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You can see the Transit of Venus live here: http://events.slooh.com/
Starts in 5 minutes.
Starts in 5 minutes.
Drakkith said:You can see the Transit of Venus live here: http://events.slooh.com/
Starts in 5 minutes.
Borek said:No chances to see anything for me - full overcast, and it is not going to change around sunrise. I can sleep as long as I want, I am not going to miss anything [PLAIN]http://www.bpp.com.pl/IMG/grumpy_borek.png[/QUOTE]
Heavy clouds here as well. They lighten up just enough to tease me. I really wanted to get out my telescope but there isn't a chance.![]()
Did you try taking the eyepiece out of your main scope?Drakkith said:I've done some projections onto a paper plate using the lens out of my finder scope, but I can't really see anything. Perhaps my lens is too long of a focal length.
This? http://sunearthday.nasa.gov/transitofvenus/theorem4.5.9 said:There's nothing but clouds for me as well though I'm digging nasa's coverage of the transit. No matter how hard I try, I just can't get myself to realize the sheer size, speed, distance etc. of these two objects!
Astronuc said:Cool -- NASA SDO - Venus approaching in 191 Anstrom [sic] (I think that is Angstrom, as in UV)
Borg said:Did you try taking the eyepiece out of your main scope?
Too late now but, I meant to use the main scope without its eyepiece.Drakkith said:Nope. Do you think using the eyepiece instead of the lens would have worked better?
Borg said:Too late now but, I meant to use the main scope without its eyepiece.
Borek said:I have a beautiful blue sky NOW. But it started to clean about two hours ago, long after transit ended.
I've done it with my 8 inch Newtonian without any filters and didn't have a problem. Now that I think about it, it was a partial eclipse (~20% covered). I guess that I'll have to try it against the full sun sometime.Drakkith said:No way, it's way to big and I don't want to damage it. I also tried using an 80mm refractor, but it was horribly bright on the paper plate I was projecting on, so I couldn't use it either.
Borg said:I've done it with my 8 inch Newtonian without any filters and didn't have a problem. Now that I think about it, it was a partial eclipse (~20% covered). I guess that I'll have to try it against the full sun sometime.