Massive Solar Prominence

H-Alpha Sun - November 12, 2011
H-Alpha Sun - November 12, 2011

Our star continues to provide stunning sights as we approach solar maximum. This huge prominence, among the biggest I’ve ever seen, is visible in the hydrogen alpha wavelength, but it takes a specially designed scope or filter to see it. My 40mm Personal Solar Telescope (PST) is one such scope.

The prominence consists of superheated solar plasma suspended along magnetic field lines. It is not static, but changes constantly–sometimes the changes happen quickly and sometimes slowly. The appearance of this prominence had changed subtly by the end time of the sketch, so if you want to draw one of these monsters, be prepared to work fast!

The Sun in H alpha
Solar Prominence
Friars Hill, WV USA
12 November 2011 1850-1910 UT
Conte’ crayon, Conte’ pencil, and Derwent Graphtint color pencil on black paper.

Thanks,

Michael Rosolina

Lunar Eclipse – First of 2011

Lunar Eclipse - June 2011
Lunar Eclipse - June 2011

Location: Malta
Date: 15 June 2011
Media (blender, charcoal, pencil colour, white paper, GIMP)
http://znith-observatory.blogspot.com

This is my first composite sketch of a total lunar eclipse that took place yesterday on June 15, 2011. It was the first of two such eclipses in 2011. The second will occur on December 10, 2011.

I used graphite with blender and an orange pencil colour. Sketching was done at the 40mm eyepiece using SCT 8″ f/10. Conditions were clear and seeing was 7/10.

The individual sketches were made on scanned sketches of the full moon. Scanning was done at 600 dpi and processed using GIMP. I enjoyed sketching the various phases of the eclipse especially during the fast-changing penumbral phase.

In my sketches I tried to capture the interesting tonality of the orange colour shading visible over parts of the eclipsed region of the moon.

This was a relatively rare central lunar eclipse, in which the center point of Earth’s shadow passes across the Moon. The eclipse was visible rising over South America, western Africa, and Europe, and setting over eastern Asia.

Messier 101 and Surroundings

Messier 101
Messier 101

instrumentation : dobson 254/1200 +pano 24, nagler 13
Location : Maumusson, Loire-Atlantique, France
Date : 29/05/2011
Media : white pencil, black paper.
condition : no humidity, great transparency, a little light pollution, great seeing.

I have never seen M101 as beautiful as that. Many details are difficult. details on ngc 5474. 1h30 of observation.

Waning Crescent Moon: Lunation 1094

Moon: Lunation 1094
Moon: Lunation 1094

This morning was the first clear sky I have seen in 2 weeks. Although it did not clear-off until after morning twilight began, I’ll take what I can get and be happy I got a chance to sketch the Moon as it prepares to end this lunation and begin the next.

At 4:30 am CDT the waning crescent moon struggled to 30 degrees above the eastern horizon as I began sketch it. By the time I had finished the sun was up and morning was well underway.

Sketching:
For this sketch I used blue construction paper 9″ x 12″, white Conte’ pastel pencils, blending stumps, a White Pearl eraser, brush and blue Crayola colored pencils. Brightness was slightly increased (+1) using the scanner

Scope 4.25” f/5 Newtonian scope with a 12mm Plossl eyepiece at 46x riding on an equatorial platform

Date: 6-26-2011, 09:30-10:30 UT
Temperature: 18° C (65° F)
clear, calm
Seeing: Antoniadi III
Colongitude: 214.0°
Lunation: 24.52 days
Illumination: 23.8% Waning Crescent

Frank McCabe

Voyager’s View of Jupiter

– Object Name: Jupiter
– Object Type: Planet
– Location: Lith, the Netherlands
– Date: 11-6-2011
– Media: pencil sketch on white paper

On March 5, 1979, Voyager 1 flew past Jupiter. During this passage, the probe made a series of legendary photographs of the planet.
Almost two years later, Voyager 1 flew past Saturn. After this passage, the probe began on its interstellar mission.

The sketch below is based on a photograph of Jupiter taken by Voyager 1. It is a pencil sketch, made on white paper.

Thanks for watching!

Rutger Teule
www.rutgerteule.com

Beauty of the Helix

NGC 7293
Planetary Nebula
The “Helix” Nebula
Aquarius
09/08/10
Ilford NSW Australia
56cm f5 Dobsonian telescope
Field: 29′
Magnification: 166x with Oxy-III filter
Sky Quality Meter reading: 21:52

Black Canford paper
White pastel chalk
White pen
Soft white pen
Cotton bud and paint brush for smudging

I have observed the Helix nebula a number of times over the years but have neglected it since I got my 56cm dob up and running.

I placed a 17mm Nagler in with an Oxy-III filter to give a reasonable field of view.
The Helix was an altogether different observing experience than I last remember, it dominated the eyepiece field and was impressive.

I was glad I called in for the visit.

Scott Mellish.

“Perhaps the Finest…”

Hey !

I send you the planetary M.27, “The manual”.

This is a easy object, bright and perhaps the finest in the
northern hemisphere. But M.57 is the most
special for us in Norway. I did not see any central star in this
planetary, and the “ears” were very faint.
It is a very splendid object in small telescopes too. More info on
my sketch!
I used crayons (watercolours) on black paper only.
The sketch was made outside Trondheim city, Norway.

Clear skies, from Per-Jonny Bremseth.

Jupiter Meets Uranus

Object : Planet Jupiter
Date : September 13, 2010
Time : 12:00-12:45 LST/ 07:00-07:45 UT
Location : Surprise, Arizona USA
Medium : white paper, colored pencils, paint brush # 4 and #10 used as a
stump
Instruments : CPC 1100 SCT/ 25mm Plossl/ No filters/ Binoculars 25X100
Magnitude : -2.9
Weather : calm winds, clear skies, temp- mid to upper 80’s

Comments :

There is no better time than right now! As the summer parade of planets bid
farewell and disappear into the western horizon,(Venus,Mars & Saturn)
Jupiter steps up to the spotlight on the East side of town. Jupiter has an
ongoing list of activities happening on and off its surface. Physically, the
sheer size of its disk is expected to reach 50″ as it nears opposition on
the 20th of this month. As of the time of this sketch, it had a disk size of
49.7″. Although not as bright as Venus(-4.7), It’s pretty shiny for being
the only contender on the lonely Southeastern front of the night sky.

On its surface or close to its Jovian atmosphere, Jupiter was recently
recorded to have been struck by some sizeable bolides. Meteors that burst
into fireballs while getting pulled by the gravity of the gas giant. While I
did not notice any of those fireballs(would’ve been cool), I did notice
other features.Through the scope the most obvious is that Jupiter is
spinning with only one of the two major belts. Only the North Equatorial
Belt is clearly visible. Last spring, the South Equatorial Belt just
disappeared before our averted eyes. It’s believed to be hiding under a
thick blanket of ammonia clouds. Previous circumstances have shown that the
SEB will resurface sometime soon. For now, a slight grayish hue is all that
remains visible of the SEB ocassionally highlighted by darker shades of eddy
currents. The Great Red Spot is easy to ‘spot’ since the lack of the SEB
doesn’t mask it from view, it seems to ride adjacent to the South Temperate
Belt. The GRS is not alone, it was found to have an oval reddish storm about
half its size keeping company just South of its perimeter. Under steady sky
conditions, the designated ‘Oval BA’ or ‘Red Spot Jr” was barely discernible
to the Southwest of the GRS. A more pronounced white oval storm was embedded
and riding high on the westernmost edge of the NEB. For added effect, the
Galilean satellite Europa was just coming out of occultation on the Eastern
limb next to the North Temperate Belt.

From a different perspective, through the binoculars, Jupiter is not exactly
all alone. In the same field of view Uranus is not far away from its big
brother. During my observation both planets were a separated by less than 1
and 1/2 degrees. Uranus will also reach opposition hours later after
Jupiter. Uranus’ disk is very tiny in comparison with Jupiter but you can
still get a pastel lightgreen color out of it. I tried to locate with the
naked eye and had some slight success but I believe its because I knew where
to look. Other than that I think I would have a hard time picking it out-I
was in Surprise I have to admit, not exactly dark skies.

I hope you enjoyed this little report, wishing you all dark and clear skies!

Juanchin

Giant Veil Nebula

Subject: Giant Veil Nebula

Hello Artists,all o.k.?I’m in holyday in this moment,the break from work,so, for me….very good days!!!
I sent my first sketch of great nebula in Cygnus made with my dobson 10″ and great old eyepiece,the Meade “Reserch Grade”12,4mm + UHC-S.
At first time i want made this sketch in one page of my album,but….the impressive dimension oblige me for two pages!
I sent you three photos of sketch,the particulars and totally of this.It’s impossible to insert in my scanner….
Excuse me for my english,clear sky.
At next and compliments at all sketchers for your works.
Ciao a tutti,Giorgio.

Site:Pergola,Serraspinosa Hill 400 meters of altitude,
Marche Region,Center Italy.
Date:2 of August 2010
Instrument:Dobson GSO 10”
Eyepiece:Meade 12,4mm “Reserch Grade”
Filter:Baader UHC-S
Seeing :Good
Air: Fresh,no wind.
Technics:White pencill and penn on black paper “Fabriano 3”

Giorgio Bonacorsi