A Day Before Full

Schluter

Schluter, Grimaldi, and Riccioli Craters
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

At one day before full moon the illumination along the western terminator, nearly at the limb was highlighting the Upper-Imbrium crater Schluter (92 km.) with its central peak protruding out from the darkness of the crater floor. The outer reaches of Mare Orientale in the name of the Cordillera mountains were just beyond the sunlight at the lunar limb. The largest feature in this sketch is the lava covered, very dark floored impact basin known as Grimaldi (230 km.) What we see of Grimaldi is the inner ring of a 440 kilometer, two ringed mini-basin. This Pre-Nectarian impact event was originally described as a walled plain crater of advanced age with a heavily worn and battered rim. The basin is noted for a large gravitation anomaly beneath the surface associated with a high mass density concentration. Adjacent to Grimaldi to the west is semi-dark floored walled plain crater Riccioli (150 km.) At the same age as its eastern partner it shows damage and age especially from the ejecta pitched out by the Mare Orientale event.

Sketching:

For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper 9”x12”, white and black Conte’ pastel pencils and a blending stump. After scanning, Brightness was decreased (-5) and contrast increased (+4) using Microsoft Office Picture Manager.

Telescope: 10 inch f/ 5.7 Dobsonian and 9 mm eyepiece 161 x
Date: 8-16-2008, 3:15-4:40 UT
Temperature: 15° C (59° F)
Clear, calm
Seeing: Antoniadi III
Colongitude 85.7 °
Lunation 14.7 days
Illumination 99.4 %

Frank McCabe

Solar Prominences – September 1, 2008

Solar Collage

Sun in H-Alpha
Sketch and details by Erika Rix

2008 September 01
solar
Erika Rix

Sketch media: black Cranford paper, white Conte’ and Prang pencils

It was a good day. I shared some solar views and was repaid with lunch!

After having walked the dogs up the road and through some fields first thing this morning, the skies were clear and I was looking forward to observing. I dragged the LXD mount outside in front of the observatory to see if the seeing improved. I didn’t set it back up inside to compare with, but I was a lot cooler, which in turn made an improved comfort level temperature wise. The downside was moving all my gear outside, putting up with a little wind, and observing on a slope. The views were worth it.

Half way through the session, my neighbor honked when she drove up the road to her house, so when I was finished with my sketches, I called her to see if she’d like to come down and have her first look at the sun through a telescope. Paul came down to join us and we had a really enjoyable time. He just came back from imaging the Sun with the Maxscope so I’m looking forward to comparing our views. His session was a few hours behind me, so I reckon there will be a few changes.

Being the thoughtful person that she is, our neighbor came back from her solar session with lunch for Paul and me.

Southeastern Ocean of Storms

southern Oceanus Procellarum

Southern Oceanus Procellarum
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

Shortly after sunset I turned my telescope in the direction of the moon and was planning to sketch the crater Longomontanus. However that all changed when I spotted a ghostly, mostly buried crater in southern Oceanus Procellarum right at the terminator. For June 10, 2006 at C. Wood’s site – LPOD, you can find a photo of this region of the moon. Superimposed over this crater are a series of dorsa (ridges) known as Dorsa Euclides F. The lava in this region is not quite thick enough to cover all the evidence that this unnamed crater existed. To the east the 12 kilometer Copernician period crater surrounded by bright ejecta at the center of the sketch is Euclides. Just to the east of this crater are the Riphaeus mountains. North of the mountains you will see four of the Lansberg craters with the largest being Lansberg D (11 km.).
The two small Eratosthenian craters at the far left side of the sketch are Kuiper and Eppinger both at about 6 km. in size.
I love these views that inspire us to capture them with a sketch.

Sketching:

For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper 9”x12”, white and black Conte’ pastel pencils and a blending stump. After scanning, Brightness was decreased (-5) and contrast increased (+3) using Microsoft Office Picture Manager.

Telescope: 18 inch f/ 5 Dobsonian and 12 mm eyepiece 167x
Date: 8-12-2008, 1:35 – 3:05 UT
Temperature: 21° C (71° F)
Partly cloudy, hazy, calm
Seeing: Antoniadi II – III
Colongitude 35.8 °
Lunation 10.6 days
Illumination 78.9 %

Frank McCabe

Stand Alone Crater

Eratosthenes Crater

Eratosthenes Crater
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

Crater Eratosthenes rests on the boundary between the Sea of Showers and the northwestern extension of the Sea of Islands known as the Seething Bay. This crater is a magnificent stand alone crater. It is 58 kilometers across and nearly 3.7 kilometers deep. Eratosthenes began as a small mountain size rock impacting the moon at the end of the Apennine mountain range onto the mare basalt. This event occurred 3.15 billion years ago and defines the beginning of the Eratosthenian period. Other well known craters forming at about the same time include Langrenus and Bullialdus.
Eratosthenes is a regal feature when illuminated with the terminator nearby. Its terraced inner walls, irregular rubble strewn floor and central peaks make it a most attractive sight in telescopes of all sizes. See for yourself at the next opportunity.

Sketching:

For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper 9”x12”, white and black Conte’ pastel pencils and a blending stump. After scanning, Brightness was decreased (-4) and contrast increased (+4) using Microsoft Office Picture Manager.

Telescope: 10 inch f/ 5.7 Dobsonian and 6 mm eyepiece 241x
Date: 8-11-2008, 1:15-2:30 UT
Temperature: 20° C (68° F)
Clear, calm
Seeing: Antoniadi III
Colongitude 26.0 °
Lunation 9.8 days
Illumination 72.3 %

Frank McCabe

Longomontanus and Environs

Longomontanus and Environs

Longomontanus and Environs
Sketch and Details by Richard Handy

Sketch of Longomontanus and environs on November 25, 2005 4:42 am PST to 6:10 am PST.

Telescope: Meade 12″ SCT
234X (2X barlow with 26mm Plossl)

Seeing: Antoniadi III-IV and occasionally II.

Colongitude: 199.9 deg

Lunation: 23.48 days

Medium: White Conte’ on black Strathmore textured paper.

Sketch size: 17.5″ x 23.5″

Crater Maurolycus

Crater Maurolycus

Crater Maurolycus
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

This is a notable crater around the twentieth day of lunation as the setting sun shadows begin to crawl across the crater floor to the east. The large size (115 km.), central peaks on a flat floor and high terraced walls identify this ancient (Nectarian period) crater as a walled plain impact. The east wall rises steeply above the floor 4.2 kilometers. Part of a previous large crater juts out from under Maurolycus to the south. Central peaks casting shadows were seen north of the center point on the crater floor. The floor is mostly flat and smooth. In addition the floor is not believed to be lava flooded and in the October 2007 issue of Sky and Telescope, Chuck Wood describes a hypothesis that it may be covered with fluidized ejecta from basin formation. The problem with this notion as he points out is that basin formation ended before the Maurolycus forming event occurred. Among the many similar craters in the southern highlands this is a crater that truly stands out.

Sketching:

For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper 9”x12”, white and black Conte’ pastel pencils and a blending stump. After scanning, Brightness was decreased (-4) and contrast increased (+4) using Microsoft Office Picture Manager.

Telescope: 10 inch f/ 5.7 Dobsonian and 6 mm eyepiece 241 x
Date: 7-23-2008, 5:45-7:10 UT
Temperature: 20° C (68° F)
Partly Cloudy, calm
Seeing: Antoniadi III
Colongitude 154.2 °
Lunation 20.2 days
Illumination 76.3 %

Frank McCabe

Exquisite Eratosthenes

Eratosthenes and environs

Eratosthenes and environs
Sketch and Details by Richard Handy

Description: Eratosthenes is the exquisite jewel sitting next to the Hope Diamond of Lady Luna, Copernicus. Consequently, Eratosthenes is often overshadowed by the spectacle of this lunar Juggernaut, however this sparkling gem of a crater and its immediate environment convey some of the major events that dominated the northwestern quadrant of the Moon. From 4.5 billion to 4.2 Billion years ago, a few hundred million years before the period of Heavy Bombardment, the large impactor Gargantuan, first proposed by the British geologist Peter Cadogan, struck the Moon with a force and fury far beyond our comprehension. The possibility that this impact could have, in one single event, reshaped the mean crustal thickness on both sides of the Moon is a staggering thought. Fed by fissures and cracks in the broken crust created by the force of the impact, magmas found easy passage to the basin floor. Over the intervening eons, the great basin formed by that event would eventually fill in with mare lavas to form Oceanus Procellarum. About 3.85 billion years ago, during the period of Late Heavy bombardment (3.8-4.0 by ago) the Moon received another enormous blow to this same northwest quadrant. The impactor, though half the size, formed another great basin, again flooding with mare lavas like Procellarum, to become the beautiful Mare Imbrium. To the east of Eratosthenes, the arcuate sweep of the Montes Apenninus, part of the remnant rim of giant Imbrium, seem to diminish to a few low outcrops as they approach the crater, probably appearing much like a mesa would if you were strolling on the surface. There are a few of these buried massifs on Eratosthenes’ northwestern flanks, although the great circular mountain range disappears in this region only to reappear as the Montes Carpatus to the northwest of Copernicus. There is a wonderful flame-like mountainous formation to the southwest of Eratosthenes, it appears to have been shaped by the fluidized flow fronts from the Imbrium event. Both Copernicus and Eratosthenes are benchmark features, meaning their formations correspond to the beginning of a geological period. Fifty-eight kilometer Eratosthenes was excavated by a 3 km wide impactor some 3.2 billion years ago. It’s rugged walls and terraces show significant scalloping and craterlet battering. The mare around Eratosthenes seemed coated in rays from 93 km Copernicus, which formed 1.1 billion years ago by an impactor 4.5 km in diameter, inaugurating the Copernican period. During this last 1000 million years most complex plant and animal life on Earth evolved.

Sketch details:
Subject: Eratosthenes and environs
Date: 12-28-2006 Start 5:27 UT End 6:50 UT
Lunation: 8.64 days Phase: 68.6 deg Colongitude: 19.8 deg
Illumination: 68.2 % Lib in Lat: -03 deg 24 min Lib in Long.: +01 deg 36 min
Seeing: Terrible most of the session, Antoniadi IV-V, only very occasionally III
Weather: clear
Telescope: 12” Meade SCT f/10
Barlow: 2X Televue
Binoviewer: Williams Optics Bino-P with 1.6X nosepiece
Eyepieces: 20 mm W.O. Plossls
Magnification: 396X
Sketch Medium: White and black Conte’ Crayon on textured black Strathmore paper
Sketch size: 18”x 24”

Luminous Goldschmidt

Goldschmidt Crater

Craters Goldschmidt, Anaxagoras and Epigenes
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

Crater Goldschmidt is an ancient pre-Nectarian period walled-plain crater that is situated only 480 km. from the lunar North Pole. The floor of this crater appears light in color and little crater Goldschmidt A (7km.) was seen on the southern floor.
Along the western rim of Goldschmidt are craters Anaxagoras (53 km.) and Anaxagoras A (18 km.). Anaxagoras is a young Copernican period crater with an expected ray system that includes some I saw during the observation and included here to the east and southeast. The crater to the southwest of Goldschmidt is Epigenes (55 km.), an ancient Nectarian period crater with a more typical dark floor for this region. With the moon crossing the meridian so low it never resolved well in the eyepiece and scintillated and shimmered in the warm air rising from the ground. All in all it was a wonderful opportunity to view and sketch the moon.

Sketching

For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper 10”x10”, white and black Conte’ pastel pencils and a blending stump. After scanning, Brightness was decreased (-5) and contrast increased (+5) using Microsoft Office Picture Manager.

Telescope: 10 inch f/ 5.7 Dobsonian and 6 mm eyepiece 241 x
Date: 7-14-2008, 2:20-3:40 UT
Temperature: 20° C (68° F)
Partly Cloudy, calm
Seeing: Antoniadi III-IV
Colongitude 41.9°
Libration in Latitude: +7° 19’
Lunation 11 days
Illumination 84.3 %

Frank McCabe

Six Degrees of Libration

Crater Barrow

Lunar Crater Barrow
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

With six and one half degrees of libration in latitude, the lunar North Polar Region was favorably positioned for viewing from our home planet. A morning sun ray was illuminating the floor of crater Barrow as I set up my scope for an evening of observing the moon and stars. I was not expecting to sketch the moon tonight because of its low altitude. I just couldn’t pass up this opportunity to catch this sight on the floor of Barrow and a sketch was in order.

Crater Barrow is an old worn 95 km. Nectarian period impact dent adjacent to larger older walled plain crater Meton (126 km.). Meton appears particularly large and irregular in shape because of the common lava flooded floors of Meton, C, D E, and F. Much smaller and younger crater B (6 km.) can be seen on the floor of Meton C (77 km.). It was only after I began sketching that I noticed a second ray of sunlight crossing the floor of Scoresby M (54 km.) just to the north of Barrow. Other craters visibly here include: Scoresby (57 km.) one of the younger craters here with the brightly lit rim and just northeast of M, Challis (56 km.) and Main (48 km.) are paired up to the north of M.

Part way through the sketching process I needed to move the entire setup because I lost the moon to a large maple tree. This was a most rewarding observing session even with a moon that tried to hide from my vantage point.

Sketching:

For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper 12”x14”, white and black Conte’ pastel pencils and a blending stump. After scanning, Brightness was slightly decreased (-4) and contrast increased (+4) using Microsoft Office Picture Manager.

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

Date: 7-10-2008, 1:45-2:50 UT

Temperature: 22° C (72° F)

Partly Cloudy, calm

Seeing: Antoniadi III

Colongitude 353.1 °

Libration in Latitude: 6° 30’

Lunation 7 days

Illumination 49.2 %

Frank McCabe

Grabbing The Horns of 1058

Waxing Crescent Moon

The Waxing Crescent Moon, Lunation 1058
Sketch and Details by Frank McCabe

Waxing Crescent Moon: Lunation 1058

This was the beginning of a wonderful observing night. I started observing and sketching the moon well before sunset and finished sketching before twilight ended. Because of my early sketch completion, no evidence of earthshine was visible.

The current lunation number is 1058. A lunation number changes approximately at 29.5 days and between two successive new moons. This interval of time for the moon is also known as the synodic revolution of the moon as it returns to the same phase. Lunation number one was the first new moon beginning in 1923 with the first new moon of that year more than 85 years ago.

Sketching:

For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper 11” X14”, white and black Conte’ pastel pencils, crayons and a blending stump. Brightness and contrast were slightly adjusted after scanning.

Telescope: 4.25 inch f/ 5 Dobsonian and 21mm eyepiece 26x

Date: 7-5-2008 1:05-2:10 UT

Temperature: 20° C (68° F)

Clear with slight haze, calm

Seeing: Antoniadi III

Colongitude: 303.5 °

Lunation: 2.9 days

Illumination: 11.7 %

Frank McCabe