Celestial Pyramid

Zodiacal Light 

Hello friends!!
I have been busy a few months but I am back again :- )
I send you a sketch that I did last year showing the Zodiacal Light. It was
the first time I saw it in so good conditions and very clear.

The weather was perfect, transparency, very very clear skies. The Moon was
next to the plain horizon, thin as a sickle, the pyramid of light was
inclining towards the left side, becoming closer as it was climbing up to
the constellation of Geminis and Cancer. Incredibly luminous it was
contrasting against the black sky.

It is a naked eye sketch showing some trees on the horizon and the moon.

Date: April 29 (2006)
After the sunset looking to the west.

I hope you like it.
Leonor

Prominent Trio

Prominent Trio

Theophilus, Cyrillus and Catherina
 
This sketch of the trio Theophilus, Cyrillus and Catherina was done in about 15
minutes due to clouds coming in. to make the best of the limited time I tried to
focus only on the big shapes, shadows & lines. Then I worked the sketch out inside.
Below is the quick sketch done outside, and above the finished version.

Prominent Trio quick
 
Sketched on the 22th May 2007 from my home in Bornem, Belgium. I used my 8” f/5 dob
at 200x through a 5mm Baader Hyperion eyepiece.
 
The sketch was done on standard A4 printerpaper with pencils. I then scanned it and
adjusted the brightness/contrast levels a bit to make it stand out better.
 
Kris Smet

Twins Gems

M35 

Hi folks,

Here’s my first observation with the SkyWatcher. This rich field scope gives a whole
new perspective on deep-sky objects. With a SP 26mm EP, I get a whopping 2.7 degrees
field of view at a power of x19. I hope you like the view.

Date : March 8, 2007
Time : 20.30 UT
Seeing :2.5/5
Transp. 3/5

Digital sketch made with Photopaint, based on a raw pencil sketch made behind the EP.
N down, W left orientation.
Rony De Laet

http://www.geocities.com/rodelaet, my personal website.

Standing On The Shoulders of Giants

Mu Cephei 

µ Cephei: Red Supergiant

µ Cephei, was first discovered by William Herschel and called Garnet
Star, because it appears to shine in garnet red due to its spectral
class of M2Ia. It is the reddest star visible with the naked eye and may
be one of the brightest and largest stars in our whole Galaxy.
It is a Red Supergiant in the last phase of its life, fusing helium into
carbon. Its radius is 1425 times the radius of the sun and it is 38000
times brighter – only thinking about those numbers can do your head in.
Sketching it was easy, however, more than once interrupted by passing
clouds.

Date: November 18, 2006
Location: Erbendorf, Bavaria, Germany
Instrument: Dobsonian 8″ f/6
Constellation: Cepheus
Seeing: II-III of VI
Transparency: III-IV of VI
NELM: 5m0
Magnification: 80x
Technique: pencil on white paper, digitally enhanced in Photoshop

Sebastian Lehner

Three near the seashore

Archimedes et al 

Archimedes et. al.

Finally, I was blessed with a clear sky. It has been 26 days since the beginning of the year and this is my fourth clear or mostly clear night. With the moon well into lunation 1040, it was bright and high in the sky at nightfall. After observing the lunar surface for about forty-five minutes, I selected a favorite region in eastern Mare Imbrium for sketching.

As an eighth grader with a new 4.25 inch f/10 Newtonian telescope, Archimedes was the first crater I remember identifying with this scope. I selected my 10 inch f/ 5.7 Dobsonian and 6mm eyepiece to make my sketch of this region. In the sketch below the three craters in counterclockwise direction from smallest to largest are: Autolycus, Aristillus and Archimedes. About half way between Autolycus and Archimedes is the impact site of the first spacecraft to reach the moon September 14, 1959. It was Luna 2 and after crossing through the Van Allen belt it detected and confirmed the solar ions known as the solar wind particles just prior to its lunar rendezvous.

The two smaller craters are from the Copernican period and the larger crater Archimedes is an ancient crater that dates back beyond 3 billion years ago. The terraced walls of Archimedes stand 2000 meters above the flat lava flooded floor of this crater. I was unable to detect at this observation any of the craterlets on the floor. This crater is 85 km. across. Autolycus is less than half the diameter of Archimedes has a higher rim (3000 meters) and an irregular floor. Aristillus which is intermediate in size (56 km diameter) has the tallest rim at 3500 meters and 3 mountains on its floor up to 900 meters tall.

For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper, white and black Conte’
pastel pencils and a soft piece of leather for  blending. Image was slightly darkened using Imageenhance software.
Date 1-27-2007 1:10-2:40 UT
Temperature: 3.8° C (39° F)
Windy with strong gusting
Seeing average Antoniadi: III
Colongitude: 10.5 °
Lunation: 7.9 days
Illumination: 62.3 %

Frank McCabe

Sunny Hawaii

 Sunny Hawaii

A unique sunspot grouping, AR963, emerged this week and has been dubbed by some “the
Hawaiian Islands”. The large ‘island’ is about the size of Neptune and all the little ones are each about the size of Earth. Atmospheric conditions prevented anything but brief glimpses at the Sun through heavy clouds and gusty winds.

This grouping is definitely one to keep an eye on!

The Sun with AR963
100mm acromat refractor at 48x (25mm Plossl + 2x Barlow).
Graphite pencil on white paper, blending stumps.

Andrew English

Gibbous Ruby World

Gibbous Mars 1

I had intended to catch up with Mars in June to begin my
observations and sketches of this exciting opposition.
Unfortunately a long run of poor weather in the UK prevented me
from doing this. Finally I caught up with the Red one early on the
morning of Sat 8th July. It was hard work but I sucked out some
detail in the end from the distant ruby planet.
  
Dale Holt

Here is the original SPA observation form with all the details about Dale’s sketch:

Gibbous Mars

Edge-on galaxy

NGC 4565 

I was observing Melotte 111 with a richfield scope when I ran into this galaxy.
While being limited to a maximum power of x63, I tried to make the best of the
observation. This galaxy looked rather faint. I needed to jiggle the scope to set
this galaxy in motion. This technique helped me to determine the real shape of this
beautiful but elusive edge-on galaxy. I would like to repeat this observation in the
future with higher powers of x80 and x120, to see if more details are visible in a
four inch scope. I hope you like the view

Date : May 5, 2007
Time : 22.30UT
Scope : SkyWatcher 102/500
Vixen LV Zoom at 8mm
Power : 62.8
FOV: 47′
Filter : none
Seeing : 2.5/5
Nelm : 5.1
Sketch Orientation : N up, W right.
Digital sketch made with a digital tablet and PhotoPaint, based on a raw pencil sketch.

Rony De Laet

http://www.geocities.com/rodelaet, my personal website.

Lights Out for Eratosthenes

Eratosthenes

   At the southern end of the lunar Apennines on the border between the Bay of
Billows (mostly in darkness) and Sea of Rains lies 60 km. crater Eratosthenes. I
was off and on observing over most of the night. By morning twilight when the moon
was high in the east, Eratosthenes crater was experiencing sunset. The deep, dark
caldera-like aperture was undergoing sunset at the beginning of my sketch. This
3.2 billion year old land mark crater is the defining feature of the Eratosthenes
time period. While sketching I could clearly see much of the ejecta pitting of
Copernicus and its ray material which crossed the region 2 billion years after
Eratosthenes formed. I did not include much of the Copernicus crater impact
features because they are in my opinion more suitable for high resolution
photography or direct visual examination at high power. In this sketch I tried to
briefly capture the overall eyepiece view.
  
  
  Sketching:
  For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper, white and black Conte’
  pastel pencils and a blending stump. Contrast was slightly increased after scanning.
  Telescope: 10 inch f/ 5.7 Dobsonian and 6 mm eyepiece 241X
  Date: 7-8-2007, 9:15-10:30 UT
  Temperature: 22° C (73° F)
  Clear to partly cloudy, light winds
  Seeing:  Antoniadi II
  Colongitude 190.2 °
  Lunation 23.25 days
  Illumination 42.2 %
  
  Frank McCabe

Splash in the water

Prom sequence 

This erupting prominence sequence reminded me of a rock plopping in the water. It
was brilliant to watch. This observing session nearly made me late for my brother’s
wedding, but I just couldn’t tear my eyes away from the view to to give myself ample
time to look presentable for the special occasion. As a last minute idea to add to
their wedding present, I framed the first sketch of this sequence with the date for
them….starting their new lives together with a bang, so to speak. Number 963 for
the sun, day one for my brother and his new wife. Sketches done with black
Strathmore paper and white Conte’ crayon.

Erika Rix
Zanesville, Ohio

This is a link to an animated sequence of the same session that Erika produced herself!