2015 Lunar Eclipse

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This Lunar Eclipse was also a super moon meaning the Moon was at perigee (closest to Earth) and this was the second total lunar eclipse of the year.

 

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Images by Simon Dawes

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Lunar Eclipse2015-2.jpeg

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Lunar Eclipse2015-1.jpeg

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Images by Mike Rushton

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Lunar Eclipse2015-3

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Images by Honor Wheeler

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Lunar Eclipse2015-4

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Images by Martin Crow

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Lunar Eclipse2015-5

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Lunar Eclipse2015-6

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Lunar Eclipse2015-7

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Images by John Howarth

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Lunar Eclipse2015-8

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Lunar Eclipse2015-9

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Lunar Eclipse2015-10

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Lunar Eclipse2015-11

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Lunar Eclipse2015-12

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2007-03-03 Lunar Eclipse

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Images by Honor Wheeler using her Meade ETX 105 telescope afocally with a Fuji E550 digital camera.

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This image is of the penumbra of the Earth's shadow (the dark bar through the middle) during the eclipse before totality. It was achieved by subtracting an image of the moon before the eclipse and an image of it during the penumbral phase by Martin Crow.

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lunar_eclipse_07_mc03

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Image by Andrew Godden

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Image by Jim Burchell

Digital Camera afocally mounted to a Dobsonian telescope.

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Images by Simon Dawes

DSLR Canon 400D, Sigma 75-300mm lens at 300mm F5.6 un-tracked (note dew increasing unnoticed over the night degrading the images.

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2001-01-09 Lunar Eclipse

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Terry Miles observations

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2013 Perseid Report

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What is astonishing about this image is that in 8 seconds Kevin has also captured the Milkyway which in his neck of the woods is washed out with light pollution.

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perseid2013-sd1

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Simon Dawes left his automated radio meteor observations to do the work and checked up later in August  
Like last year the morning of the 12th showed the most meteors.

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This was the highest duration meteor captured on the 12th August 2013 at 11:38:18 it lasted for 338 counts which looking at the trace is about a minute.

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perseid2013-sd2

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2012 Perseid Report

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Report by Simon Dawes

On holiday in Austria, clouded out, however my automated radio meteor observations continued to run 24hrs per day while I was away, this year was more successful than last, primarily due to the Yagi now being mounted on a mast.
Frequency 143.049 MHz
Equipment 4 Element Yagi, Yupiteru MVT7100 receiver, Spectrum Lab software

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Radiocolourgramperseid2012

ColourGram of total Meteor durations, hours are down the page days across the page, represents all of August 2012

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perseid_201208120459waterfall

Waterfall diagram from Spectrum Lab showing some of the Perseid meteors

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Looking at the waterfall traces my system automatically saves there was a significant number of large long duration traces during the Perseids. For those not familiar with waterfall diagrams, time is on the vertical axis (present at the top past at the bottom) and frequency on the horizontal axis, the colour represents the signal strength at that frequency. a 'wide' plot indicates a dopler-shift of the radar (GRAVES) that I am monitoring which is normally not 'visible' from my location. The thin vertical line is noise (a real pain in the ....) The meteor in the middle of the trace at 04:58 and 09s is a more usual meteor, very short duration (in this case 4 clock counts) but yo can see the other meteors last much longer (the ionisation path reflecting the radar lasts longer in the atmosphere)

perseid_2012-durationanalysis

Analysing the meteor durations and putting into bins it was able to show a much sharper peak when only meteors greater than 8 counts were included

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2011 Draconids Report

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Draconids

The Draconids, also known as the Giacobinids, after the parent comet, are a variable meteor shower, the parent body being comet 21P/Giacobini-Zinner, occasionally the Earth passes through denser clumps of material from 21P/Giacobini-Zinner and these have produced significant meteors.

Previous meteor activity
Year
observed ZHR / comments

1933 STORM
"I counted 200 meteors in two minutes, and then counting became impossible. The fire-stars became as thick as the flakes of a snowstorm. Instead of twos and threes they came in flocks and gusts. The sky was thick with them wherever one looked." Rev. W. F. A. Ellison (Former Director of Armagh Observatory); Belfast Telegraph on Wednesday, October 11, 1933

1946 STORM
+10000/hr
1953 Outburst
250/hr
1985 Outburst
550/hr
1998 Outburst
500/Hr
2011
60 to 600 predicted

2011 Observations

Members of Crayford Manor House Astronomical Society observed this event from the UK and Turkey, visual observations from the UK were hampered by cloud and the only successful results from the UK by members of the society were from radio observations.

The chart below shows the automated meteor count showing the peak from 19:45 - 20:15 on the 8th October 2011, the sporadic rate is ~24 per hour.

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Chart showing the results of automated radio observations from Simon Dawes.

draconids2011autoountchart

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waterfalldraconidspeak2011

This screen shot shows time (past at the bottom of the page, present at the top of the page) and the power of the signal at different frequencies, on the receiver these manifest themselves as whistles - see below.

This recording contains numerous meteors, the largest and longest at around 53s

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2011 Perseid Report

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This year was a challenging year for observing, the moon was full and most of the country was cloudy.

Clouded out for visual observations Simon Dawes was on holiday on Guernsey but his automated radio meteor logging station in Bexleyheath, Kent, England, did observe the Perseid's, the peak was between 08:00 - 09:00 UT on the 13th August.

Experimental automated meteor observing set-up

Frequency 143.049 MHz
Equipment 4 Element Yagi, Yupiteru MVT7100 receiver, Spectrum Lab software

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Radio_Perseids_2011_colorgram

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This plot is called a Colourgram, it plots time of day against day of month the figures are the number of meteors observed.

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Radio_Perseids_2011_surfaceplot

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A 3D surface plot of the Perseid meteor shower in 2011.
This plots time in one axis with day of month on the other, the height of the peaks indicate the number of meteors observed.

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Radio_Perseids_2011_plot

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Radio observations of the Perseid meteor shower, counts plotted in 1 hour buckets

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Meteor20110813084054

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This plot shows a waterfall diagram of a Perseid fireball, the signal was received for 12.2s! frequency is plotted horizontally and time vertically with the top of the chart being the present and the bottom of the chart representing the 2 minutes earlier

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2010 Perseid Report

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Reports from members of the 2010 Perseid meteor shower.

I observed on the 12th from 22.15 to 22.45 UT and saw 6 Perseids plus one sporadic. The sky was wonderfully clear and so variables won the day (or should I say night?). Roger Pickard

I was out from about ten to eleven until just after midnight (BST) (2010-08-12 to13). Visually, I thought the best one of the night was at 12.02(BST), about mag 1, low in the east parallel with the ground and heading straight for Jupiter. I also made a note: '11.36 Anomaly, single point flash at zenith.' Anyone else see that? Perhaps it was Iridium, looked just like an aircraft, but only flashed once. Kevin Smith

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Image of Perseid, not processed 5min exposure on astro track, canon 7D 10 to 20mm sigma lens. Taken at Stonebarrow near Charmouth. Julian Tworek.

Perseid 2010_JT01

The 12th was cloudy where I was in Cornwall but I saw 6 in 45 mins on the 13th and one sporadic - 4 faint meteors caught on camera (only one is a perseid) Full visual report was sent to the BAA along with a full photographic report. The photographic meteors were very faint so I haven't included in this report but have created a graphic showing their positions. Simon Dawes

MeteorCartoon2010-08-13SD

 

 

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2009 Geminid Report

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Sunday 13th December 20:00Hrs - Monday 14th December 04:00Hrs
Despite the cloud, a total of 67 Geminids were observed by Members, with 6 captured photographically.

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Visual

GEMINIDS_2009_Visual

 

 

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Information on all the visual meteors recorded on the night of 13-14 December 2009

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Photographic

6 Geminids were caught on camera, these images show the conditions were not ideal, note the high levels of light pollution we have to contend with in the Bexley area.

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2001 Leonid Report

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A number of Society Members were able to take advantage of the November 2001 Leonid Storm by visiting the island of Palau in Micronesia in the Pacific. From there, Jean and Brian Felles were able to take these stunning shots. Note that these are not compilations of several frames, but simply reflect the number of meteors to be seen during the length of the exposure which was 5 minutes in each case!

 

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