Difference between revisions of "November 9, 2013"

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=A Luminous Bull in a Celestial China Cabinet=
 
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<em>image by [mailto:eliasastro@freemail.gr Elias Chasiotis], Markopoulo, Greece</em><br />
 
<em>image by [mailto:eliasastro@freemail.gr Elias Chasiotis], Markopoulo, Greece</em><br />
 
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Its easy to see why observers of deep sky, or even bright sky, objects don’t care much for the Moon. Elias’ view of the last quarter Moon passing through the Pleiades dramatically shows that the Sunlit side brightens the nearby sky so much that even bright stars are hardly visible. And a exposure necessary to capture the bright stars nicely shows the Earthlit piece too. I am very glad we have this bright light in the night sky - there are more details to see in that half degree of reflected light than in the rest of the universe combined. A slight exaggeration, perhaps, but for the observer looking though an eyepiece the universe is smudges and our Moon is a magnificent complexity of detail.<br />
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It's easy to see why observers of deep sky, or even bright sky, objects don’t care much for the Moon. Elias’ view of the last quarter Moon passing through the Pleiades dramatically shows that the Sunlit side brightens the nearby sky so much that even bright stars are hardly visible. And a exposure necessary to capture the bright stars nicely shows the Earthlit piece too. I am very glad we have this bright light in the night sky - there are more details to see in that half degree of reflected light than in the rest of the universe combined. A slight exaggeration, perhaps, but for the observer looking though an eyepiece the universe is smudges and our Moon is a magnificent complexity of detail.<br />
 
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<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />
 
<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />

Latest revision as of 19:52, 14 March 2015

A Luminous Bull in a Celestial China Cabinet

LPOD-Aug9-07.jpg
image by Elias Chasiotis, Markopoulo, Greece

It's easy to see why observers of deep sky, or even bright sky, objects don’t care much for the Moon. Elias’ view of the last quarter Moon passing through the Pleiades dramatically shows that the Sunlit side brightens the nearby sky so much that even bright stars are hardly visible. And a exposure necessary to capture the bright stars nicely shows the Earthlit piece too. I am very glad we have this bright light in the night sky - there are more details to see in that half degree of reflected light than in the rest of the universe combined. A slight exaggeration, perhaps, but for the observer looking though an eyepiece the universe is smudges and our Moon is a magnificent complexity of detail.

Chuck Wood
This is a repeat of a classic LPOD from August 9, 2007.

Technical Details
07 August 2007, 02:38 UT. William Optics Zenithstar 105, Canon EOS 400D, William Optics 2″ 0.8 focal reducer.

Yesterday's LPOD: Slo-Mo Blink

Tomorrow's LPOD: Destruction by Ejecta And Lava



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