LOOK EAST! on the morning of 10th December (before Sunrise)

Alright, this is for sharing of your observation experience. Or, if you are arranging gatherings, star-gazing expeditions or just want some company to go observing together, you can shout it out here.
babyKevin
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LOOK EAST! on the morning of 10th December (before Sunrise)

Post by babyKevin »

Hey Guys!

On the morning of Sunday, 10th December, look-east (just before Sunrise approx. 45 mins) and you'll find Mars, Mercury and brillaint Jupiter bunched together, plus a star from Scorpious (beta Scorpii). :shock:

Apparently this tight grouping of 3 planets will not be seen this close for another 47 years!!! :shock:

So don't forget to do some naked-eye observing or binocular viewing of this special holiday season conjunction of 4 heavenly objects!

To find out a little more tune into :
RAT RADIO Show : 03/12/2006
the podcast takes more than 6 mins to downlaod and Jeremy Ratnam talks about it at the end.
Last edited by babyKevin on Tue Dec 05, 2006 9:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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ariefm71
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Post by ariefm71 »

Welcome to Singastro, Jeremy!
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mrngbss
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Post by mrngbss »

We may not be able to see it. From our location (Singapore), it will only be at the horison (0 deg) from 0600hrs onwards. At 0630hrs, they will be about 10 deg. :(
Wee Nghee the Pooh
babyKevin
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Post by babyKevin »

mrngbss wrote:We may not be able to see it. From our location (Singapore), it will only be at the horison (0 deg) from 0600hrs onwards. At 0630hrs, they will be about 10 deg. :(
Hi Mrngbss!

Please dont be disaheartened mate!

Be optimistic. :lol:

I own two telescopes, but nothing beats chasing a naked eye event!

As this 'end-of-the-year' conjunction of three planets is a fine example; this one's for those who don't even own a pair of binoculars, cause and event like this was once noticed by those in BC. So cherish this naked-eye event! 8-)

I have been tracking Mercury's climb (in the morning sky) since late November, 2006. The planet is very visible to the naked eye even at 6:30am and my first glimpse of the inner-planet was when she was only 8 deg above the horizon, and observing from the 2nd floor of my flat!!

How's that? Well it's the joy of chasing and being patient.

So don't give up hope, cause astronomers in Singapore are guranteed a grandstand view if you can find a nice open spot facing east. eg. Pasir Ris Park (Fisherman's Village) or maybe a second floor too? :D

BabyKevin
/
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mrngbss
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Post by mrngbss »

Yo!! This is great news Thanks babyKevin!!

Will try to find a good spot for it.


[ wow, saw your website, you are ONE emcee!! ] cool!! 8-)
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alvinsclee
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Post by alvinsclee »

Hey thanks, Jeremy! I'm flying off to Myanmar on 9th, so... 10th will be the first sunrise to greet me there. Will try not to miss it.

(Hey Boothee, I'm coming :) Not so much for astronomy, but more for free-and-easy sight-seeing and photography ;) Will be around Myanmar for 8 days!)
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ariefm71
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Post by ariefm71 »

I own two telescopes, but nothing beats chasing a naked eye event!
Jeremy, do you mind sharing with us what equipments you're using (other than the naked eye)? Here's the place for it: http://www.singastro.org/viewforum.php?f=16

cheers,
Arief
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starfinder
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Photos of triple planet formation

Post by starfinder »

Hi people, in case you are wondering, i am still around, in singapore. just been rather quiet. ha ha.

Well, here are two photos of the Triple Planets at Dawn formation which I took this morning. The wide-angle was at 55mm (cropped) with a digital SLR, and the close-up was at 555mm with thru an 80mm scope and the dSLR. Both were only so-so, the first being quite out-of-focus.

But i must say that thru a 10x binoculars, the view of the 3 planets in a tight equilateral triangular formation was magnificent! one to remember.

I've not felt this passionate rush in astronomy for several months!


(PS: someone pls let me know if the photos can be seen. i can't seem to see photos on this website now.)
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mrngbss
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Post by mrngbss »

Well done Starfinder! I'm so envious by your achievements! Yes, your photos could be seen. I just came back and I didn't see anything...so sad.. :( :( :( From my side, either I was blocked or the cloud cover was too thick.

I looked from bishan, 14th floor. What about you? How high were you?
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babyKevin
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WHAT A SIGHT!!! A story for my kids!

Post by babyKevin »

"...Mercury popped up from behind the school, I knew the moment was here."

THE morning of December 10th has come and gone and to get another tight grouping of 3 planets, it would take almost another half a century.

For 2 weeks I was eagerly anticipating the arrival of 3 planets, that rose just minutes apart in the eastern half of the sky. It finally came! And when the dawn of reckoning arrived at 6am, telescope, binoculars and camera were ready for action and most importantly, the skies had played a big part too. It was almost perfect conditions in the east south-east this morning, where alpha Centauri rose brightly at only 3 degrees above the horizon, and you could just gaze at awe at the brightness of alpha Bootes.

Then came the wait.

I knew there was going to be a small window of opportunity to capture the 3, (Mercury, Mars and Jupiter) and a 2.6 magnitude star called, beta Scorpii, before the sky got brighter and the sun sank all the stars.

Waiting patiently, (and seriously waiting patiently) until it happened at approximately 6:24am, Mercury popped up from behind a school building, and then I knew the moment was here.

First the inner-most planet, with it distinct sharpness that produced spikes to my gaze, held a steady magnitude -0.6. And if ever you thought observing Mercury brought about a pinkish hue, there was sure no sign of it this morning. However, that pinkish hue fell on the next planet, Mars. The 4th rock from the sun shone at an unimpressive +1.5, it seemed liked a dwindling Mercury but still very visible. Finally, before the arrival of Jupiter, you could just pick out beta Scorpii, obviously a star amongst the 2 planets so far. And moments later, the king, Jupiter - outshinning the rest at -1.7. All 4 heavenly objects now fit within 2 degrees of my 3" telescope. And with the naked eye, and almost perfect equilateral triangle.

What a sight!! :shock:

From gaze to inspiration, I felt tiny once again.

For a moment, with sunrise in just half-an-hour, you could take all the hustle of your busy life away, forget that upcoming work week tomorrow and silence everything in you path, and you could sense being transported to a faraway land (or a planet), where alien worlds exists just outside your home. Almost like as how some magazines would put it, "an artistes impression". This time you were the artist and the impression would last a lifetime.

With a light blue tinge in the sky, and with the planets Mercury, Mars and Jupiter, shinning against it, it just meant how wonderful and rare astronomical events just like this come few-and-far between. And observing a grand conjunction with just 15 days to christmas, gave me a sense satisfaction and more importantly, a christmas story I can tell my children and grandchildren.

- BabyKevin 8-)
morning of 10th December, 2007/
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