• Yeah definitely Venus, and if you follow down further West on a diagonal line you can spot Mercury above the horizon

  • anyone got any less tabloidy more trufacts info about the comet that is heading our way imminently
    supposedly a biggy is coming our way today / tomorrow ?

  • wiki do it for you?

    Links to ESA page here

    Something gets to about 2 lunar distances on 22nd... but that's a long way away given the sizes of the objects involved

  • Night sky in London looking much clearer I think, possibly due to lower pollution levels.

  • I am out in the garden trying to get a view of comet C/2019 Y4 (Atlas) which could be a spectacular one over the coming weeks. At the moment it is a tiny green blob.

  • It’s tiny. Just to the left of the bright star in the upper right quadrant. It is 161 million miles away. But that is only about 9 light minutes, whereas the two galaxies near the bottom of this shot are so far away that their light has taken over 11 million years to get here.

    Shot with a 200mm lens from my garden last night.


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  • Hmm, doesn’t really have the grandeur of deep space when viewed on an old mobile phone screen.

  • Some fine PSFs are usual Ludd!

  • ISS is visible at a sensible time at the moment.

  • Yes, saw it at 8.25 or so yesterday evening disappearing into earth’s shadow as it passed south of Leo. Tomorrow evening it passes overhead here. Might try making a video of it if it is still clear.

  • What aperture are you using for star shots?

  • This last one was wide open at f2.8

  • OK, maybe the last couple of shots for a while. ISS widefield and close up


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  • The sky has been beautiful the last couple of nights

  • Is it going to get any closer, Paul? Was considering trying to take a shot of it, but my camera/lens is pretty puny.

  • The ISS? I hope it doesn’t get much closer than this - it is usually at least 416km up, and if it were to drop a bit, I think it would start to encounter some atmospheric drag that would cause it to drop further out of orbit and crash.

    To get even this fuzzy view, you need a focal length of about 2 metres.

  • Or the comet? That should get close (72.6 million miles) and may be visible to the naked eye next month.

  • The altitude is plotted by NASA, note how it is periodically boosted back up to a higher altitude before drifting back down due to atmospheric drag

    https://heavens-above.com/IssHeight.aspx

    Looks like they overshot back in August and had to correct.

  • Thanks for the link - I hadn’t realised the variation was so big.

  • 20km or so, but LEO is super busy so they'll always be adjusting to avoid congestion.

  • C/2019 Y4 (Atlas)

    How about this one which swings past on 29th April? Any chance of you seeing that?

  • It will be a struggle - a slow-moving dot at magnitude 10 or 11 will show up as a thin line on a long exposure, but visually it will take a lot of sitting staring at a field of stars to see if any of them shift slightly. But I might just give it a try.

  • The comet, yes. Cheers for the info!

  • Going out again in 10 minutes to catch a wide-angle shot of the ISS

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