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Benjamin Knispel boosted
TomKrajci πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ πŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ
TomKrajci πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ πŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ
@KrajciTom@universeodon.com  Β·  activity timestamp 4 days ago

Three planets in the evening sky, as seen from the mountains of southern New Mexico. (Evening of 21 February.)

See the 2nd graphic for a finder chart from planetarium sky simulation software.

These three planets are very different in brightness, but the differences in sky background surrounding each planet ends up making them all appear roughly the same brightness in the photo. Venus is brightest, followed by Mercury, with Saturn the faintest of the three.

#Astronomy #Planets #Saturn #Venus #Mercury #Photography #Astrophotography #Evening #Twilight #Pisces #Cetus

2 media
Evening twilight shows us a great range of brightness and color in the sky.

Distant cirrus clouds are very low to the horizon, and Venus is nestled in a narrow horizontal band of cloud.

Mercury is slightly below center and Saturn is above center and to the left of center.

A few stars of Pisces and Cetus are also in the photo.
Evening twilight shows us a great range of brightness and color in the sky. Distant cirrus clouds are very low to the horizon, and Venus is nestled in a narrow horizontal band of cloud. Mercury is slightly below center and Saturn is above center and to the left of center. A few stars of Pisces and Cetus are also in the photo.
Evening twilight shows us a great range of brightness and color in the sky. Distant cirrus clouds are very low to the horizon, and Venus is nestled in a narrow horizontal band of cloud. Mercury is slightly below center and Saturn is above center and to the left of center. A few stars of Pisces and Cetus are also in the photo.
A finder chart from planetarium sky simulation software. The red wire frame box shows the sky coverage of the photo.
A finder chart from planetarium sky simulation software. The red wire frame box shows the sky coverage of the photo.
A finder chart from planetarium sky simulation software. The red wire frame box shows the sky coverage of the photo.
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TomKrajci πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ πŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ
TomKrajci πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ πŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ
@KrajciTom@universeodon.com  Β·  activity timestamp 4 days ago

Three planets in the evening sky, as seen from the mountains of southern New Mexico. (Evening of 21 February.)

See the 2nd graphic for a finder chart from planetarium sky simulation software.

These three planets are very different in brightness, but the differences in sky background surrounding each planet ends up making them all appear roughly the same brightness in the photo. Venus is brightest, followed by Mercury, with Saturn the faintest of the three.

#Astronomy #Planets #Saturn #Venus #Mercury #Photography #Astrophotography #Evening #Twilight #Pisces #Cetus

2 media
Evening twilight shows us a great range of brightness and color in the sky.

Distant cirrus clouds are very low to the horizon, and Venus is nestled in a narrow horizontal band of cloud.

Mercury is slightly below center and Saturn is above center and to the left of center.

A few stars of Pisces and Cetus are also in the photo.
Evening twilight shows us a great range of brightness and color in the sky. Distant cirrus clouds are very low to the horizon, and Venus is nestled in a narrow horizontal band of cloud. Mercury is slightly below center and Saturn is above center and to the left of center. A few stars of Pisces and Cetus are also in the photo.
Evening twilight shows us a great range of brightness and color in the sky. Distant cirrus clouds are very low to the horizon, and Venus is nestled in a narrow horizontal band of cloud. Mercury is slightly below center and Saturn is above center and to the left of center. A few stars of Pisces and Cetus are also in the photo.
A finder chart from planetarium sky simulation software. The red wire frame box shows the sky coverage of the photo.
A finder chart from planetarium sky simulation software. The red wire frame box shows the sky coverage of the photo.
A finder chart from planetarium sky simulation software. The red wire frame box shows the sky coverage of the photo.
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Γ€'Odner boosted
TomKrajci πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ πŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ
TomKrajci πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ πŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ
@KrajciTom@universeodon.com  Β·  activity timestamp last week

The young crescent moon occulted Mercury today...as seen from the mountains of southern New Mexico.

First photo is a telephoto shot of the moon only a minute after it uncovered our innermost planet. This was taken in bright twilight as a wind and dust storm was easing up.

Second photo is a wider angle shot ten minutes later that includes Venus in the bottom third of the frame. The evening twilight sky colors are pallid because of the dust storm clouds billowing a mile below me on the floor of the Tularosa basin.

#Mercury #Moon #Crescent #Occult #Occultation #Astronomy #Twilight #Evening #Photography #Astrophotography

2 media
The twilight sky is a medium blue while the crescent moon is a bright gray. Mercury is the overexposed white dot near the left horn of the crescent moon. Some crater and terrain detail is visible on the moon. Twilight is still so bright that we can't yet see earthshine on the rest of the moon's disk.
The twilight sky is a medium blue while the crescent moon is a bright gray. Mercury is the overexposed white dot near the left horn of the crescent moon. Some crater and terrain detail is visible on the moon. Twilight is still so bright that we can't yet see earthshine on the rest of the moon's disk.
The twilight sky is a medium blue while the crescent moon is a bright gray. Mercury is the overexposed white dot near the left horn of the crescent moon. Some crater and terrain detail is visible on the moon. Twilight is still so bright that we can't yet see earthshine on the rest of the moon's disk.
The evening twilight sky as a dust storm is easing up. The colors are subdued and the nearby trees are blurred in the exposure as they whip back and forth in the strong wind.  Venus is visible below the crescent moon, about 1/3 of the way up from the very bottom of the frame. Mercury is visible next to the crescent moon.
The evening twilight sky as a dust storm is easing up. The colors are subdued and the nearby trees are blurred in the exposure as they whip back and forth in the strong wind. Venus is visible below the crescent moon, about 1/3 of the way up from the very bottom of the frame. Mercury is visible next to the crescent moon.
The evening twilight sky as a dust storm is easing up. The colors are subdued and the nearby trees are blurred in the exposure as they whip back and forth in the strong wind. Venus is visible below the crescent moon, about 1/3 of the way up from the very bottom of the frame. Mercury is visible next to the crescent moon.
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TomKrajci πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ πŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ
TomKrajci πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ πŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ
@KrajciTom@universeodon.com  Β·  activity timestamp last week

The young crescent moon occulted Mercury today...as seen from the mountains of southern New Mexico.

First photo is a telephoto shot of the moon only a minute after it uncovered our innermost planet. This was taken in bright twilight as a wind and dust storm was easing up.

Second photo is a wider angle shot ten minutes later that includes Venus in the bottom third of the frame. The evening twilight sky colors are pallid because of the dust storm clouds billowing a mile below me on the floor of the Tularosa basin.

#Mercury #Moon #Crescent #Occult #Occultation #Astronomy #Twilight #Evening #Photography #Astrophotography

2 media
The twilight sky is a medium blue while the crescent moon is a bright gray. Mercury is the overexposed white dot near the left horn of the crescent moon. Some crater and terrain detail is visible on the moon. Twilight is still so bright that we can't yet see earthshine on the rest of the moon's disk.
The twilight sky is a medium blue while the crescent moon is a bright gray. Mercury is the overexposed white dot near the left horn of the crescent moon. Some crater and terrain detail is visible on the moon. Twilight is still so bright that we can't yet see earthshine on the rest of the moon's disk.
The twilight sky is a medium blue while the crescent moon is a bright gray. Mercury is the overexposed white dot near the left horn of the crescent moon. Some crater and terrain detail is visible on the moon. Twilight is still so bright that we can't yet see earthshine on the rest of the moon's disk.
The evening twilight sky as a dust storm is easing up. The colors are subdued and the nearby trees are blurred in the exposure as they whip back and forth in the strong wind.  Venus is visible below the crescent moon, about 1/3 of the way up from the very bottom of the frame. Mercury is visible next to the crescent moon.
The evening twilight sky as a dust storm is easing up. The colors are subdued and the nearby trees are blurred in the exposure as they whip back and forth in the strong wind. Venus is visible below the crescent moon, about 1/3 of the way up from the very bottom of the frame. Mercury is visible next to the crescent moon.
The evening twilight sky as a dust storm is easing up. The colors are subdued and the nearby trees are blurred in the exposure as they whip back and forth in the strong wind. Venus is visible below the crescent moon, about 1/3 of the way up from the very bottom of the frame. Mercury is visible next to the crescent moon.
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