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View Full Version here: : Solar System 24/25th July (now with added Uranus)


von Tom
25-07-2013, 08:38 PM
After failing dismally to find Uranus yesterday morning for 30min in clear skies and thus missing the chance to photograph all planets, the Moon and Sun in a 24hr period,I decided to reshoot the Sun, Moon, Venus and Saturn last night and hope to use yesterday morning's Mercury, Mars, Neptune and Jupiter with a successful capture of Uranus this morning. The goal of all major Solar System bodies would be met.

I had a 5:15am start at work and a look outside showed cloud. I resigned myself to the fact it wasn't to be, but in the 5 minutes before leaving for work I looked out again and saw very thin cloud where Uranus should be. Pulling out the Dobsonian I didn't bother with any alignment and goto (which I relied on yesterday but only let me down) and pointed it up where the planet should be. Lo and behold it was right in the finder, so I attached the EOS 600D and 5x Powermate and took a video, manually tracked.

I am pleased to display my collection of Solar System major bodies from the 24/25th July AEST :) Planets to apparent scale, and again to apparent scale with the Moon and Sun.

The second photo is the setup I used and taken at the time I imaged Jupiter about 6:15am yesterday. Don't be fooled by the complicated looking cables, I was using an extention cord to act as a variable counterweight for the camera. It really is a simple setup :)

Thanks for looking,

Tom

Saturnine
25-07-2013, 10:12 PM
What an excellent project Tom, love the concept and the images are most enjoyable to boot. Well done

Jeff

naskies
26-07-2013, 09:12 AM
Beautifully presented, thanks!

Dennis
26-07-2013, 09:54 AM
Great concept, execution, results and presentation Tom! I managed to achieve a similar result some while ago, although I was lucky enough to include Pluto which was still a bone fide planet at the time!

Cheers

Dennis

von Tom
26-07-2013, 10:05 AM
Thanks guys. And I knew Pluto would rate a mention at some point! ;) I've only managed to catch it once and made a conscious decision not to include it this time otherwise it would open up the whole thing of dwarf planets and I'd have to start chasing down more.

I'm thinking about in the future maybe getting as many Solar System objects as possible in one night - moons, asteroids, dwarf planets, comets etc. That would be a fun thing to do. :)

The hardest thing about getting the major planets is getting Mercury at a decent enough elongation.

Cheers,

Tom

rustigsmed
26-07-2013, 11:19 AM
awesome work as usual Tom! well done!
do you get many of the neighbours popping past to look at what you're doing?

cheers

Rusty

von Tom
26-07-2013, 11:44 AM
Just to make sure I am not looking through their windows :) - although I do say that the telescope doesn't focus that close! Actually yes they do come over and have a look from time to time which is cool.

Tom

naskies
26-07-2013, 12:34 PM
Does that mean you've tried?! :rofl:

von Tom
26-07-2013, 12:35 PM
I said that I *say* it doesn't!

rustigsmed
26-07-2013, 02:03 PM
hahaha, very good, i was thinking it might be an opportune moment to mention turning lights off is beneficial...

von Tom
26-07-2013, 02:11 PM
Oh, I missed that opportunity! The two street lights drown out any other light source anyway! It is hard not to feel a bit self conscious when you are pointing the scope/camera near-horizontal in very bright twilight, let alone what others who see it feel!

iceman
26-07-2013, 02:29 PM
Fantastic work Tom!

Matt Wastell
26-07-2013, 04:23 PM
Great to see Tom - great adventure!

Derek Klepp
26-07-2013, 09:26 PM
Great body of work Tom.

von Tom
27-07-2013, 10:28 AM
Thanks Derek, Matt, and Mike!

StephenM
27-07-2013, 11:15 AM
Great job getting the full set Tom! Well done.

Cheers,
Stephen

Crow
31-07-2013, 10:56 PM
Just getting my first telescope this week! yours makes it look like it came from toys are us!! Holy ****! I am not worthy!! Amazing and inspiring photos! I can only look to the sky and dream!!

Retrograde
03-08-2013, 11:16 AM
Wow that's brilliant! A splendid project. :thumbsup:

Solar
03-08-2013, 09:38 PM
Brilliant result for the amount of time for that particular project Tom.:thumbsup:
I can't find most of them let alone photograph them.

nebulosity.
04-08-2013, 07:58 AM
Thats great Tom:thumbsup: