Mars Occultation from Illinois


vk3cjk
 

That's fantastic Roland - but  I've never tried that handheld method!    The colour contrast is so amazing.      
Here downunder, we didn't get to see the occultation so thanks for sharing your view of it.  

Cheers, Chris

On Fri, Dec 9, 2022 at 4:41 AM Roland Christen via groups.io <chris1011=aol.com@groups.io> wrote:
The skies cleared for us in Northern Illinois for the egress of Mars from behind the Moon. Visually it was a stunning sight in the 12" Mak-Cass with a wide-field eyepiece. Marj and I took turns to see the tiny planet emerge from the western part of the Moon. I grabbed my Sony digital camera, removed the eyepiece and shot this scene (attached) as Mars was pulling away. Hand held above the 2" diagonal, 1/1000 second @ASA800, Sony NEX7.

Rolando

--
Roland Christen
Astro-Physics


Howard Ritter
 

Roland—

That’s as good a scene-setting shot as any I’ve seen even with high-dollar cameras! Great work.

—howard

On Dec 8, 2022, at 12:41 PM, Roland Christen via groups.io <chris1011@...> wrote:

The skies cleared for us in Northern Illinois for the egress of Mars from behind the Moon. Visually it was a stunning sight in the 12" Mak-Cass with a wide-field eyepiece. Marj and I took turns to see the tiny planet emerge from the western part of the Moon. I grabbed my Sony digital camera, removed the eyepiece and shot this scene (attached) as Mars was pulling away. Hand held above the 2" diagonal, 1/1000 second @ASA800, Sony NEX7.

Rolando

--
Roland Christen
Astro-Physics <MarsOccultation2022s.jpg>


Roland Christen
 

No composite. Just 5 shots taken in quick succession and added together in Photoshop. That's the best I could do with a hand held camera after pulling out the eyepiece.

Rolando

-----Original Message-----
From: ap@... <ap@...>
To: main@ap-gto.groups.io
Sent: Thu, Dec 8, 2022 11:44 am
Subject: Re: [ap-gto] Mars Occultation from Illinois

That is simply amazing, even more so when I read how you did it.  I've seen some from people with expensive camera gear that were not nearly as good.  If I had just run across it somewhere other than a reliable source would have sworn it was a composite. 

--
Roland Christen
Astro-Physics


Emilio J. Robau, P.E.
 

Wow Cool Squared!


Roland Christen
 

For some reason the image was reduced from what I posted. The full res image is here:

https://www.astrobin.com/full/hamfuf/0/?mod=&real=

Rolando


-----Original Message-----
From: Roland Christen via groups.io <chris1011@...>
To: main@ap-gto.groups.io <main@ap-gto.groups.io>; main@ap-ug.groups.io <main@ap-ug.groups.io>
Sent: Thu, Dec 8, 2022 11:41 am
Subject: [ap-gto] Mars Occultation from Illinois

The skies cleared for us in Northern Illinois for the egress of Mars from behind the Moon. Visually it was a stunning sight in the 12" Mak-Cass with a wide-field eyepiece. Marj and I took turns to see the tiny planet emerge from the western part of the Moon. I grabbed my Sony digital camera, removed the eyepiece and shot this scene (attached) as Mars was pulling away. Hand held above the 2" diagonal, 1/1000 second @ASA800, Sony NEX7.

Rolando

--
Roland Christen
Astro-Physics

--
Roland Christen
Astro-Physics


Luca Marinelli
 

Very nice, Roland! Great detail on Mars as well.

Luca

On Dec 8, 2022, at 12:45 PM, Terry Martin via groups.io <terry@...> wrote:

Very Cool!!  It was amazing to see the stark colour contrast between the moon and mars.

~Terry


Terry Martin
 

Very Cool!!  It was amazing to see the stark colour contrast between the moon and mars.

~Terry


ap@CaptivePhotons.com
 

That is simply amazing, even more so when I read how you did it.  I've seen some from people with expensive camera gear that were not nearly as good.  If I had just run across it somewhere other than a reliable source would have sworn it was a composite. 


Roland Christen
 

The skies cleared for us in Northern Illinois for the egress of Mars from behind the Moon. Visually it was a stunning sight in the 12" Mak-Cass with a wide-field eyepiece. Marj and I took turns to see the tiny planet emerge from the western part of the Moon. I grabbed my Sony digital camera, removed the eyepiece and shot this scene (attached) as Mars was pulling away. Hand held above the 2" diagonal, 1/1000 second @ASA800, Sony NEX7.

Rolando

--
Roland Christen
Astro-Physics