.  On the 21st of February I could resist  the call of the 'King of the Planets' no longer.  My telescope, placed upon its mount, tracking and pointed at Jupiter collected the light which had traveled from the Sun and had been reflected back off the Jovian cloud tops.







 

Various meteorological features may be seen in my images Jupiter's upper atmosphere:

  • The Northern and Southern Polar Regions and their associated Northern and Southern Temperate Zones
  • The North and South Equatorial belts (The dark red/magenta stripes running across the disc)
  • The Northern Temperate Belt (The thin dark stripe above the North Equatorial Belt)
  • The  Northern  Tropical Zone (The thick white stripe between the Northern Equatorial Belt and the Northern Temperate Belt)
  • The Equatorial Zone (The thick white stripe between the Northern and Southern Equatorial Belts)
  • The Southern Tropical Zone (The white stripe below the Southern Equatorial Belt)
  • The Southern Temperate Belt (running directly below the Southern Tropical Zone)
  • The Great Red Spot an enormous anticyclone (on Jupiter's eastern limb on the southern edge of the Southern Equatorial Belt)
  • 3 or 4 white/pink ovals, anticyclonic storm systems, disrupting the flow of the Southern Temperate Belt
  • Blue and white festoons in Equatorial Zone
 Credits: some text NASA

Saturday, 14 February 2015

The Running Man Nebula


The Running Man Nebula and the Orion Molecular Cloud taken from our Backyard in February 2015- Canon 600D DSLR and 127mm Meade Refractor (unguided)





Often missed because of their visual proximity to the Great Orion Molecular cloud, the reflection nebulae located to its north,  present a dark image which is known as  the Running Man Nebula.

In particular, the beautiful grouping of reflection nebulae NGC 1977, NGC 1975, and NGC 1973 in Orion are often overlooked in favor of the substantial stellar nursery better known as the Orion Nebula. Found along the sword of Orion just north of the bright Orion Nebula complex, these nebulae are also associated with Orion's giant molecular cloud which lies about 1,500 light-years away, but are dominated by the characteristic blue color of interstellar dust reflecting light from hot young stars.   Taken together, the dark regions suggest to many the shape of a running man.  " I'll be back"!

Credits: some text from NASA

http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap031002.html

Tuesday, 3 February 2015

Toot by Kitty-light

Tooty by Kitty Roberts 2015
The Oulton Broad Gallery is displaying 'Tooty' by Bushey artist Kitty Roberts. Kitty is famous for her use of vibrant colour and line to express movement and 'joie de vivre'. She is a member of the 'Watford Two' group of painters.

Solar Eclipses 1999 and 2015


Solar Eclipse Brittany 1999 - Watercolour and mixed digital media 1999 and 2015 George Roberts
The other day, I noticed an old water-colour sketch of mine on the wall outside my son and daughter's bathroom. With the forthcoming solar eclipse visible in March 2015, I thought I would resurrect my sketch using the full palette offered by Adobe Photoshop.  In 1999, Toot and I and a selection of our children were in Brittany and traveled north to ensure that at the appropriate time we were located within the path of totality .

As we drove up the Cotentin Peninsula towards Cherbourg, we witnessed the moon bite into the sun's disc. In good time, we parked and awaited totality. As we gazed at the diminishing and darkening crescent sun, storm clouds rolled in off the Atlantic. Sadly, we were never to see totality or the Sun's Corona but we did watch dumbstruck as totality's shadow raced towards us across the fields. We witnessed the eerie silence as wild birds were fooled into an early roost and we did see the 'diamond ring' affect before the sun was lost in cloud.

I painted the above picture to try and capture the peculiar and sublime light that is associated with the dimming of the sun as totality is approached.  I chose Mont St. Michel as the subject of the painting for its medieval aura which is enhanced by the unreal twilight of the eclipse.

If you are lucky enough to live in or be visiting the Faeroe Islands or Svalbard on the 20th of March 2015 you might, weather permitting, get to see a total eclipse of the sun. If you live in the United Kingdom, you will around 9.30am GMT, see a partial eclipse in which the Sun's disc will be approximately 90% obscured by the moon. The further north you are in the UK the more of the sun will be obscured but good weather is essential. 

PLEASE REMEMBER VIEWING THE SUN EVEN WHEN PARTIALLY ECLIPSED CAN SERIOUSLY DAMAGE YOUR EYES AND NEVER LOOK AT THE SUN THROUGH BINOCULARS OR A TELESCOPE AS YOU WILL BE PERMANENTLY BLINDED. Solar eclipse glasses using specially treated Mylar film can be obtained from reputable astronomy suppliers via the internet.