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Post by brianb on Apr 8, 2010 21:20:26 GMT
The Sun was shining from a clear sky yesterday afternoon (Weds Apr 7th) & I decided to have a go at imaging Venus & Mercury - taking great care to avoid the Sun, naturally. The seeing was very poor with a great deal of boiling. I did manage to get Venus more or less focused & obtained this image, in which the gibbous phase is clear despite the small size - Venus's apparent diameter was only 10.7 arc sec. 2010 Apr 07, 1445 UT. Celestron CPC1100, 2x Powermate (f/20), Astronomik Planet Pro 742 IR pass filter, Imaging Source DMK21 camera. Mercury proved difficult to find with the tele extender but I did manage to image it at prime focus. Twice, just to prove that it wasn't a fluke ... The fat crescent phase is quite clear but I don't claim to have resolved any surface detail. Mercury's diameter was 7.3 arc sec. 2010 Apr 07, 1459 UT. Celestron CPC1100, prime focus (f/10), Astronomik Planet Pro 742 IR pass filter, Imaging Source DMK21 camera. 2010 Apr 07, 1517 UT. Same instrument etc. Next time I try this I will be insulating the sunward side of the scope tube with silver foil ... I think that much of the bad seeing was due to tube currents as the seeing when observing the Sun was apparently much steadier.
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Post by Paul Evans on Apr 9, 2010 13:24:26 GMT
That's quite extraordinary Brian. I've managed to image both Venus and Jupiter in daylight before - only as points and only using the Moon as a signpost, but I've never seen Mercury caught like this before. Well done.
Paul.
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