Sunday, July 21, 2019

#194 - Saturday, July 6, 2019 - In the Atacama Desert

After a few more days in La Serena following the solar eclipse, we started a three-day road trip up the coast and then inland to Calama, and then on to San Pedro de Atacama.  We stayed overnight in ChaƱaral and Antofagasta on the way up.  The desert landscape was like from another world!  There were many places where there was absolutely nothing but rock and sand.  And the occasional guanaco.  We got out at a guanaco observing spot near the Paranal Observatory, and sure enough, we saw one!  And then it made a funny noise and ran off.  Besides the crunching of our feet on the gravel, it was absolutely, perfectly silent.  We couldn't even hear the wind in this little valley we were in.  I had never heard such wide-open silence before; it was totally eerie and incredible.  A Girl Scout badge I led with a middle school group when I was in college talked about different kinds of pollution, including sound pollution, and it talked about the quietest square inch of space on Earth.  When a car wasn't passing by, this had to be it!


We were basically on Mars.  But with more oxygen.

What made it especially crazy was the fact that we were not at all far from the ocean.  In some places, we could see barren desert one one side of the road and crashing waves on the other!

The highway we were on took us past the Paranal site of the European Southern Observatory, and while we hadn't been able to get a tour there when we tried, we hoped there might be a cancellation, and at least we could see them from a distance if not.  We were out of luck, but the gate guard let us use the restroom there and re-fill out waterbottles, which was very nice.  We took plenty of pictures from the parking lot.  Yay for my long lens!

Paranal Observatory, from a distance

Posing with the sign

The altitude at the parking lot was around 7800 feet!  

In Antofagasta, our hotel was right on the beach, so we enjoyed watching the waves ceaselessly roll in, ever-changing, but ever the same.  It was hypnotizing.  

The Pacific Ocean -- the color of the water was beautiful!

On the third day of the road trip, Thursday, we drove for three hours from the coast up to the 7400 feet of the town of Calama.  We stopped at a large grocery store there called Jumbo (like Chilean Walmart, but a little nicer), since it was easier to get supplies there than in San Pedro de Atacama.  However, due to the sudden change in altitude, we were all lethargic, sick, and crabby.  So we tried our best to hold ourselves together while we shopped quickly, and then drove the next hour to San Pedro de Atacama, and the Atacama Lodge.

The Atacama Lodge is an amateur astronomer's dream land, owned by French ex-pat Alain Maury, himself an astronomer who grew tired of the light pollution and the politics of France and sought better skies.  It grew to be part robotic scope operation, part astro-tourism, a few kilometers south of the touristy village of San Pedro de Atacama in northern Chile, lying in the shadow of the volcanic Andes Mountains.  He hand-built a sunflower field of telescopes, with which he hosts nightly tours in three languages to showcase the wonders of the Southern skies.  


Less of a hotel and more of a nice set of adobe cabins, the accommodations were charming and fun.


My room

John & Beth's room

Gorgeous mosaic tile in the bathroom

Kitchen & dining area, complete with cookware and dishes.  And, very importantly -- a coffee maker!

Actual thatch roof!

Bonus, it had a heater, which none of our previous hotels had, which was a godsend.  The forecast showed that it would dip into the 30s every night!

Once Alain himself finally returned from a grocery run to Calama, he quickly got me set up on the Sky-Watcher AZEQ6 with a Takahashi FSQ-85ED before he had to zip off for that night's astro-tours.  The mount was located in a giant motor-driven rolloff shed that contained several robotic scopes owned by people from around the world, including one owned by none other than Guylain Rochon, the man behind the BackyardNikon and BackyardEOS camera-control software that I use.  Since the shed automatically opened and closed at sundown and sunup, I'd be able to leave everything connected, and it would be kept safe from the heat and the dust during the day.


Alain ran back to his house and got the key for the little half-door, but couldn't get it to unlock.  After much effort, including attempting to remove the lock from the door (he just jumped over the half-wall to get to the inside), we finally just set up a chair on the inside and outside to use to help climb over the wall!  I got pretty good at it by the end of the night in the dark.

The Takahashi didn't have a guide scope attached, but Alain said it wouldn't need it, and I hoped he was right.  I had prepped the software on my computer for plugging the hand controller in via serial-to-USB cable and running it using the SynScan driver and app, but he didn't have that cable -- instead, the AZEQ6 had a direct USB cable, like the Celestron CGX-L mount, which I had no idea it had.  This required EQMOD to run.  Before it got properly dark, I went back to the wifi in the lodge to install EQMOD, but I couldn't get the driver to show up in ASCOM when I tried to connect to it in Cartes du Ciel.  So instead, since I wasn't guiding, I just used the hand controller and didn't bother with trying to control it from my computer.  I just hoped the gotos would be good enough to not need a finderscope, which it also didn't have.  I got my ZWO ASI1600MM Pro and Starlight Xpress 2-inch filter wheel attached without issue.  Alain had a Takahashi-to-T-thread adapter handy (although I had brought mine just in case). 

My ZWO ASI1600MM Pro camera and Starlight Xpress filter wheel attached to Alain Maury's Takahashi FSQ-85ED on a Sky-Watcher AZEQ6 mount.

Sunset was gorgeous, especially the way the Andes changed colors.  I have a timelapse video that I'll put together (eventually), which I'm really excited about.


Once it got darker, I needed to get the camera focused.  I had it slew to a bright star, but since I wasn't sure how well polar aligned it was at the moment, that star did not end up in the field of view of the camera.  I cranked up the screen stretch on the histogram in SharpCap, but still couldn't even see any giant blobs.  So instead, I slewed it myself over toward some patch of the Milky Way, where I knew there would be stars in the field no matter where I pointed.  After over-stretching the histogram, I saw some giant blobs, and was able to get the scope roughly focused for alignment.  I would like to take a moment to point out something amazing -- this is a one-second exposure.  There were so many stars!  It was so dark that many more stars than usual could stand out.


Wowee!!
Next, I ran the polar alignment process in SharpCap, which it was capable of doing in the southern hemisphere the same way it does in the northern -- by way of plate solving.  


It was during this process than I ran into my next stumbling block -- Alain had showed me where the RA and dec clutch knobs were, but I couldn't remember where the RA one was.  So I tried various things for about 15 minutes before I finally figured it out!  But I finally got the darn thing polar aligned.  I also balanced it before polar aligning, although I wasn't able to balance it in dec because I ran out of dovetail to move it any more forward to compensate for my camera gear on the back.

Next was alignment, which I did with the hand controller in a very similar process to Celestron.  The stars landed in the FOV for every star, which was very exciting and helpful.  Finally, after focusing on a bright star with the Bahtinov mask I'd brought with me, it was time to line up my first target.  I chose something easy -- compact and relatively bright -- for my first target: Centaurus A.  It's a large, oddly-shaped galaxy, somewhere between 10-16 million lightyears away, also sometimes called the Hamburger Galaxy. Viewing it visually makes that moniker choice obvious -- it was a bright upper and lower hemisphere, split by a thick dark band of dust, making it look very much like an enormous hamburger in the sky.  You can see it from the southern United States -- from the 29 degrees north latitude of the Texas Star Party, it crests at 12 degrees off the horizon or so, just high enough to let it peak for an hour or two above the hills.  But here at 22 degrees south, it was quite high in the sky, with much less atmosphere between me and it.  Thanks to the dark skies, it was very easy to see with 1-second exposures in SharpCap, so I centered it by hand, switched over to SequenceGenerator Pro, keyed up the sequence I wanted, and let it run.  The plan I had developed several months ago for which targets I was going to image when called for starting with RGB that night before changing targets for the second half of the night -- with RGB, I'd have a complete dataset, in case something broke later in the week and I didn't get to finish.  Having a luminance channel is great, but not required.  

I took a few test frames first to see how long it would track for, and I got as far as 5 minutes with just the tracking, and my stars were still mostly round!  I set the exposure time to 3 minutes so I could get more frames, and because that was long enough for the ZWO in these dark skies with this brighter target.  

Single 180s red channel frame, screen-stretched & zoomed in

The RGB frames looked a little out of focus, so partway through the night, I slewed over to a nearby bright star and checked the focus with a Bahtinov mask.  I tweaked it slightly, but it was very close.  I cinched down the focus lock a little tighter, slewed back to Centaurus A, and carried on.

Single 180s blue channel frame

While the ZWO was running, I set up my Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer with my Nikon D5300 and 70-300mm lens attached again, which I found some space for in the shed as well. Polar aligning this one was going to be harder -- I had no SharpCap to help me.  (I am working on putting together a rig for one of my guidescopes that will attach to the second camera screw on the Star Adventurer, which I could use both for polar alignment and for auto-guiding.  Yes, the Star Adventurer has a ST-4 port!)  I used my cell phone to get it pointed due south and get the elevation close to correct, but I couldn't see the Octans trapezoid in the polar scope still.  So I pointed it to the eastern horizon and then to zenith to do some drift alignment, which helped a bit.  I pulled the zoom on the lens back to something around 135mm, focused it, and then turned it to the glorious Eta Carinae Nebula.  I was able to get about 90s exposure times with minimal streaking, so I set it there and let it run.

Later in the night, I had a brainwave -- the Takahashi clamshell ring had a 1/4-20 tripod screw on the top!  So I took one of my ball heads and attached it to the top, and grabbed my Nikon D3100 and my new 35mm f/1.8 Nikon lens and got everything attached.  I aimed it up somewhere in the middle of the Milky Way (yes, up, overhead!!), vaguely toward M8 & M20, and took a 30-second test exposure at f/2.  I went to check on my D5300, and caught a quick glimpse of the D3100 image once it had completed and flashed onto the screen, and I froze.  I stood there for a moment, dumbfounded.  Did I just see what I think I saw?  I fumbled for the Review button, and it re-appeared on the screen. Holy McShitNuggets (were the actual words that came out of my mouth), it was incredible!

30s exposure pointing up toward the Milky Way with my Nikon D3100 and 35mm f/1.8 lens at f/2.

So I just left the camera pointed there, set it to 60s exposures at ISO-800 and f/2, and let it roll!

After all this work, everything was clicking away happily, so I went back to the lodge to warm up, take a break, and have a snack.  After the break, John, Beth and I wandered over to a lone 24-inch Dob beside another one of the cabins, which was being used by part of a large French group that was also visiting the Atacama Lodge.  Between people, we snuck in to observe the massive globular cluster 47 Tucanae.  Located about 13,000 lightyears away, it has about 10,000 stars packed into a ball about 120 lightyears wide.  It's large and bright enough to be easily seen naked eye just off the edge of the Small Magellanic Cloud, and is second only to the Omega Centauri cluster.  47 Tuc may even have a black hole at its center.  It spans an area of the sky that is wider than the full Moon by almost twice!  It was so spectacular in the large telescope that it prompted me to shout "Holy mackerel!" (yes that is what I actually said), which garnered some chuckles from the French.  

We walked up to the main field to nab a scope up there to use for the night, but the French had commandeered all of them.  So I went back over to my cameras to check on things.  Eta Carinae had gotten too low to continue imaging, and it was time to change targets on the Takahashi as well, so I took the opportunity to swap lenses between the Nikon D3100 and D5300 so I could put the longer lens on the mount that was tracking more precisely.  However, this proved to be too heavy for the Sky-Watcher AZEQ6 mount, for which I already had the counterweight at the bottom of the rail, and gravity overcame the RA clutch knob and the scope slipped over!  I caught it, and it was not like it was totally loose or anything, but it did mean that I had to start over with alignment.  I tried to tighten down the RA axis some more, but I couldn't get it any tighter.  Alain had said he'd look for a second counterweight in the daylight.  So I took the camera off, re-aligned (gotos weren't as good this time, however), and pointed it to my second target for the night, a galaxy in the southern constellation Pavo called NGC 6744.  

I started with the L channel this time, but it looked out of focus.  So I checked focus again with a Bahtinov mask, but it was still perfect.  I thought that maybe it was evenly-sided periodic error or something.

180s luminance image of NGC 6744, zoomed in

I pressed on anyway, since I wasn't sure what else to do.  Then I went over to my Nikon D5300 and set it up on the Small Magellanic Cloud with the 35mm lens.

Around 3:30 AM, I was petering out.  The long day and high altitude were making me extra-tired.  So I shut down the power to everything like Alain had asked me to, and got into bed around 4:15 AM.

It was a great night!  I got my imaging rigs rolling, the sky was incredible, and the Milky Way was simply mind-blowing.  We couldn't quite see any color, but the transparency might not have been the clearest that night due to the earlier clouds.  There were also some clouds still down near the horizon.  But the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds that appeared later in the night were easy to spot, as well as a large number of deep sky objects with averted vision.  I couldn't wait for the rest of the week!  We had five full nights under these skies!

[ Update July 21, 2019 ] 

I processed this image last weekend, but now that I finally got this log entry written, here is the Eta Carinae Nebula!

Date: 6 July 2019
Location: Atacama Lodge, San Pedro de Atacama, Chile
Object: Eta Carinae Nebula
Attempt: 1
Camera: Nikon D5300
Telescope: Nikon 70-300mm lens @ 90mm, f/4.5
Accessories: N/A
Mount: Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer
Subframes: 54x90s (1h21m)
Gain/ISO: ISO-1600
Acquisition method: Intervalometer
Stacking program: PixInsight 1.8.6
Post-Processing program: PixInsight 1.8.6
Darks: 0
Biases: 0
Flats: 0
Temperature: 33-36F

The stars came out a little bloated, and it turns out I was closer to 90mm than the 135mm-ish I thought I set it to, but isn't it a gorgeous region??  

Featured here is the Eta Carinae Nebula, which is a massive stellar nursery located in the constellation Carina, or "keel of the ship."  It's about 8,500 lightyears from us, and is 460 lightyears across!  From our perspective here on Earth, it's four times larger and is brighter than the famous Orion Nebula!  Unfortunately, however, you can only see it from southern skies.

It has a multitude of interesting stellar objects contained within.  One such object is the star Eta Carinae itself, which is an extremely luminous hypergiant star, weighing in at 100-150 times the mass of our Sun, and outputting four million times more light.  Due to its large mass, it is likely to go supernova in the near future ("near" in astronomical terms, of course). 

Immediately surrounding the star Eta Carinae is the Homunculus Nebula (probably the coolest nebula name ever, meaning "Little Man" in Latin, which sounds much less cool), which is the result of a huge outburst from Eta Carinae seen on Earth in 1841, which for a short time made it one of the brightest stars in the sky.  It's a very oddly-shaped nebula, and there are some very cool pictures out there of it!  

Also pictured here are the Southern Pleiades to the left, and the tighter open cluster NGC 3532 (also called the Pincushion Cluster, Football Cluster, or Wishing Well Cluster) to the upper right, as well as several other clusters.  

Here's how I processed it in PixInsight:

- Since I don't have any 90s dark frames at those temperatures, I skipped right to SubframeSelector
- Image scale: 8.97 arcsec/px
- Gain: 0.115 e/ADU
- Highest scoring frame: DSC_0050 (88.648)
- Debayered
- Registered with StarAlignment, with DSC_0050 as reference
- Stacked with ImageIntegration, using Linear Fit Clipping for rejection
- Cropped with DynamicCrop
- Applied DynamicBackgroundExtraction
- Color corrected with PhotometricColorCalibration
- Tried Deconvolution, but didn't like how it made the stars look
- Denoised with MultiscaleLinearTransform
- Stretched with HistogramTransformation
- Applied HDRMultiscaleTransform, 7 iterations, with lum mask
- Touched up with CurvesTransformation and HistogramTransformation

I'll probably go back and re-process this one and try to get the stars to not dominate the image as much.  We just discussed this on The Astro Imaging Channel last week, so I'll have to go back and re-watch it.

[ More update July 21, 2019 ] 

After I posted some of the screenshots of the Centaurus A galaxy, I realized the data didn't look as bad as I thought.  So I spent the later part of the afternoon processing that data.

I realized when I was filling in my documentation text file that somehow the gain got set to only 10 for this dataset, for which I have no dark frames.  I tried processing with gain 0 frames, but the calibrated light frames came out pretty much nuked of light.  So I went ahead and processed without calibration frames, but they turned out not to be that necessary, since I had my sensor cooled to -30C.  I didn't take any luminance data, although in a future re-do of this dataset, I might crop and re-scale this color data and add it to the luminance data I took of Centaurus A at the Texas Star Party.  It may or may not help, since Centaurus A was much lower in the sky -- and thus in the thicker, nastier part of the atmosphere -- but it might be worth a shot.

Anyway, here it is!

Date: 6 July 2019
Location: Atacama Lodge, San Pedro de Atacama, Chile
Object: Centaurus A
Attempt: 2
Camera: ZWO ASI1600MM Pro
Telescope: Takahashi FSQ-85ED
Accessories: Starlight Xpress filter wheel, Astrononik LRGB Type 2c 2-inch filters
Mount: Sky-Watcher AZEQ6 (Alain Murray's)
Guide scope: N/A
Guide camera: N/A
Subframes: R: 28x180s
   G: 26x180s
   B: 10x180s
   Total: 64x180s (3h12m)
Gain/ISO: 10 (not sure how that happened)
Acquisition method: SequenceGenerator Pro
Stacking program: PixInsight 1.8.6
Post-Processing program: PixInsight 1.8.6
Darks: 0
Biases: 0
Flats: 0
Temperature: -30C (chip)

This might be only my 'official' second attempt, but I had tried to image it before but ran into other issues that led me to not keep that data.  So I'm happy to finally have an image of this cool galaxy!  It's not only cool to look at in its weirdness, but its weirdness has made it an interesting target of study.  Centaurus A is somewhere between 10-16 million lightyears away -- no one is quite sure.  It doesn't fit cleanly into any established galaxy category, and its odd shape is probably a result of a galaxy merger.  At the center of that galaxy is a 56-million-solar-mass black hole that is blasting out jets that move at half the speed of light and emit brightly in x-ray and radio.  They extend out to a million lightyears!  Very cool galaxy to look at.  It's also on the top-5 list of the brightest galaxies in the sky as seen from Earth, so it makes a good visual observing target.

[ Update August 8, 2019 ] 

Still plowing through Chile datasets -- here's the Magellanic Cloud!  It turned out to be just a hair out of focus, so the quality isn't that great, but here it is anyway.

Date: 6 July 2019
Location: Atacama Lodge, San Pedro de Atacama, Chile
Object: Small Magellanic Cloud
Attempt: 1
Camera: Nikon D5300
Telescope: Nikon 35mm f/1.8G @ f/2
Accessories: N/A
Mount: Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer
Guide scope: N/A
Guide camera: N/A
Subframes: 28x90s (42m)
Gain/ISO: ISO-1600
Acquisition method: Intervalometer
Stacking program: PixInsight 1.8.6
Post-Processing program: PixInsight 1.8.6
Darks: 0
Biases: 20 (28F)
Flats: 0
Temperature: 32-35F

I did try to apply some deconvolution to see what sharpening could be done on the SMC, and with a small number of iterations, it helped a tiny bit.  I did try MaskedStretch for stretching the image, but it blew out the small pink and blue halos around the stars, which I didn't like.  So I re-stretched it myself with HistogramTransformation instead.

Here's the whole process:
- No darks, calibrated lights with pre-made superbias using ImageCalibration
- SubframeSelector:
- Scale: 23.07 arcsec/px
- Gain: 0.115 e/ADU
- Highest-scoring frame: DSC_0162 (85.313)
- Debayered
- Registered with StarAlignment
- Stacked with ImageIntegration
- Combination: Average
- Normalization: Additive
- Pixel rejection: Linear Fit Clipping
- Cropped with DynamicCrop
- Applied DynamicBackgroundExtraction
- Denoised with MultiscaleLinearTransform
- Color corrected with PhotometricColorCalibration
- Applied Deconvolution using DynamicPSF, range_mask-star_mask, 10 iterations
- Tried MaskedStretch, but stars got pink and blue halos, so I stretched it myself
with HistogramTransformation
- Tweaked with CurvesTransformation
- Applied HDRMultiscaleTransform, 9 iterations

[ Update August 15, 2019 ] 

Still chugging through Chile data!  Being in the middle of a move makes finding time and energy to do this difficult!  But I finally had some chill time to work on it.  

I processed the stack of the Milky Way I took with the 35mm lens piggybacked on the Sky-Watcher AZEQ6 mount -- the "Holy McShitNuggets" dataset -- and the result was truly excellent!  There was also almost zero drift across the whole time of the stack, which was awesome and gave me nice round stars.

Date: 6 July 2019
Location: Atacama Lodge, San Pedro de Atacama, Chile
Object: Milky Way
Attempt: 9
Camera: Nikon D3100
Telescope: Nikon 35mm f/1.8G @ f/2
Accessories: N/A
Mount: Piggyback on Takahashi FSQ85ED, on Sky-Watcher AZEQ6
Guide scope: N/A
Guide camera: N/A
Subframes: 39x60s (39m total)
Gain/ISO: ISO-800
Acquisition method: Intervalometer
Stacking program: PixInsight 1.8.6
Post-Processing program: PixInsight 1.8.6
Darks: 0
Biases: 0
Flats: 0
Temperature: 31-35F

I just can't get enough of that Milky Way!!  There are several interesting things here.
- The super bright thing on the right is Jupiter
- In the lower right is the Rho Ophiuchi complex, which I've recently shared closer-up images of. The brighter yellow-orange star is Antares.
- The dark upside-down-U-shaped nebula to the left of Jupiter is the Pipe Bowl Nebula, a giant molecular cloud
- The two fuzzy red regions in the center of the image are two emission nebulae - NGC 6357 on top, and the Cat's Paw Nebula on bottom
- Up above NGC 6357 is open cluster M7, Ptolemy's Cluster
- In the lower left of the image, the other red nebula region is emission nebula IC 4628, surrounded by stars that are part of the Trumpler 24 open cluster

...and much more, of course!

This one was a pretty quick job.  Being one-shot color and not having issues or light pollution helped!
Here's the PixInsight processing:
- No darks or biases b/c I don't have a library for my D3100
- SubframeSelector:
- Scale: 25.9 arcsec/px
- Gain: 0.115 e/ADU (not actually measured, just borrowed from D5300)
- Debayered
- Registered with StarAlignment, using highest-scoring frame was reference
- Stacked with ImageIntegration
- Combination: Average
- Normalization: Additive
- Pixel rejection: Linear fit clipping
- Tried skipping DynamicBackgroundExtraction and did PhotometricColorCalibration instead, since there's pretty much no light pollution and most of the image is Milky Way anyway
- Denoised with MultiscaleLinearTransform, with luminance mask
- Stretched with MaskedStretch
- Tried with target background 0.15, interesting result, but not a huge fan
- Tried again with target background 0.10
- Tried again with 0.05, but too low, so did 0.08 - let me try some curves on that
- Adjusted with CurvesTransformation
- Applied the DarkStructureEnhance script

I wanted to have nice contrast between the bright and dark areas, and show just the insane number of stars in the bulge.  I also wanted the dark nebulae to stand out nicely.  But I didn't want it to look too hard or electronic either -- kind of softer, like how it might appear to our eyes if they were more sensitive.  As with many of my images, I'll probably mess around with it more in the future.  But I am quite pleased with this one!





Saturday, July 13, 2019

#193 - Tuesday, July 2, 2019 - Solar Eclipse in Chile

The day finally arrived -- the solar eclipse over South America!  After a year of planning, the day was finally upon us.  I had packed my backpack and backpack camera case for my Sky-Watcher mount the night before, and I woke up at 5 AM to catch our 6:30 AM bus from a nearby hotel.  We decided to book our eclipse day with Ecoturismo, with whom we had a daytime boat tour of the islands off the coast of Chile a few days prior for spotting the Humboldt penguin, among other creatures.

We made a few stops along the way to the village of La Higuera, about 50 km north of La Serena, including a gas station that was packed with people also travelling for the eclipse.  But I successfully got my coffee, and everyone hit the bathroom and got some snacks, and we were on our way.

A large area had been set up just outside of the small village of La Higuera.  Many people just pulled their cars off the dirt road and set up chairs and BBQs.


Ecoturismo had a couple of tents set up with a bunch of chairs and a large BBQ for feeding us all day.



A mobile cell tower had been erected as well, although bandwidth was limited because there were so many people there.  Away from the area where most of us were was a series of white tents where several celebrities were said to be watching the eclipse.  

I took my time getting my gear set up after we selected a spot so I could make sure I had everything right.  It was only about 9:30 AM or something around there, and the partial eclipse didn't start until 3:22 PM.  I attached my Nikon D5300 equipped with my Nikon 70-300mm lens at 300mm to my Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer DSLR tracker mount.  To polar align it (roughly) in the daytime, I used my phone's compass and the tilt angle indicator of my phone using an app called GPS Status that I use all the time for astronomy.  I weighted down my tripod with an open sack thing I found on Amazon that velcros to tripod legs, and I filled it with some rocks that were lying around.  Then I plugged the mount into a cell phone battery and plugged my camera's USB into my tablet.  I had logged into BackyardNikon the night before and left it open, and I tested the capture speed (sometimes it will trigger pictures every 3.5 seconds instead of 2.5 seconds, depending on whether it thinks it's a USB connection or serial cable).  I put my Baader solar filter on the end of the camera lens -- it's a homemade one that was given to me with the Borg 76ED that I got from a fellow astronomy club member, and it was a little too big for my camera lens, so I lined it with bubble wrap before I left for Chile.  I aimed the camera at the sun and focused it, and then taped down the focuser.  Then I was all ready to go.


Then it was a long wait!  I walked around and took pictures, browsed Facebook, sat back and enjoyed the sunshine, and chatted with numerous passers-by who were curious and amazed with my rig.  Most of the other people in attendance didn't bring any cameras; they were just there to observe.  

Showing our tour guide Felipe the partially-eclipse sun through out solar binoculars.  It took some effort to convince people these were safe because of their special built-in filters, which means that they were well-educated on the risks!

Beside where my group was hanging out was a Chilean family, and a pre-teen boy was trying to figure out a way to capture the partial phases with his Canon DSLR after seeing the sun through our sun-oculars.  He cut up a pair of solar glasses and taped it to the aperture, but it wasn't big enough to cover the whole thing.  I helped him out (with my terrible Spanish), and we found some other cardboard pieces and tape to block the rest of the aperture. Then I helped him with the settings, and showed him how to chase the sun as it moved across the sky.  He was very grateful and excited!  I told him he could remove the filter during totality.



I checked my rig periodically and adjusted the camera as needed to keep the sun centered (my polar alignment wasn't perfect, obviously).  I did accidentally kick the tripod at one point, but it wasn't too hard to get it back where it needed to be.  Finally, we had first contact, and it was only a minute or so after that that we could see the moon just edging over the sun through our sun-oculars.  It was a few more minutes before you could see it without magnification through the solar glasses.

I went over to my tablet about a minute or so before the partial phase started and hit "go" on my partial phase script.  This took a few different settings of images every 5 minutes on repeat.  

As the moon covered more and more of the sun, the quality of the light started to degrade, and I started looking for the pinhole effect, where light shining through a hole would have the crescent shape instead of a fully-lit circle.  I was looking around for something with small-ish holes, since that's easier to see than criss-crossing your fingers, and I found it -- the chair on my traveling companion Chris' cane had holes in it that were perfect!  So I tilted the chair toward the sun, and sure enough, you could see half-moon-shaped shadows of the holes on the ground.  I looked up a couple words in Spanish to explain this to the people around me, and then went and showed a bunch of people the effect.  My friends called me the science ambassador!

At long last, totality drew near, and I went over to my laptop to prepare the script for totality, which I would start at one minute till.  I called out times in English and Spanish for the people around me, started the script, and took off the solar filter at 20 seconds.  I didn't need to call out the last 10 seconds because I great shout went up, and nobody could hear me anyway.  I watched the moon blot out the entire sun, and it was an utterly eerie and incredible sight.  The sky darkened suddenly, and the corona slowly brightened into view.  People were shouting and cheering, and I took a video on my other DSLR at the beginning of totality to capture the moment.  


My traveling companion Manning shoved a pair of binoculars into my hands saying he could see prominences, but I didn't see them.  I did admire the corona in the binoculars, something I missed during the 2017 solar eclipse in Wyoming.  Then I took some wide images of the eclipse with my other DSLR, and I looked around to see the 360 degree sunset.  It was mostly cut off for us by the mountains, but I could see it all along the west, where they were lower.  I also looked around for stars and planets, and saw quite a few!  Venus was shining very brightly below the sun, and I looked for Jupiter in the east, but I think it was too low behind the mountains.  I thought I saw Mars and Mercury, but I wasn't 100% sure it was them.  I saw several stars, including Sirius, possibly Rigel, Procyon, Canopus, Alpha Centauri, and Arcturus I think.  

Nikon D3100, 18mm, f/3.5, 1/50s, ISO-400

Because the sun was lower in the sky, it looked larger (much more so than the above image indicates), but the corona didn't appear to be as large as the one in 2017.  There were also no sunspots earlier, and there has been very little solar activity lately.  

Seeing the sun as a black hole surrounded by a shimmering halo is totally eerie.  Your brain doesn't quite know what to make of it.  It was beautiful, natural and alien at the same time.

Then, just like that, my phone solar eclipse app ("Solar Eclipse Timer" on Android at least) was announcing "glasses on!", and I watched the sun re-emerge, which was spectacular.  Then I put the filter back on my camera, and kind of stood there for a bit, unsure of what exactly to do.  It went by so fast, it felt like less than 10 seconds!  Finally I went to check on my images, and the last couple with the thin sliver through the solar filter looked a little out of focus.  My heart sank.  Were they all out of focus??  I scrolled through and checked -- they were, by just a hair.  I had taped down the focuser, but the zoom had slid back at some point, which put it a little out of focus.  However, I held out hope that they would still look good on a larger screen, as long as you didn't zoom in.  I got some cool shots!

Just before second contact
Nikon D5300, 300mm, f/5.6, ISO-200, 1/2500s

Inner corona
Nikon D5300, 300mm, f/5.6, ISO-200, 1/400s

Outer corona
Nikon D5300, 300mm, f/5.6, ISO-200, 1/8s

Diamond ring at third contact
Nikon D5300, 300mm, f/5.6, ISO-200, 1/800s

I didn't have the diffraction spikes in the 2017 images because I used a circular telescope aperture instead of the straight lines of the iris inside of a camera lens, but I think it's a cool effect.

I re-started the partial eclipse phase script, and we hung around as the moon moved away from the sun's disk.  We didn't get to see the sun completely re-emerge, however, since they sank behind the hills together, heading toward sunset.

Nikon D5300, 300mm, f/5.6, ISO-200, 1/2500s

Sunset was also a gorgeous moment to witness.


Finally, it was time to pack up and head back to La Serena.  Well, us, and 250,000 other people as it turned out!  It wound up taking us 4.5 hours to go the 50 km, and that was with our intrepid tour guide taking some American-style "shortcuts" around the other cars!  We finally got back to the hotel at 10 PM, and I stayed up for a little while longer to post a few images (after installing Lightroom so I could apply the watermarks).

It was a very long but incredible day!  It was an awesome experience sharing this solar eclipse with a few of my friends, strangers interested in astronomy, and many others who just wanted to witness this incredible spectacle.  

Does viewing two total solar eclipses in a row make me an eclipse chaser? :D

[ Update: July 7, 2019 ]

While I was waiting for the moon to set to go out and do some observing from the Atacama Lodge the second half of my trip to Chile, I processed some of my corona images together into a single composite image.  Cameras don't have as high of dynamic range as our eyes -- our eyes can see many levels of brightness at the same time, but the camera sees far fewer.  As you can see in my images above, shorter exposure times make the dimmer outer corona dark, while longer exposure times make the brighter inner corona too bright to see any detail.  There are many ways to process images to reveal multiple levels of brightness, such as people who make neat moon composites, the Milky Way behind brightly-lit foreground scenes (although this can sometimes also be done in a single shot with clever lighting), etc.  The method I used here is the same as the one I used for the 2017 eclipse, known as the Pellett method, described here by astrophotographer Jerry Lodriguss, and in more detail in the blog post made it about here.  

I won't put all the details here, since they are all in my blog post tutorial.  But here's the rundown.

First, I selected several images with different exposure times, ranging from 1/4000s to 1s, which turned out to be 10 for me.  Then, I radially blurred each one, and saved out those files as TIFFs.

Original (1/8s)

Blurred

Next, I subtracted the two images from each other with an offset of 128 to get a low-contrast difference image between the two that pretty much just contains the streamers themselves.

Difference image

Then, I added all of the difference images together.

Difference images added together

Here, you can see the streamers, some prominences, and the edges of the sun, since the input images weren't all taken at the same time, so the moon had translated across the sun's surface a bit.  Next, I multiplied this image by the longest-exposure input frame.


Since the edges of the moon are messy and it didn't really stick around during the subtractions anyway, I copied the moon from one of the longer input images and enlarged it a bit to cover up the movement.  Finally, I toyed with the exposure, contrast, saturation, and denoising settings, and covered up a few dust spots using clone stamp, and have this final product!


So awesome!  You can see lots of detail in the corona, and even one of the little prominences.  It's a little hazy because it was quite low in the sky, only 13 degrees above the horizon, which made it a bit hazy.  One thing that is really interesting about the corona this time is how symmetric it is.  This is likely due to the solar minimum we've been in for a while, which also means we haven't seen much in the way of sunspots for about the past year.  So here's hoping that the 2024 eclipse across the US has even more excitement!  

One last note I'll make here for anyone who's wondering - my images are rotated about 45 degrees from the sun's true orientation as observed visually from the same spot.


Science


Another really great thing about this eclipse in particular is that it crossed over so several professional observatories that exist in that area of Chile, including Cerro Tololo and La Silla, and a lot of research observations were taken at those locations.  Much is still unknown about the sun's corona, which is essentially the sun's outer atmosphere that extends billions of miles into space, encompassing the whole solar system.  It consists of charged particles of gas, and that gas has been superheated by some as-yet-unknown process to over one million degrees (that high, Kevlin, Fahrenheit, and Celcius are really all about the same), which is much hotter than the surface of the sun, which is about 5500 degrees C (10,000 F).  Even though it is so much hotter, it's dimmer because it's very tenuous and spread out.  

In addition to understanding the corona itself, the corona can tell us a lot about what happens on the sun's surface, as well as deeper inside, and can help us make future predictions for potentially electrical-grid-disrupting solar events.  In 1859, a massive solar storm known as the Carrington event disrupted telegraph communications, caused lines to spark and short, and even activated telegraph equipment that was disconnected from power.  Just imagine what something like that would do to today's electrical grids, computer systems, and satellites!

We have a few spacecraft that study the sun, including the corona, such as STEREO and SOHO.  SOHO has an obscuration disk that can be put into place to observe the sun's corona, but only as far out as three times the sun's radius, meaning we can't observe the inner corona at all -- except during a total solar eclipse.  

There are a variety of other interesting effects that are studied during total solar eclipses, such as the short-duration temperature changes, animal behavior, and how the temporary night-like conditions from a shadow that moves faster than the speed of sound across the surface of the Earth impact radio communications that bounce off the Earth's ionosphere at night.  Many of these projects involve citizen scientists who collect data to be processed by researchers.  There's a lot to do and see with eclipses!




Monday, July 8, 2019

#192 - Sunday, June 30, 2019 - Southern Skies from Mamalluca Observatory

After a fun day driving to the small town of Elqui Pisco to enjoy some delicious pisco drinks at the Mistral pisco distillery, we drove to the Mamalluca Observatory near the village of VicuƱa.  It's an observatory created for the public to enjoy in the dark skies of the Andes.  We weren't able to squeeze in on a tour that night, although the gentleman manning the gate was very helpful and asked the director if we could observe on the grounds.  We ultimately weren't able to, but there was a large parking lot just down the hill from the observatory, and we got to enjoy the dark skies from there.

There were a lot of headlights coming up the road for the activities that night -- they told us 700 people were coming that night!  But the Milky Way was up high overhead and was mind-blowingly incredible.  I set up my Vixen Polarie and my Nikon D5300 with my 35mm f/1.8 lens (50mm effectively on my cropped sensor) and did some long-exposure imaging of the Milky Way.

Southern Milky Way, Nikon D5300, 35mm, ISO-800, f/2, 120s

I brought my Meade 10x42 binoculars with me and we did some observing through those as well.  We saw a number of objects -- Southern Cross, bright star Canopus, Jupiter, Mars, constellation Lupus, the Large Magellanic Cloud, the Eta Carinae nebula, the Coal Sack dark nebula, the Jewel Box cluster, and much more.  It was fun just to rove around with the binoculars and see globular clusters and open clusters and dark nebula just everywhere.  The sky was incredible!

I also put my Nikon D3100 on my mini-tripod and took some non-tracked images of the Milky Way, and some with people.


Overlooking the town of VicuƱa.  Cerro Telolo Observatory is in the background on the mountains.

Despite the headlights, it was a fun night of imaging and observing!  I took some mosaics and multiple images of the same part of the Milky Way that I will process when I get home.  So excited for more dark skies in San Pedro de Atacama in our second week!

[ Update August 29, 2019 ] 

Now that I've moved into my new place in Berkeley, CA, and I've gotten myself mostly unpacked, I finally got the Milky Way stack processed!

Date: 30 June 2019
Location: Mamalluca Observatory, Chile
Object: Eta Carinae & Coal Sack Nebulae
Attempt: 1
Camera: Nikon D5300
Telescope: Nikon 35mm f/1.8G lens at f/2
Accessories: N/A
Mount: Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer
Guide scope: N/A
Guide camera: N/A
Subframes: 19x60s (19m total)
Gain/ISO: ISO-800
Acquisition program: Intervalometer
Stacking program: PixInsight 1.8.6
Post-Processing program: PixInsight 1.8.6
Darks: 0
Biases: 0
Flats: 0
Temperature: 45-47F

I should have been studying for prelim exams, but Facebook reminded me that I haven't made a post in a while...

The DynamicBackgroundExtraction process helps a lot with light pollution.  Here's a comparison of the auto-stretched versions of the same image -- one where I used the DBE process, and one without (no other processing after that).

Without DynamicBackgroundExtraction

With DynamicBackgroundExtraction

You see why it's basically my favorite process in PixInsight!

Here are all the PixInsight steps:
- No darks or biases for this set because ISO-800, so started with SubframeSelector:
- Scale: 23.07 arcsec/px
- Gain: 0.115 (just used the value for ISO-1600 because I forgot I did this at 800, and I don't have calibration frames at ISO-800)
- Highest-scoring frame: DSC_0163 (88.081)
- Debayered
- Registered with StarAlignment
- Stacked with ImageIntegration
- Combination: Average
- Normalization: Additive
- Pixel rejection: Winsorized sigma clipping
- Cropped with DynamicCrop
- Denoised with MultiscaleLinearTransform, with luminance mask
- Applied DynamicBackgroundExtraction
- Corrected color with PhotometricColorCalibration
- Stretched with MaskedStretch
- Tweaked colors and saturation with CurvesTransformation
- Created a star mask with StarMask, grew the stars with MorphologicalTransform, and then
used HueSaturation to reduce the magenta tinge in the stars from the lens
- Tweaked some more with CurvesTransformation
- DarkStructureEnhance

Just a few more datasets to go!





Wednesday, July 3, 2019

#191 - Sunday, June 29, 2019 - First Peak at the Southern Sky!

I have arrived in Chile!  I will be here for two weeks for the July 2 solar eclipse, as well as some dark desert southern sky astronomy!

On our second night at the hotel, the sky had cleared out, so we went to the parking lot (moving slowly so as not to trigger the motion-detector floodlights) with my binoculars, and got ourselves oriented with the southern sky.  Earlier that day, we watched the sun cross over the north instead of the south -- super weird!

We spotted a lot of stuff, even from fairly-light-polluted La Serena.  We first noticed the Southern Cross and the bright Centaurus constellation stars of Rigil Kentaurus and Hadar, and then we saw some fuzzy splotches that we investigated with the binoculars.  We saw the Jewel Box Cluster, the Eta Carinae nebula, and the Southern Pleiades cluster, as well as the southerly constellations Lupus, Pavo, and Volans.  Eta Carinae was easily discernible in binoculars, even with the light pollution, which was really cool.  The two clusters were really pretty -- can't wait to see them with a big juicy Dob out in the desert!  Then we looked more northward to find our familiar constellations and stars.  Scorpius was on its side, and it took us a few minutes to spot the sideways Teapot asterism of Sagittarius!  Jupiter was up much higher as well.  Arcturus was in the north, with Spica sitting well above instead of below it.  It was so weird, and so cool!

 
The Southern Cross, Centaurus, and Lupus behind a palm tree at the hotel

Jupiter, Scorpius, Sagittarius, and the Milky Way

#190 - Tuesday, June 25, 2019 - Star Tours

My boss asked me about a year ago if I would be willing to do some astronomy with his two high-school-aged daughters.  I wanted to bring them out to the observatory and show them the night sky sights, but a good night never surfaced - it was either a clear moonless weekend night where I was planning on imaging, or it was cloudy, or a week night when they had school the next morning, or one of us was busy, or any number of things. 

Finally, the forecast called for clear skies, his daughters were out of school for the summer, and I wasn't planning on imaging that night because I wasn't going to be able to get enough done before having to get to bed for leaving for Chile the next day!  And they were available that night.  So I packed my 8-inch Celestron NexStar SE rig into my car, since I didn't want to risk the club's similar version being checked out or something, as well as a jacket and some bug spray!  I also unpacked my ZWO ASI1600MM Pro, my electronic filter wheel, and my tablet from the suitcase I had prepped for my upcoming trip to Chile so that I could do some planetary imaging of Jupiter, which is shining brightly post-opposition in the southeastern sky in the evening. 

I got out there about 8:30, unlocked the observatory, and gave them a tour of the building.  We went up into the dome with the old, very long reflector in it, which I've never seen through since the dome doesn't rotate properly at the moment.  We're in the process of replacing the scope and mount and getting the dome fixed.  After the quick tour, we hung out outside as the sky slowly darkened (very slowly!).  I got my telescope set up, and Jupiter was visible in not too much time, so we looked at that for a while.  My telescope was hot from sitting in the car, so there was a lot of heat current disturbing the view for a while.  The scope cooled eventually, and the air finally settled down.  After aligning on a couple stars once they popped out (and identifying them for my guests), we looked at a couple of other objects as it got darker. 

Some patchy cloud banks rolled through, but by about 10:15, they had cleared out pretty well, and the sky was gorgeous.  We saw numerous satellites and rocket bodies up overhead, even from our fairly light-polluted location.

First, we looked at Mizar and Alcor, and we could easily see Mizar's twin.  We saw a hint of Alcor's second star.  Then we went over to double-star Albireo, which was pretty and up high.  As the sky darkened, we could move on to dimmer targets, like M57, the Ring Nebula, since Vega was an obvious star for them to find.  It was readily apparent with averted vision due to its compact size.  That got them used to using averted vision, and then I went over to M51 Whirlpool Galaxy.  I showed them pictures I had taken of the Ring Nebula and the Whirlpool Galaxy after they looked in the scope so that they'd have a better idea of what exactly it was they were looking at.  M51 showed two obvious cores and some hints of spiralness despite the still-bright sky.  They were awe-struck to imagine the vast distances involved between galaxies!

My boss and his two daughters left around 11 PM, and I stuck around to capture some images of Jupiter.  I got my ZWO and filter wheels attached and started grabbing a couple of data sets.  The day before, I finally received the 2-inch to 1.25-inch filter converter I ordered from High Point Scientific, which let me fill up the empty slot in my filter wheel with the Johnson-Cousins IR photometric filter I have from one of my fellow club members.  I've used it previously for imaging planets, and since light is less perturbed by the atmosphere at that wavelength, it makes for a great luminance channel.  The seeing looked pretty decent, so I was optimistic about the data.  I took a few sets, and then packed up and left around midnight.  A fun evening!  I'll have to wait to process them until I get back from Chile though!

Friday, June 14, 2019

#189 - Tuesday, June 11, 2019 - Jupiter Double-Shadow Transit

I read in Sky & Telescope a couple months back that June 11th was going to host a special astronomical event: a double-shadow transit on Jupiter!  This happens when Jupiter's moons pass in front of it when Jupiter, Earth, and the sun are position together in such a way that we can see the shadows over the cloudtops.

Borrowed from Sky & Telescope

These occur as often as once or twice a month, but this was my first time catching one!  

Now, unfortunately, Jupiter's prime time at opposition (when the sun, Earth, and Jupiter line up, so Jupiter as at about its closest point to us) this year also comes when the plane of the ecliptic (the plane on which the solar system planets reside) sits quite low in the sky.  Jupiter only gets as high as about 26 degrees from middle latitudes, which means we have to try and view it through the denser, mushier part of the atmosphere.

The sky was relatively clear that night, with some well-formed but thin clouds drifting through, so I got set up in my front yard at around 10:15 PM.  This included my Celestron 8-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain on my Celestron NexStar SE mount, as well as my ZWO ASI1600MM Pro camera, and my Microsoft Surface 3 tablet to run the show.  I was ready to roll at 10:30.  Jupiter was still behind a tree, so I started with the moon for a few minutes.  Then I went ahead and slewed over to Jupiter to get set up, get the parameters figured out that I wanted, and practice a couple times doing the filter change, target name change, exposure time change, and capture data rotating sequence I would need to do quickly in order to get through all four LRGB filters before Jupiter rotated too much.  I cropped the frame down to 640x480 so that I could get as much speed as possible, which also allowed me to capture more frames in the moments of clear seeing.  I averaged about 20-60 fps depending on which filter (and thus, which exposure time) I was using, thanks to the USB 3.0 on my ZWO.  

Now, of course, all of those clouds I mentioned were in the south, where I needed to see!  Fortunately, they drifted north, and I finally got a clearer view of Jupiter.  I took LRGB datasets about every 5-10 minutes for an hour and a half.  I couldn't see Io's shadow in the camera image, but I could see Ganymede's!  

All told, I collected 14 datasets.  At the end, I took the camera off and put an eyepiece on, since I hadn't actually seen a shadow transit at all before.  Io was just off the edge of the disk, having completed its transit, and I could clearly see Ganymede's shadow.  It was really neat.  I frst looked through a 25mm eyepiece, then 13mm, and then 13mm with a Barlow.  The seeing was pretty bad, but sometimes I could see  more detail.  It was a fun event!  And I was quite tired at work the next day!  The temperature was quite pleasant though - 63 degrees, and no wind at all.

I'm still plowing through all of those datasets, hoping to find one that had enough clear moments to make a nicer image, but I got some not-too-terrible ones!

Frames: L: 475/2013
    R: 371/1006
G: 398/1002
B: 470/1005
Exposure: L: 12 ms
  R: 30 ms
  G: 30 ms
  B: 40 ms
ISO/Gain: 139
Stacking program: RegiStax 6
Processing program: PixInsight 1.8.6

You can see Ganymede's shadow up near the top, and I think I see Io and its shadow in the upper dark red band, closer to the right.

So the way that I processed this is:
- Stacked and did wavelet deconvolution on each LRGB channel in RegiStax
- Imported those TIFFs into PixInsight and aligned them using the script FFTRegistration that I found while I was poking around for any scripts or processes that could align on objects instead of stars.  This script can align objects as opposed to stars using a fast Fourier transform algorithm that looks at where the spatial frequencies are.  I actually did this in Matlab for a homework assignment for one of my classes once, and it was really neat how it worked!
- Applied the LinearFit process to each channel with one channel as the reference to make them all the same brightness
- The images come out of RegiStax as RGB, even though they appear grayscale, so I had to use the ConverToGrayscale process to convert them to be actually grayscale (single-channel) before I could combine them
- Combined them with LRGBCombination, but then decided to leave off the L channel, since it made it fuzzier
- Sharpened the image with MultiscaleLinearTransform
- Denoised with MultiscaleLinearTransform
- Denoised with ACDNR
- Adjusted curves and saturation with CurvesTransformation
- Calibrated the color with ColorCalibration, using the whole image as reference, and a patch of black background as the background.  This actually did a nice job, even though I think it's normally meant for stars and galaxies.

And voila!  Pretty neat.  This was my first time post-processing planetary images in PixInsight, and I liked it.  Far easier than trying to align each channel myself in Photoshop!

I'm also planning on putting all of the images together into a video to show the transit and Jupiter's rotation.  It might be a while before I can get to that, so keep your eyes out!

[ Update June 20, 2019 ] 

Finished generating the rest of the images!  Here's one of my faves.

In this one, you can easily see both Ganymede and its shadow near the top, and Io has just cleared Jupiter's limb on the right side.  

I also created a video!


So cool!!!
I made the video in PixInsight using the Blink tool.  It lets you use ffmpeg to generate video from the individual frames, and you can set the frame rate.  It does a variety of formats, so I made an AVI and a GIF.  The GIF makes it a bit noisier, but it's easier to share.

I tried to align the rotation (it appears to rotate as it moves across the sky because I used an alt-az mount), but turning on the rotation alignment in FFTRegistration didn't seem to do anything  I could rotate by hand, but that does not sound fun.  I'll find another program out there.  Or, I do have some Matlab code from a class I took where we used the Fourier transform in log-polar coordinates to calculate the rotation...

Hopefully the next one I can catch will have better atmosphere!





#188 - Monday, June 10, 2019 - Finally, Some Outreach!

It's been a long, cloudy month since the end of the Texas Star Party.  I almost went out to the observatory one night -- had the car loaded up and everything for zipping out there after the astronomy club's board meeting -- but alas, the forecasts were mixed, and the sky was pretty hazy.  But we finally got a clear night, and I happened to have signed up to do an outreach event that night!  It's my first outreach event of the year, since I've been pretty busy lately and couldn't make some of the others.

This particular event was held in a paved lot behind a school, and we had quite a few kids and their parents come through.  We also grabbed some random passers-by who were curious about what we were looking at.  Because of the light pollution, the only things we really tried to look at were the waxing moon and Jupiter as it peaked above the building.  The seeing was decent before darkness fully settled in, but it got worse as it got darker.

There were seven of us there from the club with five telescopes set up.  I brought my 8-inch Celestron Schmidt-Cassegrain on its Celestron NexStar SE mount, my go-to outreach setup for how easy it is to put together and how nice of views it gives, especially of the planets and the moon.



Kids and parents alike were amazed at how awesome the moon looked under some magnification.  Even though we see the moon all the time, it's a whole different experience when you apply some magnification!

Later on, I swapped out the eyepiece for my ZWO ASI1600MM Pro camera to do some imaging on the moon, but I ended up getting pretty sidetracked talking to people, and before I knew it, we had to pack up and go so they could close up the lot.  One of the people I was talking to was a boy about 11 years old or so who was asking a lot of fun questions about black holes.  I love answering science questions :D

I did snap a few shots with my cell phone though!

Through my 32mm eyepiece with my Samsung Galaxy S9 camera.

I almost set up my gear in my front yard as soon as I got home, but I was tired, it was kind of chilly, and I could see a bit of a haze in the air.  Plus, the seeing was pretty degraded earlier.  So I went to bed.  It was a fun evening!