Saturday, October 13, 2018

Voyager 2 is leaving our Solar System

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech 


Voyager 2 is currently on a journey toward interstellar space. According NASA the probe has detected an increase in cosmic rays which travel from outside our solar system. Voyager was launched in 1977 and is about 17.7 billion kilometers from Earth, this is more than 118 times the distance from Earth to the Sun.

Since August, the Cosmic Ray Subsystem instrument on Voyager 2 has measured a 5% increase in the rate of cosmic rays hitting the spacecraft. The probe's Low-Energy Charged Particle instrument has detected a similar increase in higher-energy cosmic rays.

Cosmic rays are fast-moving particles that originate outside the solar system. Some of these cosmic rays are blocked by the heliosphere, so mission planners expect that Voyager 2 will measure an increase in the rate of cosmic rays as it approaches and crosses the boundary of the heliosphere.

In May 2012, Voyager 1 experienced an increase in the rate of cosmic rays similar to what Voyager 2 is now detecting. That was about three months before Voyager 1 crossed the heliopause and entered interstellar space.

The fact that Voyager 2 may be approaching the heliopause six years after Voyager 1 is also relevant, because the heliopause moves inward and outward during the Sun's 11-year activity cycle. Solar activity refers to emissions from the Sun, including solar flares and eruptions of material called coronal mass ejections. During the 11-year solar cycle, the Sun reaches both a maximum and a minimum level of activity.

Renewed Editing Mars July 13


Astropictures from Mars taken on July 13, 2018 UT01h23 with TAL200K and ASI224MC were edited again. 
I used the new update of AutoStakkert!3.0.14 (AS!3) which is now a 64bit version. Stacking was done in planet mode, drizzle 1.5 and Sharpened 10%.
The result was edited in CS4 in following order of unsharp mask and Gaussian blur. 


Comparison of Mars as predicted by Calsky


Monday, October 8, 2018

Draconid Meteor Shower this evening?

When the sky is clear get a chance to go outside this evening to watch for meteors. The annual peak of Draconid meteors is expected this evening around midnight. Last month the parent comet,
21P Giacobini-Zinner, reached its perihelion. It means there is a small chance the number of meteors could peak.  But watch yourself :)

Sunday, October 7, 2018

Startrail

Startrail taken on the morning of October 5th, UT2h-3h. Picture taken in the direction of South-East with Nikon D7500 f/3.5 10mm. Pictures stacked using Startrails v2.3


Freek Roelofs & Marcel Vonk









Send by iPhone 6 iOS 11.2.5




Afgelopen weekend vond in Oostende het 32ste VVS/JVS weekend plaats. Diverse onderwerpen kwamen aan bod maar 2 lezingen sprongen eruit. Twee topsprekers waren aanwezig die uitzettingen gaven over Event Horizon Telescope : de eerste foto van een zwart gat (Freek Roelofs). Een tweede lezing ging over Emergente Zwaartekracht en het donkere Heelal (Marcel Vonk)

Friday, October 5, 2018

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Spiral Galaxy NGC891

In the constellation Andromeda you can see an unbarred spiral Galaxy known as NGC891. Visually it's difficult to see and shows up as a very faint blur. I took some pictures at the moment the moon was 98% illulinated. That's why the picture is not really dark. The galaxy is loacted at a distance of 30 million light years from Earth. This is 15 times further then the Andromeda Galaxy M31.
The picture was taken with my nikon D7500 on TALAPO80/480 f/6. Darks are included and stacking with DeepSkyStacker. Final editing in CS4.