Saturday, February 27, 2016
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
Evolution of Comet C/2013 US10 (Catalina)
Here is a compilation of my key observations of a comet C/2013 US10 (Catalina). Pictures were taken on 8 Dec 2015; 29 Dec 2015 and 6 Feb 2015 (left to right): I tried to catch clear sky (this winter is extremely cloudy). Place: Kyiv (Osokorky district).
All images are on the same scale, a size of each picture is 2x2 arc degree (approximately four angular diameters of the Moon).
Black-and-white version:
Initial color version:
Two tails of the comet have different nature: straight upper tail (in the first and the second images) is gas ion tail, it points to a direction opposite to the Sun (ions are pushed back by solar wind and light pressure); the other curved tail is of dust, it is more affected by Sun's gravitation and is left behind in the comet's orbit.
The distance between the comet and the Sun increases from the first to the third picture (while distance between the comet and Earth for the second picture is less substantially than for the first and somewhat bigger than for the third): the comet's activity decreases, only the dust tail is revealed in the last image.
To make the photos, I used Canon EOS 600D with EF 50mm F/1.8 II lens on fixed tripod. Images were captured and processed in different conditions: there were 100x3s, 260x4s, and 210x12s individual frames averaged for the first, the second, and the third images respectively.
While processing, stacking by comet position was used. Stars in the first picture are affected by Earth's rotation (or, partially, optical distortion of the lens) while on the next two pictures star trails arose because of comet's own movement (remember that I stacked images using comet's position as a reference).
Finally, I made an animation from a set of frames captured during the third session. Here is comet's own movement during approximately an hour (57 min).
1x1 arc degree
Saturday, February 13, 2016
C/2013 US10 (Catalina) in Camelopardalis -- Remastered
An image of the comet in a post on 7-Feb was substantially distorted because the comet was moving on the star background during registration. An image beneath is "remastered". I took all frames taken during the session (210 individual frames having exposure of 12.34s each) and made averaging by 10 frames (using DeepSkyStacker). As a result, I obtained 21 averaged frames. Then I averaged those frames again in DSS, using comet's position as a reference point.
See the resulted picture beneath [06-Feb-2016 19:01..19:58 EET (UT+2)]:
A size of the image is ~3x3 degree (according to nova.astrometry.net).
[Correction] In fact, only 200 (not 210) frames were used because one of intermediate averaged frames was lost by mistake while final stacking.
See the resulted picture beneath [06-Feb-2016 19:01..19:58 EET (UT+2)]:
A size of the image is ~3x3 degree (according to nova.astrometry.net).
According to CometBase.net, a visual magnitude of the comet is ~7..7.5m (visual estimation)
[Correction] In fact, only 200 (not 210) frames were used because one of intermediate averaged frames was lost by mistake while final stacking.
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Twin Satellites
During preparation to comet catching, I suddenly captured unusual twin tracks. After googling, I revealed that they are tracks of NOSS satellites.
Here is a quote from http://www.satobs.org/noss.html:
One of the interesting sights in the night sky are the Naval Ocean Surveillance System (NOSS) satellite formations, each having two or three satellites in close proximity to one another. Normally these satellites are relatively dim to the unaided eye, but on occasion they brighten sufficiently to be easily seen in a dark sky.
NOSS 3-3 duo passing by Polaris (bright star at the bottom). Movement in this 12.3s exposure is from upper-left to bottom-right; the A object is leading. 06-Feb-2016, 18:52(UT+2), Kyiv.
This picture is uploaded as an illustration to corresponding Wikipedia article.
Sunday, February 7, 2016
C/2013 US10 (Catalina) in Camelopardalis
Comet C/2013 US10 (Catalina) last night (07-Feb 2016) between 19:29 and 19:59 (UT+2).
Unlike early observations (when the comet had two tails: 29 Dec; 8 Dec) only one curved dust tail is seen now. It is considerably shorter and weaker than before because of a bigger distance between the comet and the Sun.
Setup: Canon 600D + EF 50mm f/1.8 II on fixed tripod.
Shooting options: 110x12s; f/2.5; ISO 800.
Processing: DSS+FITStacker.
A size of the cropped image is ~3x3 degrees.
Unlike early observations (when the comet had two tails: 29 Dec; 8 Dec) only one curved dust tail is seen now. It is considerably shorter and weaker than before because of a bigger distance between the comet and the Sun.
Setup: Canon 600D + EF 50mm f/1.8 II on fixed tripod.
Shooting options: 110x12s; f/2.5; ISO 800.
Processing: DSS+FITStacker.
A size of the cropped image is ~3x3 degrees.
C/2013 X1 (PANSTARRS) in Pegasus
Last night I managed to catch C/2013 X1 (PANSTARRS) in Pegasus. Comet is faint and was relatively close to the horizon in the West direction.
Setup: Canon 600D + EF 50mm f/1.8 II on fixed tripod.
Shooting options: 110x3s; f/2.5; ISO 1600.
Processing: DSS+FITStacker.
Shooting options: 110x3s; f/2.5; ISO 1600.
Processing: DSS+FITStacker.
A size of the cropped image is ~3x3 degrees.
2016-02-06 ~18:30-18:39 (UT+2); Kyiv
Friday, February 5, 2016
Two comets
Last night (04-Feb-2016) I captured two comets. They are both not far from Polaris this time.
Left image: C/2013 US10 (Catalina)
Right image: C/2014 S2 (Panstarrs)
The comets are in the center of respective images. Stars are marked for better orientation.
Canon EOS 600D + EF 50mm f/1.8 II on a tripod.
1st: C/2013 US10 (Catalina) ~21:35 (UT+2)
f/2.5 10x12s ISO800
2nd: C/2014 S2 (Panstarrs) ~21:08 (UT+2)
f/2.5 60x3s ISO800
The second comet was close to the horizon where light pollution was bigger.
Both sky areas are ~3x3 degrees in size.
According to CometBase, the brightness of the first comet is ~7m (http://cometbase.net/en/observation/listObserv/121); the second one is dimmer: not brighter than 9m (http://cometbase.net/en/observation/listObserv/1119)
Left image: C/2013 US10 (Catalina)
Right image: C/2014 S2 (Panstarrs)
The comets are in the center of respective images. Stars are marked for better orientation.
Canon EOS 600D + EF 50mm f/1.8 II on a tripod.
1st: C/2013 US10 (Catalina) ~21:35 (UT+2)
f/2.5 10x12s ISO800
2nd: C/2014 S2 (Panstarrs) ~21:08 (UT+2)
f/2.5 60x3s ISO800
The second comet was close to the horizon where light pollution was bigger.
Both sky areas are ~3x3 degrees in size.
According to CometBase, the brightness of the first comet is ~7m (http://cometbase.net/en/observation/listObserv/121); the second one is dimmer: not brighter than 9m (http://cometbase.net/en/observation/listObserv/1119)
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
Orion
Probably the most beautiful winter constellation -- Orion -- in the evening on 1 February 2016 during a short period of clear sky. A constellation art is taken from Jan Heweliusz’s Uranographia.
Great Orion Nebula is seen near sword hilt. A bright star on the down-left is Sirius (the brightest star in the sky).
The original picture is shown below.
Canon EOS 600D + Canon EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS II; exposure 10s; f/3.5; ISO=1600.
Kyiv (Osokorky).