03 September 2007

Jupiter & Lambda Ophiuchi


Date: 03 September 2007 U.T.
Time: 2:03 - 2:15 U.T. (Jupiter)
Telescope: 130mm refractor
Magnification: 138x (Jupiter)
Filter: Moon-SkyGlow (Jupiter)
Seeing: Poor to Fair
NELM: Twilight (Jupiter)
Temperature: +83 F (+28 C) (Jupiter)


The above rough (at the telescope) sketch of Jupiter has North up and Preceding to the left.

Due to poor seeing conditions small-scale, moving "ripples" were constantly visible around the limb of the planet. The "star" to the upper right of the planet is Io, one of Jupiter's moons. A little later in the evening Io was seen in transit across the planet's disk. The following limb of the planet was slightly darker than the preceding limb due to the sun angle (a slight phase effect). At times more detail was visible; but under the circumstances (poor seeing and a relatively quick observation and sketch) some of the details shown may not be particularly accurate.

The planet's North Equatorial Belt (the darkest belt on the planet) appeared brownish-red in color. Other features had colors that were too subtle to differentiate from shades of gray.



After completing the Jupiter observation I observed and sketched Lamda Ophiuchi A&B, a close double star. The above sketch (greatly enlarged from the telescopic view) shows this double with North up and West to the left. A #82A Light Blue filter sharpened the view a bit under the relatively poor seeing conditions. The "A" star appeared to have a yellow or yellow-orange color while the "B" component appeared bluish. A narrow gap was visible between the two stars during intervals of somewhat improved seeing conditions. A weak, broken, diffraction ring was also visible at times around the two stars. A magnification of 218x was used for this observation.

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