An Investigation into the Phase Anomaly of Venus

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R. H. CHAMBERS AND J. TAYLOR

Introduction

It has been known for some time that a difference between observed and theoretical phase of Venus is apparent, not only at dichotomy (Schröter's Effect) but throughout the planet's cycle. Warner [1] has shown that the magnitude of this difference varies according to the phase of the planet, being ± 10%, near 10% and 90% illumination.
There has been considerable speculation whether this effect is due to conditions on the planet itself or to observing errors. Agreement between individuals at any one elongation is poor but most observers are convinced of the reality of the phenomenon, although Cattermole et al..[2] have pointed out the difficulties in obtaining consistent and accurate results when known standards are available for comparison.
Experimental Programme

As most measurements have been made from drawings of the planet plus a few micrometer observations, it was considered that a different approach to the problem would be of value. Accordingly, it was decided to use a calibrated model as a standard for comparison with Venus in the optical train of the telescope. The study was divided into three separate experiments:
1. With one model alone. To make drawings and compare the measurements of phase from these drawings with the known phase of the model.
2. With two models. Using one model as a fixed standard, to vary the other until it matched the phase of the first and to record any difference.
3. With one model. Arranging for the model to be seen in the same field of view as Venus and varying the model to match the planet's phase.
It will be seen that experiment I was a check on the normal methods of ascertaining the phase of Venus and experiment 2, a necessary precursor to experiment 3 was designed to assess how accurately one object could be matched to another.
Twenty three people took part in experiment I and twenty one in experiment 2. Experiment 3 is still under consideration but the results so far obtained are thought to be of sufficient interest to warrant publication before the study is complete.

Experiment I

Apparatus

  • One elbow telescope on altazimuth mounting;
  • One identification telescope on altazimuth mounting;
  • One Venus phase simulator (V.P.S.), shown in figure 1.

The V.P.S. consisted of a table tennis ball painted black on half of the sphere, illuminated from within by a flash light bulb and suitably mounted over a platform containing a scale of divisions giving an accurate measurement of phase. The sphere assembly could be rotated and the simulated phase read off the scale. A sighting device was incorporated to facilitate the accurate alignment of the V.P.S. with the observer.

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Method of use

The two telescopes were set up about twelve yards from the V.P.S. and carefully lined up with it, the identification telescope being above and behind the elbow telescope so that observations could be conducted simultaneously from both instruments.
Each observer was issued with a sheet of paper on which was drawn a circle of approximately five inches diameter. During the course of the experiment the V.P.S. was set at a number of known phase angles and each observer
sketched on the paper the phase as seen through the telescopes. The experiment was carried out with the V.P.S. in the dark and without the observer having knowledge of the setting value

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PAPERSVENUS01

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PAPERSVENUS02

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A total of 240 observations were recorded from 23 different observers. These are shown in Table I and in graphical form in Figure 2, where the standard deviation of each set of figures is also plotted. No apparent difference was recorded between the estimates from the two telescopes.

PAPERS_VENUS03

 

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Experiment 2

Apparatus

  • One elbow telescope on altazimuth mounting; Two Venus phase simulators

Method of use

The two simulators were set up twelve yards from the telescope with the axes of the spheres in the same vertical plane so that through the telescope one sphere appeared above the other. The first V.P.S. was set at a particular phase and the other was varied by an operator under instructions from the observer looking through the telescope. When the observer considered the two images were matched, the setting of the second V.P.S. was noted by the operator. The experiment was carried out in the dark.

Results

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A total of 21 observers gave 63 observations. These are tabulated in Table 2 and shown in graphical form in Figure 3, where the standard deviations are also plotted.

PAPERS_VENUS05

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PAPERS_VENUS04

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Discussion and Conclusions

Examination of Figure 2 reveals that the differences between the observed and actual phases of the model Venus follow a regular pattern, being highly positive at phases in the order of 3o per cent and negative at phases around 70%. Reference to Figure 2 of Warner's paper,' where a large number of actual measurements of the planet has been plotted, shows a similar variation with phase. It is true that at 50 % phase Warner shows a positive (O–C) in contrast to the negative (O–C) in Figure 2, but the magnitude of this difference is not great, and it must be remembered that the experiments described in this paper were carried out under ideal conditions, which makes it hardly surprising that minor differences in detail should result. What is of greater importance is the close similarity between the two curves which points to a common origin for both sets of data. It is difficult to draw any other conclusion than that the causal factor lies in the observer and the dif¬ferences between the observed and theoretical phases of Venus are of physiological origin.

Attention is also drawn to the increased scatter of results at high and low percentage illumination, indicating the difficulty of the observation and the imprecise nature of any values obtained.
Although the data obtained in experiment 2 are not extensive, they do point to the conclusion that a comparison can be made between two images that is of sufficient accuracy for the purpose. It is intended that further confirmatory experiments will be carried out before the final phase of the study is completed.

Acknowledgments

Thanks are due to Mr J. Wright who constructed one of the Venus phase simulators, and to members of the Crayford Manor House Astronomical Society who took part in the experiments with such enthusiasm.

References

I Warner, B., J.B.A.A., 73, 65.
2 Cattermole, P. J., Nicholson, I. and Moore, P., J.B.A.A., 73, 118.

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Images of Venus by Simon Dawes

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venus_sd01

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Image by Simon Dawes
12" Newtonian Philips ToUcam Pro webcam
9 Apr 2004 19:59UT

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C2014/ Q2 Lovejoy

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C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy) is a long-period comet discovered on 17 August 2014 by Terry Lovejoy using an 8" telescope.

It was discovered at an apparent magnitude of 15 it is the fifth comet discovered by Terry Lovejoy. 

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COMET LOVEJOY 24012015

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This image of Comet Lovejoy was taken by member Gordon Collings on the 24th January 2015 at 20:29 using a SkyWatcher Esprit ED 120, NIkon D300, 4m exposure, using an Astronomik CLS Filter.

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lovejoy stacked PS

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Taken on the 24th January 2015 at the Pavilion, Sutton-at-Hone.

This image is a stack of 123 x 30 second exposures, taken with a Canon 600D with a clip in light pollution filter and iOptron tracker. Using a F4 50mm lens. No calibration frames were used.

The images are stacked on the comet, hence the trailing stars.

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COMET LOVEJOY 16012015

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This image of Comet Lovejoy was taken by member Gordon Collings on the 16th January 2015 at 22:20 using a SkyWatcher Esprit ED 120, NIkon D300, 120s exposures.

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Welcome to our new website!

Our new website is live, come back regularly to see new updates.

This post lists the progress of migrating data from the old website to the new one.

Our old site cmhas.wikispaces.com remains operational for a short period as sections from it are migrated more and more of the old site will point to this new site, however please be patient at we have 560 pages and 2.5Gb of images to migrate!

2018-09-09

Added Making dew heater controller and dew bands to equipment section

2018-08-07

Added Automatic Photometric Telescope post to Papers  and Equipment sections

2018-08-06

Added new post for BAA Exhibition meeting in 2010
Added new post for BAA Summer Exhibition Meeting 2012
Added Paper
Added Paper
Added Paper

2018-08-05

Added book review posts

Updated Aurora page

Added news posts

Updated Atmospheric Optics Page and added some posts

2018-07-25

Added Frankenscope to equipment section

Added Observatory Section

2018-07-24

Added post on summer BBQ

Fixed Event section which wasn't displaying event posts

2018-07-23

Updated space Junk section and added post

2018-07-22

Added Equipment Section and added to Activities menu

  • CEM post
  • Drift scan post
  • Battery Free electric focuser
  • DIY Finderscope
  • Variable Barlow
  • Large Telescopes

Added Variable star page and 3 posts showing observations

2018-07-21

Updated Mars Page

2018-07-20

Added Spectroscopy page

2018-07-18

Added post for 2015 Lunar Eclipse - all Lunar Eclipse reports from old website are now covered.
Modified the Programme- you can now import our programme into your own Calendar!

2018-07-17

Added page on Detecting meteors with Radio
Updated Lunar Eclipse Page added posts for 2001 and 2007 Lunar Eclipses

2018-07-15

Complete upload of member solar images
Papers section added and 2 papers published
Meteor Page updated with posts for previous society reports of meteor showers
Radio Section Added, added SID page
Double Stars Section Added

2018-07-14

Comet page updated, including all the previous comet reports by the society.
Venus page updated with members images plus a paper on the dichotomy of Venus 
Sun pages updated with members images

 

Comet panSTARRS c/2011 L4

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We will be attempting to observe Comet PanSTARRS C/2011 L4 on the 12th March 2013 at the Pavilion. The comet will be 11 degrees above the horizon at 19:00, close to Uranus; the Sun - according to StaryNight pro 4.5 sets at 19:00 so we will want to set up any equipment before sunset.

This will be a challenging observation, the comet is predicted to be close to its brightest but it will be in bright twilight
CAUTION SUN MUST HAVE SET BEFORE YOU USE YOUR BINOCULARS

panstarrsC-2011_L4

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mcrowCometC2011L4(Panstarrs)

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Stack of 33 images ED80 Canon 600D

Image by Martin Crow

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panstarsC2011l4SD800

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30s exposure Canon 650D Comet is just below centre of image. Image taken at the BAA Winchester Weekend.

Image by Simon Dawes

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CMHASDCalender2014.09ArthurCockburn_September

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2013-03-14 Just south of Cahors in France. 200mm lens f5.6 1s exposure ISO 1250

Image by Arthur Cockburn

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Comet C/2007 N Lulin

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The comet was first photographed by astronomer Lin Chi-Sheng with a 16" telescope at the Lulin Observatory in Nantou, Taiwan on July 11, 2007. 19-year-old Ye Quanzhi from Sun Yat-sen University in China identified the new object from three of the photographs taken by Lin. 3.

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Lulinmc02

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Image by Martin Crow

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Lulin_contour_map

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Contour image of the Lulin's Coma
(c) Martin Crow
2009-02-27
14 x 30s exposure

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cometLulinspectraMC01

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Spectra of Comet Lulin by Martin Crow

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COMETS_Lulin_SD2

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640x480 Image, by Simon Dawes on 2009-02-27, 20 x 20s exposure

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Comet 17P/Holmes

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17P/Holmes is a periodic comet (designated by the P in its name), discovered Edwin Holmes on November 6, 1892. Normally a very faint object, Holmes brightened by a factor of half a million, in October 2007 and became visible to the naked eye.

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holmes05

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Image by Martin Crow.

Dennings observations implies velocities of around 400 - 500 m/s between the 9th and 16th November 1892

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holmes04

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This image by Martin Crow is a subtraction of a 2007/10/29 image against a 2007/11/01 image, in effect it shows the changes in the comet over this short period.

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holmes06

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Brightness measurements of Comet Holmes by Martin Crow. The numbers are in the astronomy unit of 'Magnitude' so smaller numbers represent a brighter object.

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17PHolmes_KR01

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Image Keith Rickard, this image is 'Larson - Sekanina' processed to show the radial detail in the coma

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holmes01

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Image by Martin Crow showing some different image processing techniques to bring out specific features of the comet

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holmes02

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Image by Martin Crow showing some different image processing techniques to bring out specific features of the comet

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Holmes03

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Image by Martin Crow showing some different image processing techniques to bring out specific features of the comet

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Comet 2004 Q2 Machholz

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Martin Crow managed to not only image but also create a short animation, as can be seen below.

[caption id="attachment_1117" align="aligncenter" width="540"] The images were taken on 2 January 2005 between 20:03UT and 21:23UT. In the animation shows the comet tracking across the sky and its tail dynamically changing shape with a possible hint of a detachment.[/caption]

Now for the techie stuff:

Each original image was obtained using a Celestron C8 SCT at f3.3 with a MX916 CCD camera. The exposure was 20 seconds and an interval of 60 seconds between shots. The relatively short exposure was designed to give an unsaturated nucleus so that some photometry might be done on it. All of the images were dark frame subtracted and flat fielded prior to processing. Each of the frames is a group of 5 original images converted into and AVI file and then seriously processed in Registax. The resulting images were then save as JPEGs so that they could be opened in Adobe Photo Shop to align each frame.

 

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Comet C/1995 01 Hale-Bopp

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This comet is possibly the most widely observed comet of the 20th century, and one of the brightest seen for many decades.
Discovered on July 23, 1995, independently by both Alan Hale and Thomas Bopp. It was visible to the naked eye for a record 18 months, and holds the record for unaided eye visibility in modern times.

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hale_bopp_AC01

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The Great Comet of 1997 imaged by Arthur Cockburn who took the image while visiting Chepstow Castle. A 30 second exposure on ISO200 film.

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halebopp_AB01

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The Great Comet of 1997 imaged by Andy Barber, while at Romney Marsh in Kent. Image is a 25 second exposure on ISO1600 film.

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halebopp_AB02

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The Great Comet of 1997 imaged by Andy Barber, while at Romney Marsh in Kent. Image is a 25 second exposure on ISO1600 film.

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Comet C/1996 B2 Hyakutaki

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Hyakutaki_AC01

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The Great Comet of 1996 imaged by Arthur Cockburn, taken in March 1996 on ISO100 film

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Hyakutaki_AC02

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The Great Comet of 1996 imaged by Arthur Cockburn, taken in March 1996 on ISO100 film

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Hyakutaki_AC03

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The Great Comet of 1996 imaged by Arthur Cockburn, taken in March 1996 on ISO100 film

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