Sun
Again
On
the morning of July 26th, I imaged the sun again. It seems
like Georgia has clouds almost every night lately, so no imaging of
the one Messier item and any more Herschel items. Or Mars, Jupiter or Saturn. And then there is
the fatigue that goes along with my current health issues, so I would
have difficulty staying up too late, anyway.
So,
what's on store for this entry? Not much. There were two prominences
visible and one filament. The filament was so thin that it was almost
impossible to pick up with the camera. The optics of the telescope
and camera are such that it spread the thin filament out enough to
make it almost invisible on it's “close up” shot, and just
visible on the full disk shot. And I suspect strongly that the prominence (ie filament) was fading away as well, so there wasn't much to see. As far as the prominences go, they
were just visible when viewed through the eyepiece, and only a little
more so when imaged. But, they are here. Bearing in mind that we are
going through a solar minimum, I'm surprised to get this much.
However, I'll take just about anything.
The filament (really?) |
First of two small prominences. |
Second of two small prominences. Notice how much more diffuse this one is. I suspect this would be similar to the filament. |