Auroral Glow over the Jodrell Plank Observatory 22nd November 2023. Canon 600d DSLR with Sigma EX lens at f=20mm. Cropped and stacked image. Credit Kurt Thrust. |
Auroral Glow over the Jodrell Plank Observatory 22nd November 2023. Canon 600d DSLR with Sigma EX lens at f=20mm. Cropped and stacked image. Credit Kurt Thrust. |
Jupiter showing 3 moons left to right: Europa, Ganymede and Io. |
Jupiter showing two moons: Europa and Ganymede. |
Jupiter's disc showing its cloudy atmosphere with two equatorial bands clearly displayed. North is up in our image. |
" Our Instrumentation Engineer, Jolene McSquint Fleming, has been working very hard on the electrical systems at the Jodrell Plank Observatory and today power has been restored. Kurt has yet to reprogramme the LVST software defined radio telescope but has taken the opportunity to download data whilst the telescope has been off-line. Friend of the Observatory, Professor Chrissy H Roberts, has provided invaluable AI advice and time, which may well help to streamline the meteor data analysis process.
The weather took a turn for the better and on 03-11-2023 we were able to rig a temporary electrical supply to the NEQ6Pro mount and capture some Jupiter data using the Meade 127mm apo refractor, x3 Televue Barlow lens and the new QHY5111462c planetary video camera. The last image shown above is the clearest and is a 50% stack of 6000 frames subsequently processed using PIPP, AS3!, Registax6, AstroSharp, AstroClean and AffinityPhoto .2" - Joel Cairo CEO of the Jodrell Plank Observatory.
"As the direct result of water ingress associated with the rain and high winds, experienced in Lowestoft during Storm Babet, the power supply to the Jodrell Plank Observatory and the Cabine du Jardin Deux has had to be turned off and isolated. Our site engineer, Jolene McSquint-Fleming, has been working today to restore the power but of course safety is our prime directive in this matter. With the LVST (Lowestoft Very Small Telescope) also off line we are taking the opportunity to download over a year of meteor data collected by the 'software defined radio telescope'". - Joel Cairo CEO of the Jodrell Plank Observatory.
" This emission nebula is large and often pops up in our widefield images of the area of sky encompassing the constellations Perseus and Taurus. It stretches 2.5 degrees across the sky and is about 100 light years across. It is approximately 1000 light years away in the constellation Perseus. For an idea of scale the Moon which is less than 250,000 miles distant has an apparent diameter of only 0.5 degrees. The California Nebula glows red as the hydrogen gas is excited by the ultra violet light from the nearby star Menkib (Xi Persei)" - Karl Segin outreach coordinator at the Jodrell Plank Observatory.
Credit: Astrometry. net Widefield image taken from the Jodrell Plank Observatory, showing the California Nebula top left and the Pleiades bottom right.