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Date: 29 May 2007 08:17:48
From: laura halliday
Subject: Mercury and Venus at dusk
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I spent some quality time on my balcony last night with my old C8 and guests Mercury and Venus. Venus is obvious. I've been routinely seeing it a couple of hours before sunset, and have followed it this apparition from a small nearly-full object to the growing half phase it is now. Mercury took a bit of doing. I couldn't see it naked-eye, so I scanned the ecliptic with binoculars to see where it was. With some landmarks from the binoculars I reacquired the tiny spark in the scope's finder, then threw enough magnification at it to see a tiny off-white half phase planet. It was a school night so I didn't do Jupiter or Saturn. They'll keep until the weekend... Laura Halliday VE7LDH "Que les nuages soient notre Grid: CN89mg pied a terre..." ICBM: 49 16.05 N 122 56.92 W - Hospital/Shafte
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Date: 30 May 2007 22:18:00
From: Joe S.
Subject: Re: Mercury and Venus at dusk
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"laura halliday" <marsgal42@hotmail.com > wrote in message news:1180451868.508541.98520@o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com... >I spent some quality time on my balcony last night > with my old C8 and guests Mercury and Venus. > > Venus is obvious. I've been routinely seeing it a couple > of hours before sunset, and have followed it this > apparition from a small nearly-full object to the growing > half phase it is now. > > Mercury took a bit of doing. I couldn't see it naked-eye, > so I scanned the ecliptic with binoculars to see where > it was. With some landmarks from the binoculars I > reacquired the tiny spark in the scope's finder, then > threw enough magnification at it to see a tiny off-white > half phase planet. > > It was a school night so I didn't do Jupiter or Saturn. > They'll keep until the weekend... > > Laura Halliday VE7LDH "Que les nuages soient notre > Grid: CN89mg pied a terre..." > ICBM: 49 16.05 N 122 56.92 W - Hospital/Shafte > Thanks for posting this. I hauled my XT-12 out of wraps a few minutes after 2100, EDST. Hot and hazy with mostly cloud covered sky -- moon was dim and fuzzy, Venus was blazing away and Mercury was a tiny speck in the binos. Got a good look at Venus -- it's a half-moon shape. Normally Venus is blinding through my scope but I think the haze knocked off the brightness enough to allow me to get a good look. Mercury was soon swallowed by a cloud bank but at least a got a look at a tiny orange-red ball -- color probably was from dust in the atmosphere. Saturn was very dim -- I'm going back out in a few minutes to check on it.
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Date: 29 May 2007 11:57:13
From: Dave Jessie
Subject: Re: Mercury and Venus at dusk
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Laura Halliday wrote: > snip < > Venus is obvious. I've been routinely seeing it a couple > of hours before sunset, and have followed it this > apparition from a small nearly-full object to the growing > half phase it is now. Hi Laura, Beautiful, isn't it!? I love seeing Mercury naked eye. And Venus is just ablaze at -4.1 magnitude. If by 'growing half phase' you mean 'getting closer and appearing larger in angular diameter', you are absolutely correct. If you meant 'phase increasing to full', I'm afraid that's not exactly right since it's currently heading toward a thin crescent later in July. Clear Dark Steady Skies, Dave Jessie
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