Venus transit 2012
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Elbarto84 | Date: Wednesday, 06.06.2012, 13:32 | Message # 2 |
Space Tourist
Group: Users
Brazil
Messages: 37
Status: Offline
| Amazing!!! Thanks for sharing! Unfortunately i couldn't see this almost once in a lifetime experience =( (live on the southern hemisphere) I like all 3 photographs. Even the clouds in the second and third photos add something cool and unique to it.. looks almost like a gas giant in the last picture
Edited by Elbarto84 - Wednesday, 06.06.2012, 13:32 |
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HarbingerDawn | Date: Wednesday, 06.06.2012, 14:03 | Message # 3 |
Cosmic Curator
Group: Administrators
United States
Messages: 8717
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| Wonderful pictures SpaceEngineer! I too could not see it since it was too cloudy where I live But I shall live vicariously through pictures like yours
All forum users, please read this! My SE mods and addons Phenom II X6 1090T 3.2 GHz, 16 GB DDR3 RAM, GTX 970 3584 MB VRAM
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apenpaap | Date: Wednesday, 06.06.2012, 14:15 | Message # 4 |
World Builder
Group: Users
Antarctica
Messages: 1063
Status: Offline
| Unfortunately it was very cloudy in the morning, and so I could not see it myself. But I followed streams of it all night. And I saw the 2004 one through eclipse glasses.
I occasionally stream at http://www.twitch.tv/magistermystax. Sometimes SE, sometimes other games.
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Talisman | Date: Wednesday, 06.06.2012, 17:19 | Message # 5 |
Pioneer
Group: Users
United States
Messages: 409
Status: Offline
| Impressive! Unfortunately I don't have a solar filter for my 8 Inch telescope so I was only able to glance at it like I mentioned in a different thread: Quote (Talisman) I naked eye viewed the sun for 1.5 seconds this afternoon, some of the light from venus must have reached my retinas so technical I didn't miss it.
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SpaceEngineer | Date: Thursday, 07.06.2012, 07:24 | Message # 6 |
Author of Space Engine
Group: Administrators
Russian Federation
Messages: 4800
Status: Offline
| Quote (Talisman) Unfortunately I don't have a solar filter for my 8 Inch telescope But you could use a white paper sheet placed behind the ocular to make a projection on to it.
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apenpaap | Date: Thursday, 07.06.2012, 11:08 | Message # 7 |
World Builder
Group: Users
Antarctica
Messages: 1063
Status: Offline
| ^Considering Google says 8 inches is 20 cm, I'd say that's a bad idea. Catching that much light in a telescope to be bounced around and focused can heat the telescope up terribly and damage it. I know my own 15 cm telescope comes with loads of warnings never to project the Sun with it, but to use a solar filter instead.
I occasionally stream at http://www.twitch.tv/magistermystax. Sometimes SE, sometimes other games.
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