Archive for the ‘Asteroids’ Category

Asteroid 3 Juno on May 18, 2007

Friday, May 18th, 2007

3 Juno is among the largest asteroids (tenth in size) at 149 miles in diameter (240 km). It orbits the Sun in about 4.36 years and is currently about 2.3985 AU distant from Earth. According to the ephemeris its current brightness is 10.4.

Image of asteroid 3 Juno on May 18, 2007

Images are from last evening, May 17 about 20 minutes before midnight and another 18 minutes after. Telescope was a Celestron Nexstar11 with F3.3 focal reducer. A Stellacam II video camera used for capture at 128 integration (4 sec), medium gamma setting, and 9/14 gain. Sky was mostly cloudless, 0-5 mph wind, temperature 53°F, transparency was good though some haze was apparent, and turbulence 5/10. Location was light polluted Louisville, CO.

Asteroid 2006 VV 2 on March 30

Saturday, March 31st, 2007

Asteroid 2006-VV-2 is a mile wide rock which past closest to Earth on March 30, 2007 around 9 pm MDT at a distance of about 2.1 million miles. Below is a video taken with Celestron Nexstar 11 telescope, F3.3 focal reducer and Stellacam II video camera.


Unfortunately, I was unable to see it visually despite repeated tries. The moon was quite close by and there was a thin haze which brightened the background. Temperature was 32 degrees F, mostly clear sky, turbulence around 6/10, no wind, and 95% humidity. Location was Louisville, CO.

Asteroids 6-Hebe and 15-Eunomia

Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006

Main belt asteroids 6-Hebe and 15-Eunomia are currently in the constellation Capricornus. Both are bright (visual mag 8.2 and 8.8 respectively) and easy to find by comparison with a star chart. (Asteroid 1-Ceres is also in Capricornus but is too low behind my neighbors trees).

Asteroid 6-Hebe on Aug 21, 2006

 

Asteroid 15-Eunomia on Aug 21, 2006 

Equipment used was Celestron Nexstar11 telescope, F3.3 focal reducer, and Astrovid StellacamII video camera (9/14 gain, integrate 128, medium gamma).  Dark subtracted, flat field and bias corrected with ImagePlus. Aligned and stacked with Registax3, brightness adjusted, crop, and animation created with Photoshop Elements2. Sky was clear; temperature was 60°F; turbulence was 5/10; transparency was very good; location was Louisville, CO;

Asteroid 532 Herculina

Friday, August 11th, 2006

Currently traveling though through the constellation Ophiuchus is the large, main belt asteroid (225 km in diameter) called Herculina. This one was easy to spot, it matched up with the star field on my notebook exactly.

Asteroid 532 Herculina

Image acquired from my backyard in Louisville, CO between 05:10 and 05:42 UT with Celestron Nexstar11 telescope, Meade F3.3 focal reducer, and Astrovid Stellacam II video camera (Gain 9/14, Integrate 128, medium gamma). Sky was clear — first clear night in two weeks, no wind, temperature 68°F, 40% humidity, transparency excellent, turbulence 6/10. Moon quite low in the southeast, didn’t appear to affect images a whole lot.