Well, I'm guilty of neglect, I admit it. I haven't posted anything on this blog in what feels like forever.
I haven't been idle, though.
Following the transit of Venus, I've been busy planning the trip to Australia and New Zealand for November's total solar eclipse and I've went to an Astrocamp, organized by the local Astroclub. It was great! I'll have to write about that in a separate post.
Oh, I finally learned how to focus using liveview! :)
Big accomplished for moi ;)
I plan on working on some photos this weekend so maybe... just maybe :D ... I'll have a new post by the end of the week...
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Monday, June 18, 2012
The Transit of Venus - 06.06.2012
One of this year's most important astronomical event has come and gone. It's been almost two weeks since the event, but only now I've managed to work on the photos and find some quiet time to update my blog.
First and foremost, it's been a wonderful adventure, one that I will always remember fondly.
This adventure starts Tuesday evening, on June 5th, with pretty glum weather forecasts. It seems like the best chance for a clear sky lies about 150-200 km west from Bucharest. There's also a chance the skies will clear at about 150-200 km east. So... what to do and which direction to take. After all, the next transit is in 2117 so... no pressure. My team decides to go west, while the other members of the Bucharest Astroclub decide to go east. I feel like a tornado chaser, only we're chasing patches of clear skies :)
I pack my borrowed equipment (since I don't have a scope of my own yet), my cameras and my tripod and off we go. We leave the city at about 11 pm, just in time to make it to the selected site by sunrise. No incidents on the way, we pick a nice wheat field almost in the middle of nowhere and we set our equipment with time to spare...
By 5.30 am the sky looks clear, but awful winds threaten the sunrise... As it is, the sunrise comes and of course, in accord to Murphy's laws, the event happens behind a thick curtain of clouds... For the next minutes, we're all on edge looking at the sky and hoping that the winds will move the clouds fast enough so that we might actually see something.
As if our prayers were listened to, at about 6.25 am the Sun makes a quick appearance (for a few minutes) and then hides behind the clouds again. I am able to take a few photos, but my settings are off, so they're underexposed... (as you can see). In my defense, it's the first time I've photographed the sun with a filter on and I was expecting an ISO of 200 or 400 to be enough...
The next hour is horrible for me. With only these images taken until now, I'm almost in a state of panic. All I could think of was that I really needed to get at least one good photo of the transit.
Apparently, someone loves me up there, because in the last half hour of the transit, the sky clears and the sun is waiting for the photo session.
Here are a few of my photos. They're not processed too much... They're also a bit out of focus because the winds were really strong and my mount was not one of the sturdiest...
All in all, it's been an incredible adventure and I'm looking forward to the next "hunt".
First and foremost, it's been a wonderful adventure, one that I will always remember fondly.
This adventure starts Tuesday evening, on June 5th, with pretty glum weather forecasts. It seems like the best chance for a clear sky lies about 150-200 km west from Bucharest. There's also a chance the skies will clear at about 150-200 km east. So... what to do and which direction to take. After all, the next transit is in 2117 so... no pressure. My team decides to go west, while the other members of the Bucharest Astroclub decide to go east. I feel like a tornado chaser, only we're chasing patches of clear skies :)
I pack my borrowed equipment (since I don't have a scope of my own yet), my cameras and my tripod and off we go. We leave the city at about 11 pm, just in time to make it to the selected site by sunrise. No incidents on the way, we pick a nice wheat field almost in the middle of nowhere and we set our equipment with time to spare...
By 5.30 am the sky looks clear, but awful winds threaten the sunrise... As it is, the sunrise comes and of course, in accord to Murphy's laws, the event happens behind a thick curtain of clouds... For the next minutes, we're all on edge looking at the sky and hoping that the winds will move the clouds fast enough so that we might actually see something.
As if our prayers were listened to, at about 6.25 am the Sun makes a quick appearance (for a few minutes) and then hides behind the clouds again. I am able to take a few photos, but my settings are off, so they're underexposed... (as you can see). In my defense, it's the first time I've photographed the sun with a filter on and I was expecting an ISO of 200 or 400 to be enough...
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06:30:54 am; Corabia, Romania |
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06:38:50 am, Corabia, Romania |
Apparently, someone loves me up there, because in the last half hour of the transit, the sky clears and the sun is waiting for the photo session.
Here are a few of my photos. They're not processed too much... They're also a bit out of focus because the winds were really strong and my mount was not one of the sturdiest...
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07:424:42 am |
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07:29:20 am |
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07:32:32 am |
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07:35:44 am |
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07:36:56 am |
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07:37:54 am - the Third Contact |
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07:38:46 am - the Third Contact |
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07:41:46 am |
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07:46:50 am |
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07:49:34 am |
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07:52:04 am |
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07:53:46 am - almost gone now and the Forth Contact is almost here |
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07:54:58 am - Venus is gone |
All in all, it's been an incredible adventure and I'm looking forward to the next "hunt".
Sunday, January 1, 2012
First photos of 2012
Happy New Year everyone!
And here is Venus above the city, as seen from my balcony:
2012 starts with the first night with clear skies in weeks. So I could not pass up the opportunity to take some photos from my balcony: one with the Moon and Jupiter and one with Venus above the city.
The pictures may not be my absolute best, since I feel pretty rusty. It's been a long time since I found the time to indulge in my new hobby. One of my New Year's Resolutions is to practice more.
In the meantime, here is the photo of the Moon and Jupiter (Jupiter is the small dot on the far left of the Moon):
And here is Venus above the city, as seen from my balcony:
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