A Full Quarter

8 Day Old Moon

8 Day Old Moon
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

This was my last chance in very pleasant unseasonable weather to comfortably capture the entire visible lunar surface at once. I drew this moon sketch on a long 7” x 14” piece of Strathmore 400 Artagain paper with the aid of an 8” protractor for the initial semicircle. After I finished the drawing, I made a background change that Rony DeLaet taught me to do with a previous whole moon sketch. I added a larger black background by first darkening the sketch electronically with Microsoft Office Picture Manager by a value of -5. I then pasted the image to a black background using Microsoft Paint. To draw this sketch I needed a small scope so I used the finder scope of my 18” which doubles as a 4.25” f / 5 Dobsonian. Some of my favorite views of the moon have been witnessed with this little scope. With the moon at 48% illumination the curvature of the terminator in this very late waxing crescent phase was just discernable and gave the moon a slight 3-D effect at the eyepiece. The large crater Maginus is the one poking out beyond the terminator near the top of this south up sketch.

Sketching:
For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper, white and black Conte’
pastel pencils and a blending stump and my index finger too. Brightness was reduced by a value of -5 (using Microsoft OfficePicture Manager) after scanning.
Telescope: 4.25 inch f/ 5 Dobsonian and 21mm eyepiece 26x

Date: 11-05-2008 to 11-06-2008 / 23:00-1:00 UT
Temperature: 20° C (68° F)
Partly cloudy, breezy
Seeing: Antoniadi III
Colongitude: 3.5 °
Lunation: 7.99 days
Illumination: 48.0 %

Only a Waning Gibbous Moon in Mind

Waning Gibbous Moon

Waning Gibbous Moon
Sketch and Details by Deirdre Kelleghan

Waning Gibbous Moon
Bray, Co Wicklow Ireland
January 28th 2008
200mm dob/FL 1,200mm/25mm eyepiece/48X
Lunation 19.60 days 01:35 – 03:42
Pastels and conte on black paper

I enjoy doing full phase lunar sketches, pastels help bring out the subtle grey tones.
In the time it takes to do these drawings there is nothing else in my mind, the concentration is
all consuming. The moon is a wonderful teacher and a great place to play.

Dee


Deirdre Kelleghan
President
Irish Astronomical Society 1937 – 2007
Public Relations Officer IFAS

Oscail do Shuile D’iontas na Cruinne
Open Your Eyes to the Wonder of the Universe

Craters Cardanus & Kraftt with the flooded plain Eddington

Craters Cardanus, Krafft and Eddington

Craters Cardanus & Kraftt with the flooded plain Eddington
Sketch and Details by Dale Holt

The upper crater of the pair is Cardanus named
after Girolamo Cardano 1501-1576 an Italian
mathematician.
This is a crater 49 Km in diameter, terraced with a
small central peak. Below is Krafft named after a
German Astronomer Wolfgang Ludwiig Krafft 1743-
1814.
This is a crater of 51Km diameter with a flooded
floor. To the lower right we see the bright illuminated
rim of the flooded plain Eddington named in memory
of the Cambridge astrophysicist Arthur S Eddington
1882-1944.
This sketch was made using black & white hard
Conte pastels on black Daler Rowney paper with
bright highlights made with a Derwent watercolour
pencil.

This image and caption appeared in the LDAS Newsletter 2008-10.doc
Permission to use this image was given by the artist and author Dale Holt

Sublime and Glorious

M42

The Trapezium and Other Bright Stars of the Orion Nebula
Sketch and Details by Janis Romer

Janis wrote:

January, 1983. Temple University Night Owl, 17 1/2″ Dob. One of those Coulter mirrors*.

You will notice I have not included any of the smaller stars. I was using stars only as reference points for the nebula and simply ignored them. I’ve been tempted to go back and add them in, but decided I liked it better just the way I originally made it, warts and all.

Sketching:
Conte pastel pencils (white, blended greens) on black pastel paper.

*Note: James A. Braginton (Jacobsen), the owner/operator of Coulter Optical (deceased) was the first manufacturer of commercial Dobsonian telescopes. The Odyssey 2 (17.5” f/4.5) debuted in January of 1982. Nearly all of them were made in a small shop in Idyllwild, California. The early ones had well figured mirrors and were very inexpensive. Finished mirror sets were also sold in good numbers. -Frank McCabe

Theophilus, Cyrillus and Catharina after Sunrise

Theophilus, Cyrillus and Catharina

“Theophilus, Cyrillus and Catharina after Sunrise”
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

Back in late June I visited these three craters at about the time of sunset for the trio.

If you have not observed these craters through a telescope then you are in for a treat when you do. The trio I speak of is Catharina, Cyrillus and Theophilus. All three of these craters are between 100 and 104 kilometers in diameter. The oldest of the three is Catharina which is also the southern most of the group in this north at the bottom sketch. Catharina, a Nectarian period impact may be older than the Imbrium basin with debris from that basin scattered across this crater and the older surroundings. Cyrillus a bit younger than the former shows terraced walls and worn central peaks when illuminated. The last member of the trio is one of those lunar treats that cannot go unnoticed. Theophilus, an Eratosthenian crater, just about has it all. It is large, sharp rimmed, terraced walled, tall central peaks (2 km.), a flat floor, and much melted ejecta just beyond the crater especially to the north and east. The outer reaches of Theophilus gradually merge with the Bay of Asperity. To the east 28 km Mädler can be seen basking in the morning sun.

Sketching:

For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper 8”x 9”, white and black Conte’ pastel pencils and a blending stump. After scanning, Brightness was decreased (-2) and contrast increased (+1) using Microsoft Office Picture Manager.

Telescope: 10 inch f/ 5.7 Dobsonian 6mm eyepieces 241x

Date: 11-3-2008 to 11-4 2008, 11:00 – 12:15 UT

Temperature: 20° C (68° F)

clear, breezy

Seeing: Antoniadi III, II

Colongitude: 339 °

Lunation: 6 days

Illumination: 29.5 %

Solar Prominence – October 10, 2008

Solar Prominences

Solar Prominence
Sketch and Details by Jeff Young

My permanent pier is a bit high for this time of year (when the sun is so low to the horizon), so I had to rotate the binocular head a bit to see through it. The sketch orientation therefore doesn’t match the sun graphic (courtesy of Tilting Sun by Les Cowley) in the upper right.

I’ve only been doing solar sketches for about 6 months now, but this was definitely the most fun to sketch so far. Conditions were pretty poor (with seeing alternating between bad and horrible, and transparency not much better), but there was gobs of detail to take in and try to reproduce.

White Derwent Graphitint pencil on black Artagain paper. Solarscope 70mm h-alpha filter / Tele Vue Pronto / Astro-Physics Barlow / Baader MkV binoviewer / Tele Vue 19mm Panoptics / Astro-Physics 400QMD equatorial mount. 10-Oct-2008; 10:20UT; County Louth, Ireland.

Mixed Media Daytime Moon

Daytime Moon

Gibbous Moon
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

On Saturday October 18, 2008 at 8:00 am local time, I was out walking in east Mesa, Arizona on a gorgeous morning with the air temperature about 22°C (72°F) and the humidity in the high teens. Over in the western sky the 19 day old waning gibbous moon was riding high and bright in a remarkable deep blue sky. Never in my life have I seen such a bright daytime moon. I stopped in front of a nearby building roof with a tall palm tree on the other side. I took out of the folder I was carrying an index card and using a pencil I drew the moon on one side and the building roof and palm tree on the other side. I jotted down some notes on colors and positions. When I got back home to Illinois, I combined the pencil drawings and notes into a mixed media sketch. For the moon I used pastel pencils (white and black) and for the building and palm tree I used Cray-Pas oil pastels on deep blue construction paper. Of course the view was much better than I am capable of capturing but I will never forget the treat of this perfect morning.

Sketching:

Naked eye drawing
Date and Time: 10-18-2008 8: 00 am PST
Location: Power Road and Broadway Ave. Mesa, Az.
Weather: Perfect
Moon at 19 days, high in the western sky.

For this sketch I used: dark blue construction paper, 10”x 8”, white and black Conte’pastel pencils and a blending stump. Also cray-pas oil pastels for the building and tree. This sketch was put together from pencil sketches and notes made at the time of the observation.

Frank McCabe

Andromeda’s Subtle Structure

M31

M31
Sketch and Details by Kiminori Ikebe

M31(NGC 224) And Galaxy Difficulty level: 1/5
Date of observation: 1996/10/15 02:21
Observing site: Kuju
Transparency/seeing/sky darkness: 3/2/4
Instruments: 32cm Dobsonian and XL14
Magnification: 110x
Width of field: 0.6 degree
It is interesting to observe at higher magnifications for details. It is a magnificent view with two dark lanes clearly seen. A brighter circular core is visible within the large elongated central bulge. West of the center lies a double dark lane. The regions other than the dark lanes show unevenness in brightness.

Crater Mersenius

Crater Mersenius

Crater Mersenius
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

Mersenius is an 84 kilometer diameter floor fractured crater just to the west of Mare Humorum. This crater is a Nectarian period crater estimated to be 3.9 billion years old. Close examination shows it has a very noticeable convex floor which is estimated to be half a kilometer higher than the floor edge. No hint of any central peaks seemed to be visible. The floor of this crater is fractured and one of those rilles appearing as a fine bright line was in view when the seeing was at its best just a few times as I sketched. Lunar geologists suggest that the bulging floor is due to lava upwelling from basin lava (Humorum), which released molten rock through the floor fractures at the crater’s center. This may account for the burial of the central peaks and production of numerous rilles. The floor distance below the crater rim is about 2.5 kilometers. Parts of the Rimae Mersenius system stood out clearly northeast of Mersenius Other craters included in my sketch are Mersenius D to the southeast, P to the north, 34 and 42 kilometers in diameter respectively. This was a most enjoyable sketching session because of the seeing and weather conditions.

Sketching:

For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper 8”x11”, white and black Conte’ pastel pencils and a blending stump. After scanning, Brightness was decreased (-4) and contrast increased (+2) using Microsoft Office Picture Manager.

Telescope: 10 inch f/ 5.7 Dobsonian 6mm eyepieces 241x
Date: 10-12-2008, 1:00 – 2:45 UT
Temperature: 16° C (61° F)
clear, calm, humid
Seeing: Antoniadi III, II
Colongitude: 60.4 °
Lunation: 12.7 days
Illumination: 90.6 %

Frank McCabe

The Bay of Rainbows

Sinus Iridum

Sinus Iridum
Sketch and Details by Richard Handy

Less than a several hundred thousand years after the impact that formed the Imbrium basin about 3.8 billion years ago, the 260 km Upper Imbrian crater formed that would eventually become known to observers as Sinus Iridum, the poetically named Bay of Rainbows. In a blindingly intense blast lasting less than a couple of seconds, the roughly 13 km Iridum asteriod gouged out a section of one of the ejecta rings that surrounded the Imbrium basin, scattering a rubbly circular lens of debris around the crater. It’s floor was lower in depth to the south, where it intersected the plate shaped lowlands of the basin. Huge chuncks of ejecta covered or partially obliterated the older craters that had survived the Imbrium event, giving Nectarian aged 48 km Maupertuis on it’s northeast slopes an odd rhomboidal shape. Thirty seven km Lower Imbrium La Condamine to the north seems to have faired a little better, partially filled with Iridum ejecta. 24 km Bouguer to its west is the the most recent, of Copernician age. To the northwest it pushed up the rim creating the Jura mountains, in places 6000 meters high. Even though the Imbrium basin had been flooding for a few hundred thousand years, and the mare basalts had not yet reached the lower elevations of the southern rim of the Iridum crater, it seems likely that Iridum’s floor had already been weeping a slow flow of lava from fissures that had been opened up by the force of the fiery impact. Still it would be close to half a billion years before the Imbrium flows began to erode the southern peaks and cascade down the slopes to completely cover the crater floor. As the lower southern floor began to subside from the load of dense basalt, the whole southern rim section may have suffered a series of catastrophic slides further down into the Imbrium basin, producing the clean separation at the 2600 meter high Promontorium Laplace, the eastern cape. Now only the sinuous dorsae near the craterlet Laplace A mark the rim’s southern boundry. To the west, the Promontorium Heraclides, Cassini’s aptly named “Moon Maiden”, reaches a height of 1700 meters, yet the western cape seems to taper to the southwest, blending rather smoothly into the mare. Along with its slow liquid inundation, Iridum was struck by several small impacts, most notably 39 km Upper Imbrian Bianchini which apparently caused a section of the northern rim to collapse, creating a talus of regolith beneath it’s southern rampart as a result of the seismic shock imparted so close to the rim of Iridum. Beyond the capes to the southwest are the 26 km Imbrium aged crater Helicon and it’s smaller companion, 20 km Eratosthenian Le Verrier. Out on the mare, to the west of Promontorium Laplace, is Montes Recti, a rectangular group of mountains 94 km long x 12 km wide, at 1800 meters, towering over the surrounding somber lava plains.

Sketch details:

Subject: Sinus Iridum #14 of L100 Rukl: 2, 3, 10 , 11
Time: 4:47 UT till 6:10 UT Date: July 25, 2007
Seeing: Antoniadi III -II Weather: clear and calm
Lunation: 10.7 days
Colongitude: 35.8 deg.
Illumination: 76.8%
Lib. in Lat.: +07 deg. 31 min.
Lib. in Long.: -03 deg. 28 min.
Phase: 57.6 deg.
Telescope: 12″ Meade SCT f/10
Binoviewer: W.O. Bino-P with 1.6X nosepiece
45 deg. W.O. erect image diagonal
Eyepieces: 18mm W.O. Plossls
Magnification: 271X
Sketch Medium: White and black Conte’ crayon on black textured Strathmore paper
Sketch size: 18″ X 24″