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Re: An Astronomical Treat

Posted: 27 Feb 2023, 10:04
by Tomliner
Iโ€™ve just looked outside and I canโ€™t see them :hide:
EricT

Re: An Astronomical Treat

Posted: 27 Feb 2023, 12:16
by TSR2
Cheers Kevin, Iโ€™ll climb up the hill at the Rising Sun, should get a good view from there. ๐Ÿ˜Š๐Ÿ‘

Re: An Astronomical Treat

Posted: 27 Feb 2023, 14:38
by Nigel H-J
t's not a photo, Nigel. It's a screenshot from the Stellarum program.
Fooled again!! :doh:

If the cloud disperses not only might I get a chance in seeing them

Regards
Nigel.

Re: An Astronomical Treat

Posted: 25 Mar 2023, 02:53
by Kevin Farnell
Another treat tonight (or more correctly yesterday) at around 19:45 GMT.
A great view tonight of the crescent Moon, with Venus just below it. The remainder of the disc of the Moon is just visible as a phenomena known as 'earthshine'. This is sunlight reflected off the Earth, back onto the Moon and then back to Earth.
Having a look at the excellent freeware 'Stellaruim' (I can't recommend this software highly enough!) , I found that it replicated the 'earthshine' exactly as I saw it (note - this is a screenshot from the software, and not a photograph).

Image

Kevin

Re: An Astronomical Treat

Posted: 25 Mar 2023, 11:37
by Airspeed
A peek at the dark side of the Moon, eh, Kevin?
It was brightly sitting in our sky this evening.

Re: An Astronomical Treat

Posted: 26 Mar 2023, 00:09
by GHD

Re: An Astronomical Treat

Posted: 26 Mar 2023, 22:28
by Kevin Farnell
Airspeed wrote: โ†‘
25 Mar 2023, 11:37
A peek at the dark side of the Moon, eh, Kevin?
Pink Floyd got it wrong! There is no 'Dark Side of the Moon'' it's the ''Far Side of the Moon'. The Moon is tidally locked to the Earth, meaning that the same face is always seen. That doesn't mean that the other side never sees sunlight.
Scarily close!

Kevin