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Venus
Nipped out of work before lunch to go & have a look at the transit of Venus, in Parks. There was an impressive crowd of people there, including my old tutor Martin Noble, and Richard Dawkins. Various telescopes had been set up, and there were long (but fast-moving) queues waiting to have a look through them.
Photos here
There were two semi-naked women kissing, but I didn't think it appropriate to use the work camera to photograph them. :-) (Not to mention, like, asking their permission or anything).
Quite pleased with the photo of the sun, too - taken through a telescope, just pointing the digicam into the eyepiece.
Photos here
There were two semi-naked women kissing, but I didn't think it appropriate to use the work camera to photograph them. :-) (Not to mention, like, asking their permission or anything).
Quite pleased with the photo of the sun, too - taken through a telescope, just pointing the digicam into the eyepiece.
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Nice pics though.
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i like the second telescoped shot - i presume the big snooker ball is the sun and the tiny black circle in the bottom left is venus.. /me wonders what sort of filter makes the sun look like that.
most unfair depriving us of seminaked girls. ;-)
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* sunspots are colder regions of the solar atmosphere, so look dark, Faculae are hotter regions so are brighter and pale against the sun. Sunspot and faculae groups tend to occur in pairs, though not always close to each other. They show regions of convection where material of a different temperature to the sun's surface is being convected down from or up to the surface.
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by we saw, do you mean in that picture? or do you me you and some other unknown people?
black drop effect?
thanks for the spot/faculae education. :-)
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The other end of the 'scope was covered with a heavily-silvered foil commonly used for observing the sun. The generic term is 'mylar', I don't know if they differ at all in coating/darkness.
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Black drop - the edge effect when two edges nearly touch. http://www.transitofvenus.org/blackdrop.htm
No problem re education - not sure if you knew or not but it was aimed in general at any reader who didn't.
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i'm generally not very knowledgeable about astronomy things - i don't really take much interest. i love to look at things like hubble photos, but looking at the stars or whatnot with my own eyes seems a bit pointless, because you never see anything particular impressive or interesting.
my main interest in space has always been the rockets and other craft - really just glorified aeroplanes, a long standing interest.
*shrug* i have no romance or something.