Photo Gallery:
Note: All images in this gallery are copyrighted by the photographers and may not be
reused in any form without their permission.
Sky Events
PhotographerAntonio MorenoLocationDurueloDateMarch 13th at 20:15PMEquipmentNikon D70 with 28mm zoom lensDescriptionVenus and Jupiter close toguether in the sky, a beatiful sight behind the dome of my observatory. |
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PhotographerAnnette DeGiovine OliveiraLocationFire Island National SeashoreDateFebruary 26, 2012 6:55pmEquipmentCanon Digital Rebel XT on tripod with a 18-55mm lens.DescriptionPhotograph of yesterdays planetary conjunction of Jupiter, Moon, Venus and Mercury at sunset looking west from Fire Island National Seashore off the south coast of Long Island, New York. |
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PhotographerOdilon Simões CorrêaLocationAraxá, BrasilDateApril 02, 2012 - 21h52m UTEquipmentCanon EOS REBEL T3i with 55mm lens, set at f/5.6, ISO-400, on a fixed tripod.DescriptionThe beautiful and relatively rare encounter between Venus and the Pleiades was recorded in this 5 seconds exposure. |
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PhotographerMohammadLocationTiran , Esfahan , IranDate3 April 2012Equipment35 mm Samyang at f 4 , Canon 5DDescriptionPleiades and Venus on the Apple blossoms , 3 April 2012. |
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PhotographerAsadolah GhamarinezhadLocationSarvelat, Gilan, IranDate2012/3/26Equipmentcanon 60D camera 100-400 canon lens manferotto tripod 3.2 sec exposure time iso speed 800Descriptionbeautiful view of Moon , Venus and Jupiter conjunction |
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PhotographerLeo DyLocationQuezon City, PhilippinesDateApril 04, 2012 8:11pm PHTEquipmentCanon X5 zoom lens at 300mm f/5.6 iso 100 3min, motorized barndoor tracker.DescriptionVenus passing thru Pleiades |
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PhotographerFred EspenakLocationPortal, AZDateApr. 3, 2012 at 8:20pmEquipmentA Nikon D90 and a Sigma APO 400mm lens were used to capture the event (North is up). The exposure was 4 minutes at f/22 (ISO 800). Camera tracking was accomplished with a Losmandy G-11 equatorial mount.DescriptionConjunctions between Venus and the Pleiades star cluster at favorable elongations from the Sun are relatively rare astronomical events. The last one occurred in May 2004 (source: More Mathematical Astronomical Morsels, 2002, Jean Meeus). The Pleiades is one of the most famous night sky asterisms and is also known as the Seven Sisters, Subaru and M45 (http://astropixels.com/openclusters/M45-01.html). In April 2012, Venus and the naked-eye star cluster are again in close proximity for several days, and with Venus favorably placed in the evening sky just days after its Greatest Eastern Elongation from the Sun on March 26. The image below shows the close conjunction of Venus and the Pleiades on the evening of 2012 April 3 (local time), as seen from Portal, AZ. It will take approximately 3 days for Venus to pass through the Pleiades (April 2-4). Check AstroPixels.com (http://astropixels.com/main/recent.html) for more photos of this lovely event in the coming days. |
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PhotographerJimmy WestlakeLocationSteamboat Springs, CODate04/03/12 9:06pm MDTEquipmentThis is a 15-second exposure through a Celestron 4-inch refractor with a Nikon D700 digital camera set at ISO 6400, piggybacked on a Celestron 11-inch telescope.DescriptionDazzling Venus amongst the twinkly Pleiades is one of the loveliest sights I've seen through a telescope! |
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PhotographerBob ChristmasLocationBurlington, Ontario, CanadaDateApril 4, 2012, approx 9:30pm EDTEquipmentCanon Digital Rebel 300D on Tamron 300mm telephoto lens, stopped down to f/4. Lens and camera were tracked on a Super Polaris equatorial mount. 5 x 20 seconds (100 seconds of exposure in total), ISO 400.DescriptionVenus is beside the Pleiades (M45) on the evening of April 4, 2012. The diffraction spikes of Venus are from the aperture leaves of the lens. |
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PhotographerNoel CramerLocationGeneva, SwitzerlandDateApril 2, 2012 19h35m GMTEquipmentPentax K5 camera with Pentax smc A* 200mm F2.8 lens on fixed tripod. Diaphragmed to F:5.6, 1600 ISO, 12 2sec exposures stacked with RegiStax and corrected for 2sec linear drift with FocusMagic software.DescriptionVenus close to the Pleiades cluster. Venus is spectacularly bright in comparison to the "bright" Pleiades stars. The extended diffraction spikes are due to the 8 blades of the diaphragm. |
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