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#122 | |
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Basketry That Evening!
"Bunslow the Bold"
Jun 2011
40<A<43 -89<O<-88
722110 Posts |
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#123 |
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"Gang aft agley"
Sep 2002
2·1,877 Posts |
15 second video showing solar power decrease in areas affected by the eclipse.
Total Eclipse Vs Solar Power |
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#124 |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
226658 Posts |
Hm... you are all lying... we looked to the sky all the night... didn't see any solar eclipse...
Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2017-08-26 at 09:47 |
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#125 |
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Nov 2004
22·33·5 Posts |
Like several others, I was in Madras, Oregon and just got back last night- Really spectacular; and it was especially nice that there were several good sunspot groups visible, even though we're in a solar minimum. The picture below is with a cell phone mounted on a 6-inch reflector.
And like others, the traffic was incredible. The 1-hour drive back to where we were staying took us only a little over two hours (because we listened to Google Maps as it changed routes), but our observing partners needed over 6 hours by staying on the main roads. Worth every minute of it, though, and every gallon of gas between Tucson and Madras. Norm |
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#126 | |
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Aug 2010
10100100102 Posts |
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The only place in the US where you can expect clear or mostly clear skies is a small area surrounding Eagle Pass, Texas
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#127 |
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Nov 2004
22×33×5 Posts |
Doing some processing of our eclipse images; playing with contrast and brightness and such to see how much I could pull out of the outer corona and how far out it would show up, and the star Regulus popped out of the murk. Checked an on-line planetarium program just to be sure, and its right where it should be. Venus was visible during the eclipse, but I don't actually remember seeing Regulus. It shows up on several shots, but not all. This digital processing is neat stuff!
Norm |
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#128 |
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Dec 2011
11×13 Posts |
No advance plans, other than a Delorme atlas of Wyoming with my hand-drawn lines across a few pages showing "center line" and "southern limit" of totality. Just good luck. Glendo State Park. Got a non-reservable campsite on the 20th, as the previous occupants were packing up to leave. Due to topography of the lake and peninsula, my campsite was a single, isolated lakefront campsite. With a very low lake level, the site was enormous. I didn't need it all. So, I shared with a group of college students. [Limit 2 vehicles, 2 tents per campsite.] Park rangers drove into my campsite that afternoon. They were content. Next morning, cars started coming into my campsite and its stubby little access road before sunrise. I told them they were welcome to stay as far as I was concerned, but if the ranger came, he might ask them to leave due to exceeding the capacity of the site. By 1st contact, my campsite and access road contained about 15 cars and 35 people, It was definitely a party atmosphere.
The composite contains 20 stacked images taken approximately 4 minutes apart through a homemade solar filter, and 1 image taken during totality with the solar filter removed. A jet and its contrail photo-bombed my final image. The camera was mounted on a tripod and was not moved during this composite, so the composite reflects the actual movement of the sun and moon through the sky on that day. I'll let the poets supply the words to describe totality. However, I will assert that "totality" is an entirely different phenomenon that any other phase of the eclipse. No photo I have ever seen does it justice. One camera had battery trouble. My other camera was dedicated to the attached composite. The drive north on I-25 was about 2.5 hours. The drive south on I-25 was about 12.5 hours (including two 3-hour naps, while waiting for traffic to ease up.) It was worth it. Last fiddled with by rcv on 2017-08-30 at 16:07 |
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#129 |
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
1078010 Posts |
I could have told you that, had you bothered to ask.
![]() Now that you have a good estimate of the PSF of your imaging equipment (Regulus is a point source yet its image is readily seen not to be point-like) you can process your image further to reduce the blurring of the solar structures. How to do so in practice is left as an exercise. If you would like suggestions and/or assistance please ask. Nice image, BTW! (added in edit: I may snarf a copy of your image and see what I can do. Unfortunately lots of other things are also clamoring for my attention.) Last fiddled with by xilman on 2017-08-30 at 17:48 |
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#130 | ||
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Nov 2004
22·33·5 Posts |
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Norm |
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#131 | ||
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6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101Γ103 Posts
2·4,909 Posts |
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#132 | |
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Dec 2011
11×13 Posts |
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A friend of mine, sent me a link to this stunning video, which started north of Glendo. Since you were right there, you might appreciate it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Ti0Qd-ULEA Last fiddled with by rcv on 2017-08-31 at 01:01 |
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