Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Heliographic Coordinates

In order to define anything on the photosphere of the Sun we need to measure this in terms of heliographic latitude and longitude. This changes by time due to :
1) the fact Earth - Sun distance changes
2) the rotation of the Sun
3) the rotation axis of the Earth being inclined by 23.4° to the ecliptic
4) the rotation axis of the Sun being inclined by 7.25° to the ecliptic

This can be calculated once we have
1) the apparent diameter of the Sun
2) the heliographic latitude B0 of the centre of the Sundisk
3) the heliographic longitude L0 of the centre of the Sundisk
4) the position angle P of the north end of the axis of rotation, when positive it is east of the north point

In a later blog I will post more details about this calculation. Below is the Sun (with Sunspot) including the position angle. The software used was HelioViewer from Peter Meadows.


North is defined by taking two pictures with tracking modus off when using an equatorial set up. By drawing a line between the two sunspots and turning this horinzontal, we find north - south of the Sun.


The "north" positioned Sun (BMP format) is uploaded within HelioViewer. Once your settings (position, time) are entered, the software calculates all coordinates and makes a final drawing of the Sun with Heliographic coordinates.

Moon with Airplane

Beautiful and lucky shot of moon with airplane.


Moon-Venus 32h before Conjunction

The planet Venus and the Moon as seen this morning just before sunrise above the eastern horizon. This is 32h before the Venus-Moon conjunction on July 20 around 12hUT.

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Verandering van weer




Send by iPhone 6 iOS 10.3.2


Bewolking vanuit het zuiden. Hopelijk blijft het droog deze nacht.

Lecture Prof. Erik Verlinde


On October 4th, Prof. Erik Verlinde will give a lecture in Maastricht regarding new insights on gravity and time-space.

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Sunspot AR2665


Sunspot AR2665 is still 100.000km end to end, which is still 8 times the size of the Earth. The pictures are taken using my triplet APO80/480 f/6 with a APS-C DSLR. Final editing done using CS4.



Sunspot with IPhone 6

Huge sunspot this evening!