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3towers Observatory Moon & Planets
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Moon Halo and Venus. 8mm f/3.5 lens, 10-second exposure with
Nikon D100 digital camera, ISO 1000.
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Moon Halo 23 November 2005. 8 mm f3.5 lnes and 16 mm f/4.5 lens,
respectively, 5-second exposures with Nikon D100 digital camera,
ISO 800 |
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Young Moon (17 hours 58 minutes), 5-inch f/5 reflector, Nikon
D100 camera, ISO 800. The dove was observed sitting on a distant
telephone wire before the Sun set. |
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The Earth's Shadow and the Belt of Venus above it on the morning
of December 30, 2007. |
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The Earth's Shadow, the Moon, and the Belt of Venus on September
27, 2007. |
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Animated
image of Lunar Eclipse of 28 August 2007. Series of
images taken from the beginning
Penumbra till the ending of Totality (by that time, the Moon was
very low in the sky). Nikon D100 digital camera combined
with 4-inch (100 mm) 1000 mm focal length f/10 lens. ISO
800. |
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Lunar Eclipse Montage from the 27 October 2004 Total Eclipse of
the Moon. Taken at Tucson, Arizona, with a Nikon D100 digital
camera and a 1000 mm f/10 lens. Exposures ranged from 1/250
second to six seconds. ISO 800. |
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The Planets January 28, 1984 |
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The Phases of the Moon |
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The phases of the Moon from day 1 through day 27.
Images taken at the 3towers Observatory, Spring 2005. Meade LPI
camera attached to a Celestron 2.4-inch f/10 telescope.
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The phases of the Moon are individually shown from day 1 through
day 27. The Moon is oriented as viewed with the naked eye from
the mid-Northern Hemisphere. The near Full Moon images (days
14-15) are labeled for Lunar East and West, which are opposite
terrestrial East and West.
Most Lunar and planetary images are taken at the 3towers
Observatory using either a Nikon D100 digital camera or a ToUCam
web cam attached to the 3towers Meade 12-inch LX 200 telescope.
Images are obtained at prime focus or with eyepiece projection.
The seeing conditions at the 3towers Observatory are usually
mediocre at best so that its lunar and planetary imaging does
not compare with the incredible results now being obtained by
many amateur astronomers worldwide. Nevertheless, the
significant improvement in planetary and lunar results available
from modern web cams, digital cameras, and software techniques
allows almost anyone with modest equipment and seeing conditions
to obtain results that rival or exceed those of the best
planetary images obtained on film in the recent past. |
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Mars 12 September 2003 ToUCam @ f/20, 100 images |

Mars 29 August 2003 ToUCam @ f/10, 100 images |

Mars 22 October 2005 ToUCam
@ f/20, 200 images |

Mars 11 November 2005 ToUCam @ f/20, 200 images |

Lumenera SKYnyx 2-1
image of Castor 31 March 2007 |

Lumenera SKYnyx 2-1
image of Venus 31 March 2007 |

Lumenera SKYnyx 2-1
image of Saturn 31 March 2007 |

Lumenera SKYnyx 2-1
image of Saturn 31 March 2007 |
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Wide angle view of the Moon and Mars on September 8,
2003 |
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Moon near first quarter. This image was taken with
a Nikon D100 camera placed at the prime focus of the
3towers Observatory 12-inch Meade LX 200 telescope. |
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| Rainbow at the
3towers Observatory. Nikon D100 digital camera
with 8 mm f/22 lens. |
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Self-portrait. Wide angle view of the setting Sun and
the rising Full Moon 180 degrees apart. One-quarter
second exposure with 8 mm f/4 lens on Nikon D100 digital
camera with ISO 400. Taken at sunset on December
25, 2004. |
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| 15 January 2005.
Scorpius rising. Notice Mars just East of Antares and bright
Delta Scorpii in the predawn sky. Ten second exposure
with 16 mm f/2.8 lens on a Nikon D100 digital camera
with ISO 800. |
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| 25 June 2005.
Mercury, Venus, and Saturn in the Western sky after
sunset. Nikon D100 image, ISO 800. 50 mm f/2.8 lens. |
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| 25 June 2005.
Mercury, Venus, and Saturn in the Western sky after
sunset. Nikon D100 image, ISO 800. 135 mm f/2.8 lens. |
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| 26 June 2005.
Mercury, Venus, and Saturn in the Western sky after
sunset. Nikon D100 image, ISO 800. 135 mm f/2.8 lens. |
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| 27 June 2005.
Mercury, Venus, and Saturn in the Western sky after
sunset. Nikon D100 image, ISO 800. 135 mm f/2.8 lens.
Note how much Mercury has shifted with respect to Venus
and Saturn. |
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| 16 January 2006, 6:00
am MST. Jupiter at top center is between Zubenelgenubi
just to its West and Zubeneschamali somewhat more to the East.
Below and slightly to the East of Jupiter Scorpius is partially visible above the house.
The two bright stars to the East of Scorpius are Han
(top) and Sabik (bottom). The two stars above Han
and Sabik are Yed Posterior (bottom) and Yed Prior
(top). The near Last Quarter
Moon was setting in the West illuminating the
foreground. Ten second exposure with Nikon D100 at ISO
800, 16 mm f/4 lens. |
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| Moon Halo 7 February 2006. Notice the relatively thin clouds and the
stars visible through the clouds. Orion is evident to
the South (bottom) and Taurus and the Pleiades are
visible to the East (right). Inside the halo North of
the Moon is Auriga, and Perseus is visible in the upper
right hand corner. Ten second exposure with Nikon D100
digital camera at ISO 800, 16 mm f/4 lens. |
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| Moon Halo 7
February 2006. The exposure is centered South of the
halo to show Orion and Canis Major. Note the light
pollution of Tucson to the South. Ten-second exposure
with Nikon D100 digital camera at ISO 800, 16 mm f/4
lens. |
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| Moon Halo 26 March
2007. Eight-second exposure with Nikon D100
digital camera at ISO 800, 8 mm f/4 lens. |
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| Moon Halo 6 April
2007. Eight-second exposure with Nikon D100
digital camera at ISO 800, 8 mm f/4 lens. Jupiter
lies in part of the Halo. |
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| Moon Halo 28
September 2007. Eight second exposure with Nikon D100
digital camera at ISO 800, 15 mm f/4 lens. |
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| Moon, Venus,
Saturn, and Regulus October 7, 2007. One-half
second exposure with Nikon D100 digital camera at ISO
800, 50 mm f/4 lens. |
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| Moon Halo and Mars
November 26, 2007. Eight-second exposure with
Nikon D100 digital camera at ISO 800, 8 mm f/4 lens.
Mars lies in part of the Halo. |
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| Moon Halo and Mars
November 28, 2007. Eight-second exposure with
Nikon D100 digital camera at ISO 800, 8 mm f/4 lens.
Mars lies in part of the Halo. |
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| The Moon and the
Pleiades on April 8, 2008. One-second exposure
with 135 mm f/4 lens on a Nikon D100 camera, ISO 800. |
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