The real name for this full phase is a Perigee Moon. It’s when the Moon in its orbit about the Earth is at its closest point. The Moon does not orbit the Earth in a perfect circle but in an ellipse (like a squashed circle) so it can be up to 50,000km closer at Perigee (which is why it appears larger in the sky) or up to 50,000 kms further away from us here on Earth, which is called Apogee.
~ Beautiful Full Moon ~ What a glorious sight it was to see the full Moon rise tonight, we had quite a lot of cloud about and I could not believe my eyes when I saw a slight green flash…could such a thing happen with the Moon! Then as it rose above the rooftops it shimmered in its soft golden light…it was just so beautiful :-)
The real name for this full phase is a Perigee Moon. It’s when the Moon in its orbit about the Earth is at its closest point. The Moon does not orbit the Earth in a perfect circle but in an ellipse (like a squashed circle) so it can be up to 50,000km closer at Perigee (which is why it appears larger in the sky) or up to 50,000 kms further away from us here on Earth, which is called Apogee.
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~ The magnificent planet Saturn is occulted by our Moon ~ On the 4th August there was a glorious occultation of Saturn by the Moon here on the Gold Coast… this is the first time that I’ve ever seen this event and it was amazing!
It started at 9.19 pm with Saturn disappearing behind the dark western limb then reappearing at 10.27 pm on the eastern sunlit rim of the Moon. Watching Saturn and its magnificent rings slowly disappear into nothingness was quite unreal…and I managed to capture it all on video :-) I tried something new this time and took HD videos instead of still images with my Canon 7D on video mode and 2x Barlow lens that was attached to my tracking Meade 8inch Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope. This image is one of the screen captures from the video. ~ 2nd August 2014 ~
The Sun looked very interesting today with some very jagged shaped filaments and many little sunspots that looked quite active. There was also quite a large prominence on the western limb (top left) that at times looked like it was detached, I wanted to take another look later this afternoon to see if it had separated…but the weather came in and that was that! My image is a composite of two images, one for the surface and one for the prominences. There were 15 images for each photo that were stacked in RegiStax6 and combined in PS. Taken with a Canon 7D and 80mm Lunt solar telescope. The colour of the image is close to the colour as seen in the telescope and picked up by the camera. |
AuthorI just love being under the heavens, come on a journey with me and I’ll share some of the amazing wonders of the Universe with you. Noeleen :-) Archives
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