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Old 03-11-2011, 10:35 AM
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Peter Ward
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H-alpha Sun on November 2nd

Managed to grab some solar data literally minutes before the clouds rolled in (with a front approaching the seeing was quite poor, hence the presentation is at a smaller scale than my usual )

The link is here
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Old 03-11-2011, 04:46 PM
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tilbrook@rbe.ne (Justin Tilbrook)
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Hi, Peter.

Your images always blow me away, it's a good reminder how dynamic the sun is.

Thanks,

Justin.
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Old 03-11-2011, 06:56 PM
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Shiggy (Shaun)
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Peter, I must agree with Justin that is a mind blowing image.
I was thinking about getting a filter to try out the sun. Now you have made me think about a coronado!

Cheers
Shaun
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Old 03-11-2011, 07:33 PM
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Peter Ward
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Shiggy View Post
Peter, I must agree with Justin that is a mind blowing image.
I was thinking about getting a filter to try out the sun. Now you have made me think about a coronado!

Cheers
Shaun
Ta... actually I think the pressure tuned Lunt 80mm is by far the bast bang for buck at present.
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Old 03-11-2011, 07:41 PM
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Peter Ward
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tilbrook@rbe.ne View Post
Hi, Peter.

Your images always blow me away, it's a good reminder how dynamic the sun is.

Thanks,

Justin.
Thanks... what can I say? I suspect way too many amateur astronomers simply haven't seen the sun with a reasonable H-alpha rig.

When you are used to seeing the "same M42" for decades, observing an astronomical object changing in minutes is, in a word, amazing.

Forget aperture fever, giga pixel CCD's etc. Solar h-alpha is a lot of fun!
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Old 03-11-2011, 07:56 PM
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astronobob (Bob)
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That is Mind Blowing ? ooops , Phenomally sharp & quite active ?
Awesome ! !
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  #7  
Old 03-11-2011, 08:19 PM
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Peter Ward
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Quote:
Originally Posted by astronobob View Post
That is Mind Blowing ? ooops , Phenomally sharp & quite active ?
Awesome ! !
Thanks...but as one C. Dundee commented on what did, or didn't constitue a knife.... it's not that sharp .

This earlier effort (link here) is.
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