Tonight was somewhat clear, so I hauled out the 'scope and set my sites on Jupiter. The clouds were annoying from time to time, but the real difficulty was turbulent air.
In any case, I'll show what I have. These images have been heavily processed and enlarged for your enjoyment. North is up, and East is right (which is backwards for a sky map).
This is Jupiter alone. I used a low frame rate (5/sec) for this image, and had only a couple of hundred frames to stack to create this. Nevertheless, I think that it turned out quite well. The dyadic wavelets work wonders on this planet! It still doesn't quite compare to being at the eyepiece, though.
This is a partial "family portrait." The moons shown are (from left to right) Europa, Io and Ganymede. Ganymede is just emerging from behind Jupiter and swinging out. The image quality is not quite as good here. I was using 30 frames/sec with the maximum shutter opening to catch the moons.
If you really want to see a talented amateur's work, check out Tom Matheson's Rotating Jupiter.
That's all for tonight. I hope you have enjoyed the show!
Saturn is definitely one of my favorite telescopic targets. It is a tough one to image in detail, though. It is currently 8.825 AU away (or 1.31 billion kilometers, for those who prefer metric) and that means that the planet itself (not the rings) subtends an angle of only 19 arcminutes (0.32 degrees). Even at 308X magnification (which is what my telescope (1540mm focal length) plus my Neximage webcam (5mm focal length) give, that's still an awfully small image. Also consider that 300X magnification is getting quite close to both the theoretical limits of my 127mm telescope, and to the best that can be expected from the Earth's turbulent atmosphere.



