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Old 11-07-2022, 01:59 PM
Dennis
Dazzled by the Cosmos.

Dennis is offline
 
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 11,828
NEO 2022 NR - 9th and 10th July Trail Comparison.

I enjoy imaging Near Earth Objects (NEO’s) as reported on the pages of Spaceweather.

With the skies finally clearing in SE Qld, this gave me the opportunity to attempt NEO 2022 NR which was predicted to pass within 1 Lunar Distance (LD) of planet Earth on 10th July, at around mag 16.

Depending on how fast they move, I have previously been able to record the trails of these objects down to magnitude 16. Any faster, smaller or dimmer and they don’t sprinkle enough photons in one place to create the extended trail, unlike the fixed stars which just keep on pouring their light into the charge wells of the sensor under their fixed location.

I set up on the 9th July as I knew 2022 NR would be moving more slowly, but a 30 sec exposure tracking at the sidereal rate did not reveal a trail as I viewed the image on screen. So I asked the Mount to track on the NEO and after 30 secs, a very faint blip did appear so I increased the exposure to 60 secs and there it was, a stationary coalescence of pixels against the trailed stars in the back ground.

Buoyed by this success, I followed the same process the next evening, Sat 10th July when the NEO would be belting along and lo and behold, once more it made its appearance on the computer screen.

The composite comparison image gives an indication of how the NEO sped up as it reached its closest approach, the rate across the FOV some 3 times faster than the previous evening.

Cheers

Dennis
Attached Thumbnails
Click for full-size image (NEO 2022 NR 5x60 secs M210 0x8 QHY268M 2x2 Bin Crop 1280.jpg)
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Click for full-size image (NEO 2022 NR_2x2_60 10th July 5 frames Crop 1280.jpg)
177.6 KB55 views
Click for full-size image (2022 NR Comparison 9 to 10-07-2022 Crop 1280.jpg)
184.8 KB43 views

Last edited by Dennis; 11-07-2022 at 02:01 PM. Reason: Typo
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