webcubus, to astrophotography
@webcubus@astrodon.social avatar

Sun and moon combo: I finally got some OK skies overnight last night and few enough clouds to shoot through during the day today to get another moon/sun combo. These images were captured a little over 9 hours apart.

Astrobin:

image/jpeg

guidobibra, to astrophotography
@guidobibra@mastodon.social avatar

Sun 2024 #1 Sadly we haven't had a single glimpse of the polar lights around here, but I was able to dig out those old solar glasses and take a shot of the sun with the massive group of sunspots clearly visible on the right! https://foto.bibra-medien.de/2024/05/12/sun-2024-1/

webcubus, to Canon
@webcubus@astrodon.social avatar

Seeing the northern lights with my own eyes was an amazing experience this weekend! I wrote up a blog post about it and assembled a new video. Check it out!

https://blog.briangweber.com/2024-05-11-northern-lights-show/

webcubus, to random
@webcubus@astrodon.social avatar

Not a great image, because I was shooting around the clouds but I had to capture the source of our Aurora fun. That big chunk on the right side has been blasting us with solar mass to light up the sky!

jerzone, (edited ) to random
@jerzone@techhub.social avatar

Total cloud cover when I went to bed, no aurora for me last night. Here’s a view of the sun just now and the big spot causing all of the fuss. Desaturated to remove lens aberration colors.

br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar
HarveyEsq, to news
@HarveyEsq@mastodon.world avatar

#Headline "Close to G5 Solar Storm Right now. Watch for Strong Auroras after Sunset! Friday 5/10/2024"

#TGIF #Friday #news #Auroras #sunspots

video/mp4

RobynGoodfellow, to Astronomy
@RobynGoodfellow@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar

Did some some amateur solar astronomy to see that monster sun spot everyone's talking about. Yep. There it is.

A photo of a porch on a sunny day. There's a reflecting telescope set up to project a small image of the sun on a piece of white paper.

ottaross, to random
@ottaross@mastodon.social avatar

So if the internet and power are knocked out this weekend, you can smugly tell your friends and family who are oblivious to today's sunspot activity: "It's solar storms. I knew that was a risk this weekend…" and then set about trying to break down your bookshelves and chairs for the bonfire that will cook your supper.

ottaross, to random
@ottaross@mastodon.social avatar

Was just using the eclipse-viewing welding glass to see the spots on the sun today. That's a big one alright.

🎵"There's a little black spot on the sun
today…"🎵

Well, several, and they're pretty huge in reality.

ottaross,
@ottaross@mastodon.social avatar

Here's a handy link to seeing them, updated hourly, without the effort of finding your eclipse glasses.

(Rotation varies relative to your perspective depending on where you are on the curvature of the Earth.)

https://www.spaceweatherlive.com/en/solar-activity/sunspot-regions.html

ottaross, (edited )
@ottaross@mastodon.social avatar

Currently, this is what the sun looks like:

ai6yr, to random
philo, to Astro
@philo@astronomy.city avatar

If you have a solar filter or glasses left over from the eclipse in North America and Canada, go check out the sun right now! Amazing cluster of sunspots visible!

Nikon D750
Sigma 150-500mm lens set to 500mm.

KevinFreitas, to astrophotography
@KevinFreitas@mastodon.social avatar
webcubus, to solar
@webcubus@astrodon.social avatar

Finally! A clear day for some solar imaging and what a view today! My phone has been buzzing all day as all of these spots are firing off solar flares.

Details: https://www.astrobin.com/ahxkph/

webcubus, to solar
@webcubus@astrodon.social avatar

Last Friday, I set out to do something fun: capture the rotation of the sun! The challenge with this is that the sun rotates very slowly - roughly one rotation every 27 days. I captured images every 5 minutes from about 8AM to 5PM and then stuck them all together in a time lapse.

More details on my blog (I have a blog now!): https://briangweberphotography.wordpress.com/2024/04/27/creating-a-solar-time-lapse/
Here's the result: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Vu4NvicdiHs

webcubus, to astrophotography
@webcubus@astrodon.social avatar

The sun and moon captured about 6 hours apart on April 23. The sun was super active with tons of sunspots and the moon was 100% full. I captured the moon right after it cleared the trees and the color is unedited.

Both were captured from my backyard with my QHY168C camera and EQ6-R mount. I used a homemade solar filter with Thousand Oaks film for the sun shots.

A white light image of the full sun littered with sunspots across the surface

DarkCorax, to astrophotography

Today at noon there was a fantastic solar transit of the ISS near home; sadly the clouds covered the sun in that moments. Besides the low altitude passage and the consequent relative size of the ISS, the background would be rich in , as you can see in this later shot.

image/jpeg
image/jpeg

KevinFreitas, to astrophotography
@KevinFreitas@mastodon.social avatar

Incredibly active field of sunspot on our star today.

br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar

Solar eclipse glasses aren't sunglasses, but you can look for sunspots with them

https://nowtoronto.com/lifestyle/solar-eclipse-glasses-arent-sunglasses-but-you-can-look-for-sunspots-with-them/

kevaba, to random
@kevaba@fediscience.org avatar
webcubus, to solar
@webcubus@astrodon.social avatar

I wasn't planning to do any solar imaging yesterday, but I changed my mind once I saw what the sunspots were up to! That large sunspot region is cranking out solar flares at an impressive rate. Hopefully I'll get another chance to image on a clearer day before they disappear around the side.

Details: https://www.astrobin.com/0hpep5/

webcubus, to astrophotography
@webcubus@astrodon.social avatar

It was not a good day for solar imaging, but I pointed my scope (with solar filter, of course) at the sun and waited for a break in the clouds. I finally got a bit of one and captured 2000 frames of video. Normally, I tell the software to pick the top 25%, but that stack had weird artifacts. Lowering to 5% produced a really nice image, which might be my favorite yet.

Details: https://www.astrobin.com/om17fg/

CaroltheCrone, to technology
@CaroltheCrone@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

Yesterday the dishwasher flashed "Error 6" and we discovered that part has been discontinued.

Last night the humidifier began to whine.

This morning, the roomba announced (in German, no less) that it, too, was having an Error 6.

I suspect the Internet of Things is staging a revolution.

This might be the beginning of the end.

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