Look at the Moon! Astronomy & our satellite... Photos of the Moon at key times of the month. Will it change? Keep looking in to watch our Moon!
Friday, 7 July 2017
Moon 2nd July 2017 Jupiter
22:05
Late night so some really good detail; look at the craters at the Southern pole.
In the second photo, there is a really good view of the Moon behind the clouds and Jupiter in clear sky.
Moon 2nd July 2017
18:50
Very bright early evening so not good for seeing detail on the moon but it looks lovely in the sky with some clouds around it.
Very bright early evening so not good for seeing detail on the moon but it looks lovely in the sky with some clouds around it.
Thursday, 29 June 2017
Sunday, 11 June 2017
Moon Tripod
I have got a tripod so when I take photos of the Moon, the camera will hopefully be more stable meaning greater detail.
Moon 10th June 2017
Nearly a midnight moon.
Full moon phase which means there are no shadows to show the detail of craters - have a look at the Grimaldi crater - it's just a blob of grey.
But it does show the mares really well.
Distance 252,274 miles.
Full moon phase.
150 degrees SE compass point.
Full moon phase which means there are no shadows to show the detail of craters - have a look at the Grimaldi crater - it's just a blob of grey.
But it does show the mares really well.
Distance 252,274 miles.
Full moon phase.
150 degrees SE compass point.
Saturday, 10 June 2017
Moon 8th June 2017
In the first photo, you can see Tycho again and you can recognize that the Moon has rotated compared to the previous post.
In the second photo, you can see the problem I often have - a lot of cloud - so often I cannot see the Moon.
Moon 6th June 2017
An easy way to see the rotation of the Moon is by looking at the crater Tycho and it's lunar rays.
Lunar rays are made by a meteorite crashing onto the Moon and spreading rock out in lines that look like rays around the crater.
Moon 4th June 2017
Two photos.
First one shows how bright it is in the evening - twenty to seven - so not as much detail.
Second one is later at light and is exciting because you can see Jupiter again.
First one shows how bright it is in the evening - twenty to seven - so not as much detail.
Second one is later at light and is exciting because you can see Jupiter again.
Thursday, 1 June 2017
Moon 31st May 2017
23:45
West, 255 degrees.
Sunny & warm.
As an experiment, I took this photo using the camera's maximum optical zoom rather than its digital zoom. I've found out that although the picture looks smaller, the definition seems better.
The line that separates the light and shade is called the terminator.
The terminator is very good because it makes shadows that make the surface near it more detailed.
Last night, the terminator was close to the landings of Surveyor 5 (1967), Apollo 11 (1969) and Apollo 16 (1972).
Apollo 16 commander, John Young, flew Gemini and Space Shuttle missions, was the first man to orbit the Moon on his own and has driven the Lunar Roving Vehicle. Poop-poop!
West, 255 degrees.
Sunny & warm.
As an experiment, I took this photo using the camera's maximum optical zoom rather than its digital zoom. I've found out that although the picture looks smaller, the definition seems better.
The line that separates the light and shade is called the terminator.
The terminator is very good because it makes shadows that make the surface near it more detailed.
Last night, the terminator was close to the landings of Surveyor 5 (1967), Apollo 11 (1969) and Apollo 16 (1972).
Apollo 16 commander, John Young, flew Gemini and Space Shuttle missions, was the first man to orbit the Moon on his own and has driven the Lunar Roving Vehicle. Poop-poop!
Wednesday, 24 May 2017
Moon 18th May 2017
Since starting Sam's Lunar Look In I have learnt that we see the moon much less frequently than I expected.
This is my only recent sighting, 18th May.
9:15 in the morning. Very bright day so can't see much detail but it looked big in the sky.
This is my only recent sighting, 18th May.
9:15 in the morning. Very bright day so can't see much detail but it looked big in the sky.
Sunday, 14 May 2017
Saturday, 6 May 2017
4th May 2017
It was a cloudy night so I took this video to show how difficult it can be to take pictures of the Moon. Look at the fast-moving cloud running in front of the Moon!
2nd May 2017
I haven't seen the moon for nearly a month.
This photo is very good because the shadow runs right on the Apollo 15 landing.
David Scott and James Irwin landed near a crater named Salyut in the Hadley Rille of the Apennine Range on 30th July 1971.
They stayed on the Moon for 3 days.
This photo is very good because the shadow runs right on the Apollo 15 landing.
David Scott and James Irwin landed near a crater named Salyut in the Hadley Rille of the Apennine Range on 30th July 1971.
They stayed on the Moon for 3 days.
Thursday, 13 April 2017
13th April 2017
The Moon is 250,000 miles on average from the Earth. Hard to imagine, but how much harder to imagine the distances of the planets from the Sun? It's incredulous!
In the photos, the Sun is represented by a fiery orange sphere, the Earth by a globe, and the other planets by marbles and pool balls. The planets are not to scale but the distances are.
The tape measure is 5 metres long, and Pluto is off the scale!
I'm including Pluto because this is a NO-BULLY-PLUTO blog!
The second photo shows the view from Pluto, the exposure makes it look a wild and lonely place.
Tuesday, 11 April 2017
9th April 2017
Looks like a full moon.
Did you see any lycanthropes?
Sunday 9th April 2017, 23:25.
Full moon phase. Distance 244,447 miles.
Compass south 160 degrees.
Did you see any lycanthropes?
Sunday 9th April 2017, 23:25.
Full moon phase. Distance 244,447 miles.
Compass south 160 degrees.
Sunday, 9 April 2017
8th April 2017
You may think this is a full moon but it's not quite.
There's another moon song called 'Bad Moon Rising' - check Youtube!
Saturday 8th April 2017, 23:20.
Waxing gibbous phase. Distance 243,305 miles.
Compass south 175 degrees.
There's another moon song called 'Bad Moon Rising' - check Youtube!
Saturday 8th April 2017, 23:20.
Waxing gibbous phase. Distance 243,305 miles.
Compass south 175 degrees.
7th April 2017
I tried the tungsten light setting on the camera for a bit of fun and got this cool blue colour.
There's a song called 'Blue Moon' - check Youtube!
Friday 7th April 2017, 23:20.
Waxing gibbous phase. Distance 241,112 miles.
Compass south 180 degrees.
There's a song called 'Blue Moon' - check Youtube!
Friday 7th April 2017, 23:20.
Waxing gibbous phase. Distance 241,112 miles.
Compass south 180 degrees.
6th April 2017
Moving cloud so difficult to get a good exposure for the moon and a clear view.
Thursday 6th April 2017, 23:20.
Waxing gibbous phase. Distance 238,827 miles.
Compass South West 230 degrees.
Thursday 6th April 2017, 23:20.
Waxing gibbous phase. Distance 238,827 miles.
Compass South West 230 degrees.
Saturday, 8 April 2017
5th April 2017
You can see the Sun's shadow go from Anaxagoras at the top to the big crater of Copernicus in the middle to the cluster of craters around Schiller at the bottom.
Wednesday 5th April 2017, 23:15.
Waxing gibbous phase. Distance 236,472 miles.
Compass south west, 215 degrees.
Clear skies.
Wednesday 5th April 2017, 23:15.
Waxing gibbous phase. Distance 236,472 miles.
Compass south west, 215 degrees.
Clear skies.
4th April 2017
Same day, 8 hours later. Look how the angle of shadow has changed, now top right to bottom left.
You can also see moon daytime and nighttime. If you were standing on the bottom right of the moon you would be able to see the Sun but if you were standing on the top left of the moon it would be dark.
You would also be either very hot or very cold because the Moon has no atmosphere so cannot keep the Sun's heat at nighttime.
Tuesday 4th April 2017, 23:55.
First quarter phase. Distance 234,091 miles.
Compass west, 260 degrees.
Clear skies, great for Moon watching.
You can also see moon daytime and nighttime. If you were standing on the bottom right of the moon you would be able to see the Sun but if you were standing on the top left of the moon it would be dark.
You would also be either very hot or very cold because the Moon has no atmosphere so cannot keep the Sun's heat at nighttime.
Tuesday 4th April 2017, 23:55.
First quarter phase. Distance 234,091 miles.
Compass west, 260 degrees.
Clear skies, great for Moon watching.
Friday, 7 April 2017
4th April 2017
Daytime moon!
It's exciting because it feels funny seeing the moon in the daytime.
You can still see a lot of detail even though it's daylight.
Can you see the angle of the shadow is the opposite of 2 days ago - now top left to bottom right?
Tuesday 4th April 2017, 16:00.
First quarter phase. Distance 234,091 miles.
Compass east, 90 degrees.
12 degrees Centigrade, Humidity 51%.
It's exciting because it feels funny seeing the moon in the daytime.
You can still see a lot of detail even though it's daylight.
Can you see the angle of the shadow is the opposite of 2 days ago - now top left to bottom right?
Tuesday 4th April 2017, 16:00.
First quarter phase. Distance 234,091 miles.
Compass east, 90 degrees.
12 degrees Centigrade, Humidity 51%.
2nd April 2017
I only saw the moon a few times in March because of the cloudy weather - a bit like February.
But April looks like being a bumper month. Here's the first one.
Nearly midnight; the Moon was very low.
Sunday 2nd April 2017, 23:50.
Waxing crescent phase. Distance 229,616 miles.
Compass west, 290 degrees.
But April looks like being a bumper month. Here's the first one.
Nearly midnight; the Moon was very low.
Sunday 2nd April 2017, 23:50.
Waxing crescent phase. Distance 229,616 miles.
Compass west, 290 degrees.
Thursday, 16 March 2017
FIVE MOONS!
FIVE MOONS!
On the 14th, I could see a bright spot to the right of the Moon and I didn't know what it was at.
So I looked it up on the Internet and I found out that it was Jupiter! How exciting!
Even though they look close together, they are really far apart - in fact, Jupiter was 423 million miles away and the Moon was only about 0.25 million miles away.
I was excited about seeing Jupiter but I got much more excited when I zoomed in the photo and saw four fuzzy dots in a diagonal line around Jupiter and worked out that they were Jupiter's four largest moons - Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto!
It's amazing that I could photo them using only a hand-held camera - no tripod!
On the 14th, I could see a bright spot to the right of the Moon and I didn't know what it was at.
So I looked it up on the Internet and I found out that it was Jupiter! How exciting!
Even though they look close together, they are really far apart - in fact, Jupiter was 423 million miles away and the Moon was only about 0.25 million miles away.
I was excited about seeing Jupiter but I got much more excited when I zoomed in the photo and saw four fuzzy dots in a diagonal line around Jupiter and worked out that they were Jupiter's four largest moons - Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto!
It's amazing that I could photo them using only a hand-held camera - no tripod!
Wednesday, 15 March 2017
14th March 2017
Two photos similar to yesterday because of the arc of the moon but this time I recorded the compass points both times! The Moon travelled approx. 53 degrees in 2 hours 10 minutes. It's not easy using just this to work out how long the orbit around Earth is because both the Moon and the Earth are moving at different speeds.
Tuesday 14th March 2017, 21:00 & 23:10.
(21:00) 102 degrees E compass point. (23:10) 155 degrees SE compass point.
Waning gibbous phase. Distance 244,942 miles.
Pressure 1033mb rising, humidity 83%, partly cloudy, good visibility.
Tuesday 14th March 2017, 21:00 & 23:10.
(21:00) 102 degrees E compass point. (23:10) 155 degrees SE compass point.
Waning gibbous phase. Distance 244,942 miles.
Pressure 1033mb rising, humidity 83%, partly cloudy, good visibility.
13th March 2017
The first photo at 20:30 shows the Moon low in the sky so I had to take the photo through branches. However, the second one at 22:50 was much higher in the sky! So it must have been rising in an arc and not parallel to the horizon.
Monday 13th March 2017, 20:30 & 22:50.
195 degrees S compass point.
Full moon phase. Distance 242,563 miles. (The same distance as yesterday - strange?)
Monday 13th March 2017, 20:30 & 22:50.
195 degrees S compass point.
Full moon phase. Distance 242,563 miles. (The same distance as yesterday - strange?)
12th March 2017
I don't know why the Moon was grey rather than yellow in this photo. I must have changed one of the colour balance settings on the camera, but which one? Do you prefer the yellow or the grey tint one?
Sunday 12th March 2017, 23:00.
Full moon phase. Distance 242,563 miles.
Sunday 12th March 2017, 23:00.
Full moon phase. Distance 242,563 miles.
Tuesday, 14 March 2017
8th March 2017
A much better photo - I have been trying different camera settings.
This photo was taken with 'spot' exposure metering - so the camera works out the light/dark exposure by measuring the very centre of the image (only the bright moon). Before it was including the dark sky.
I also changed the film speed range from ISO max. 1600 to 6400. The faster speed range reduces very fine detail but is better for extreme light situations.
Wednesday 8th March 2017, 21:45.
175 degrees S compass point.
Waxing gibbous phase. Distance 234,186 miles.
This photo was taken with 'spot' exposure metering - so the camera works out the light/dark exposure by measuring the very centre of the image (only the bright moon). Before it was including the dark sky.
I also changed the film speed range from ISO max. 1600 to 6400. The faster speed range reduces very fine detail but is better for extreme light situations.
Wednesday 8th March 2017, 21:45.
175 degrees S compass point.
Waxing gibbous phase. Distance 234,186 miles.
5th March 2017
I only saw the moon 3 times in February because of the cloudy and wet weather. Is that unusual? I don't know! I will have to keep a record for next year and the year after and so on to see if it is or not.
Sunday 5th March 2017, just after midnight (actually the 6th, 00:04).
First Quarter phase. Distance 230,423 miles.
Sunday 5th March 2017, just after midnight (actually the 6th, 00:04).
First Quarter phase. Distance 230,423 miles.
17th February 2017
A daytime moon!
I took this photo in the morning before going to school.
Friday 17th February 2017, c.08:00.
Waning gibbous phase. Distance 250,129 miles.
I took this photo in the morning before going to school.
Friday 17th February 2017, c.08:00.
Waning gibbous phase. Distance 250,129 miles.
Tuesday, 14 February 2017
10th February 2017
Another week with no Moon.
Had to be quick to take this photo in a brief break in the clouds.
Too much moonshine to see any detail.
Still a good atmospheric photo.
Friday 10th February 2017, 23:00.
Windy - fast moving clouds.
Approx. 220 degrees SW compass point.
Full moon phase. Distance 234,494 miles.
Had to be quick to take this photo in a brief break in the clouds.
Too much moonshine to see any detail.
Still a good atmospheric photo.
Friday 10th February 2017, 23:00.
Windy - fast moving clouds.
Approx. 220 degrees SW compass point.
Full moon phase. Distance 234,494 miles.
Saturday, 4 February 2017
4th February 2017
Another long time with no visible Moon.
Too much cloud and rain.
4 degrees Centigrade, Pressure 998mb, Humidity 83%
(approx.), clear but watery sky.
230 degrees SSW compass point.
First quarter phase. Distance 229,833 miles.
Both photos show the precipitation pollution!
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