Sunspot 3363 On The Move and in Color
Taken by Philip Smith on July 8, 2023 @
Manorville, NY USA
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Camera Used: Unavailable Unavailable Exposure Time: Unavailable Aperture: Unavailable ISO: Unavailable Date Taken: 2023:07:09 20:51:59 |
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Details:
Please Note: I tried to add color to my images. Hope you like them. On 07-08-23 from my Manorville observatory, I imaged the large sunspot 3363. The average sunspot is about the size of the entire planet Earth! However, sunspots come in various sizes ranging from hundreds to tens of thousands of miles across (many times larger than Earth). Scientists measure the total size (area) of all of the sunspots seen on the sun every day to get a measure of how active the sun is. Sunspots are not permanent. They appear and disappear on the surface of the Sun.
My imaging configuration was an Edge HD 14" telescope. I bought 2 full mounting solar assembles from Ryan Seymor owner of Spectrum Telescope. I fit it with a "FULL 14" aperture of the Baader ND3.8 Film for "PHOTO ONLY" not visual for viewing at the eyepiece like you can with the Baader ND5.0. solar film I have. Camera used for this image was the Player One MINI APOLLO-M IMX429 (mono) with a Green Chroma 1.25" filter. A Baader Planetarium Carl Zeiss 2x Barlow Lens in the MoonLite Focuser with stepper motors all on an Astro-Physics 1600GTO German Equatorial Mount with Extended Temperature Absolute Encoders.
Kind Regards To ALL 🙂
Photographer's website:
https://www.facebook.com/philip.smith.5686
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