Shown above are two sketches of Jupiter and its brightest moons as observed on 1 August 2008 U.T. The uppermost sketch was made at 3:15 U.T. The lower sketch was made at 7:25 U.T. The lower star at the far left is an actual star, not one of Jupiter's moons. Europa was in transit across Jupiter's disk (and not visible in the large binoculars) at the time of the first sketch, but by the time I had started working on the second sketch it had reappeared off Jupiter's preceding (western) limb.
Jupiter's North and South Equatorial Belts (the dark bands running parallel to Jupiter's equator) were visible in the tripod-mount 25x100 binoculars. Seeing conditions were rather poor on this night. Jupiter's moons and the various field stars appeared to twinkle due to earth's unsteady atmosphere. A haze (most likely from forest fire smoke) seemed to fill much of the sky as well.
No comments:
Post a Comment