Image by Ian Clarke |
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Waxing Crescent Moon, 10/17
Here is a photo I took of the waxing crescent moon, taken on Oct. 17, 6:53 PM EDT south of Fairfield, PA. The moon was new on Oct. 15 at 12:02 PM EDT, so this crescent is just short of 59 hours old. Thin as the crescent in this photo may seem, the record for seeing a crescent moon is about 15 hours from new. For comparison, this Astronomy Picture of the Day shows a 34-hour-old moon.
AST 101 Observing 10/4
Setting up. |
Sorry about the focus, but I wanted to include it. Of the two bright reddish objectrs, Mars is on the right and the star Antares on the left. 7:30 PM EDT. |
Cassiopeia and Perseous over the GCO dome. 8:30 PM, 60 sec. exposure. |
Monday, October 15, 2012
Big Week at the Hatter Planetarium
Hatter director Ian Clarke, with Brad Rush and Scott Huggins of Spitz, Inc. |
On Thursday and Friday, a technician from Spitz replaced our obsolete lumiline cove lighting (check out its "toothy" appearance in the SciDome photo). The new cove lighting is made up of about a thousand red-blue-green LEDs. We can't wait for our next public show (Sunday, Nov. 4, 4:00 PM), but in the meantime, here are some photos.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Date set for New Cove Light Installation
It turns out that the scene in 1,000 to 1: The Cory Weissman Story will be the last hurrah for our yellow and blue lumiline cove lights (pictured right). The system is original to the 1966 construction of the Hatter Planetarium, and the bulbs have not been made for some time. Spitz, Inc., will be installing a modern set of red-blue-green LED cove lights on October 11 and 12. Look for them at our next show!
1000 to 1 Filming
Boom and camera frighteningly close to our 1966 Spitz A3p. No worries; these guys were pros! |
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Venus Regulus Conjunction
We've talked about the upcoming conjunction of brilliant planet Venus and bright star Regulus in the show, the Times column, and the podcast. The closest approach of the two will be in the early morning hours of Oct 3 (i.e., tonight), but the weather forecast is looking poor at this point. Here is what you'll see if we are lucky, or what we would have seen if it stays cloudy.
Venus will be about 150x brighter than Regulus, but Regulus is over four million times farther away! The two will stay together in the morning sky the rest of the month, with Venus sinking toward the rising sun and Regulus pulling away. The waning crescent moon will join the scene on mornings around Oct 12.The inset represents the view through the eyepiece of a small telescope. |
Images created with Stellarium |
Monday, October 1, 2012
Observing Session, Sept 24
Here are a couple photos from a recent Astronomy 101 observing session. The first shows the waxing gibbous moon above campus before students arrived, and the second shows student activity on the observing deck during a thirty second exposure.
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