The partial lunar eclipse coincided with this week's Harvest Moon and was visible from most of North America, all of South America, Europe, all but the easternmost parts of Africa, western portions of Asia and Russia, and parts of Antarctica, per Space.com.
Showing posts with label Second Avenue Star Watchers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Second Avenue Star Watchers. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
Last night's partial lunar eclipse from 2nd Avenue
A dispatch about last night from Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers...
Last night, some of the Second Avenue Star Watchers could not agree whether that was an actual shadow of the Earth in front of the Moon or just some clouds.
Per Felton: "The partial eclipse was certainly a subtle event!"
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
The Moon and Saturn in Aquarius
A dispatch this morning from Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers.
For starters, the moonflowers that he planted in June survived the oppressive heat of July.
The one that blossomed yesterday evening in the cool air was a beautiful prelude to a magical night in which the day-after Full Moon chased the planet Saturn across the heavens ... and it was not easy to get both of them into a single photo.
Saturn, at about 1 billion miles away, was a tiny jewel whose rings will flatten out by next April, and then it starts a new seven-year cycle of widening.Billed by Space News as an occultation, but not in New York City at ground level. And not everyone who stopped by could see the rings, only those who have taken care of their vision health.
Monday, April 8, 2024
Today's solar eclipse with the Second Avenue Star Watchers
Here's the eclipse-viewing scene today on Third Street and Second Avenue... with photos courtesy of Felton Davis c/o of the Second Avenue Star Watchers ... from the ground...
... and the view of the moon blocking out the sun through the telescope (a 90% partial solar eclipse) ...
Friday, February 9, 2024
Today in enormous cluster of sunspots
Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers shared this dispatch today...
After a long month of almost non-stop clouds and rain, the crowds came out for this afternoon's stupendous 120,000-mile wide cluster of sunspots. Lucky for us, it was not pointing directly at the U.S. when the coronal mass ejection (CME) erupted. Stay tuned for an almost-total eclipse of the Sun on April 8, and lets hope for another clear day!
Thursday, August 31, 2023
Miles away: the Moon and Saturn in Aquarius from Third Street
Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers shared this dispatch from last night...
Aquarius is low in the sky, and the glare from the streetlights on East Third Street made it very difficult to make out Saturn, some 800 million miles distant. Thanks to everyone who stopped by...... and for a little constellation perspective...
Wednesday, August 9, 2023
A pre-dawn collab with the Moon and the Seven Sisters
Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers shared this dispatch early this morning...
Waning crescent Moon and very close by, the Pleiades in the constellation Taurus, high over East Third Street at 4 a.m. on Wednesday.All Seven Sisters could clearly be seen, especially if you blocked the glare from the Moon, but only three of them showed up in the photos.
Thursday, September 15, 2022
The pre-dawn Moon in Taurus
An early morning dispatch from Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers ... the top photo of the waning Moon was taken from Third Street ... with another shot with some of the Moon's features...
Wednesday, April 27, 2022
Seeing sun spots today
A dispatch today from Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers:
For about an hour this afternoon, while the bright sun was still in the sky, and before the cloud banks covered it over, there was an unobstructed view of the active sunspot regions that have appeared this month.... and a safe view of the sun... And please note ... "Word of caution for serious fans: do not look directly at the sun, and do not set up a telescope unless it is fitted with a 99% solar filter."
Sunday, March 27, 2022
Sunday's opening shots
Pre-dawn photos from East River Park via Felton Davis from the Second Avenue Star Watchers.
There's a planet-moon conjunction taking place ... Venus, Mars and Saturn all appear close together just before sunrise ... with a crescent moon nearby.
Per Felton: "On the other side of the constellation, the 28th-day waning crescent moon will slowly process across the planets, and then slide below them toward Aquarius on Tuesday."
Friday, November 19, 2021
The longest partial moon eclipse in 580 years as seen from 2nd Avenue
As Space.com reported:
The full Beaver Moon of November 2021 passed through Earth's shadow in a partial lunar eclipse overnight on Nov. 18-19 in what was the longest eclipse of its kind in 580 years.And this was obviously a big event for Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers.
He reports that the event here was almost rained out (ed note: stupid rain):
After a long, cold and drizzly night, the clouds over 2nd Avenue finally parted, revealing a slow eclipse of the Moon that was already in progress. Three or four times from 3:15 to 4:30 a.m., the Moon disappeared behind the clouds, and came back out, and each time I had to reset the (icy cold!) telescope ... and take a few photos.And props to Amy for coming out and helping Felton get the telescope back inside.
Monday, November 8, 2021
Monday's parting shot
Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers shared this:
Venus and the Moon were low over the Avenue tonight, and disappeared behind Avalon and the Public Hotel soon after sunset.The top pic shows the view from Second Avenue and Third Street ... while the shot below is what people saw through the telescope he had set up on the corner (click on the images for a better view!) ... And on the horizon (so to speak) on Nov. 18 into Nov. 19 ... the Full Moon in the constellation Taurus will undergo a partial — but almost total — eclipse, per Felton.
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
Today in sunspots
Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers shared this today...
Crystal-clear blue sky this afternoon, for an unusually large sunspot left of center, but the attempt to angle my aging telescope almost straight up was very difficult. Joanne stayed the course through about 45 minutes of agonizing adjustments, and then the sun promptly disappeared behind the clouds. The sunspot was approximately 8,000 miles in diameter, or a hundredth of the diameter of the sun.... and a view of the sunspot... ... and the size of the sunspot next to Earth for a little comparison... According to NASA: "The sun ... is roughly 109 times the diameter of the Earth — about one million Earths could fit inside the sun."
And a word of warning from Felton if you want to start sunspot spotting: "Do not stare at the sun for any length of time, and do not point a telescope at it unless you have a very thick filter covering the tube."
Monday, November 11, 2019
Today's transit of Mercury from 2nd Avenue
Exciting day for fans of the planet Mercury, which passed directly between Earth and the Sun in an event that won’t happen again until 2032.
As this photo by Derek Berg shows, Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers was set up near the F stop... from here, you could spot the small silhouette of Mercury moving across the Sun. (A very thick black filter blocked out 99 percent of the Sun's light, and made it safe to view.)
Here's a photo
Saturday, December 3, 2016
Some big nights ahead for the Second Avenue Star Watchers
Via East Village astronomy buff Felton Davis...
Amazing lineup of planets setting in the southwest this week: the sun in Ophiuchus setting at 4:30 pm, Saturn in Ophiuchus setting at 4:55 pm, Mercury in Sagittarius setting at 5:34 pm, Pluto in Sagittarius setting at 6:56 pm, Venus in Sagittarius setting at 7:30 pm, Mars in Capricorn setting at 9:30 pm, and Neptune in Capricorn setting at 11:19 pm. What a spectacle for people viewing over the Hudson from High Line Park or from Battery Park.
What does that leave for Second Avenue Star Watchers? It leaves a nice four-day old waxing crescent Moon about seven degrees north of Venus in the constellation Capricorn, and if it doesn't cloud over, later in the evening the famous Pleiades star cluster rising high in the heavens between Aries and Taurus.
If it stays clear I'll set up outside The Bean (East Third Street & Second Avenue) at 5:30 pm to show the Moon going down, but don't get your hopes up for the Pleiades, because that one is difficult to spot from the street.
Updated: Unfortunately, the cloud coverage made all this impossible this evening... Felton says he will try again tomorrow night...
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