I recently received another email from member Al Ernst, saying; Jupiter is again rising above the trees and becoming a visual and photographic target for those who stay up late (or get up early -Keith). With a little help from me, the St. Joseph HS, Metuchen(New Jersey), Astronomy Club took this series of images of one of the double transits over several hours in late October 2021. The students used the School's C14 telescope and ZWO ASI-120MC camera. Five minutes of subs were accumulated for each image was processed in Fire Capture and then in Photoshop.
With Jupiter, a bit higher above the horizon during this opposition, the steadier atmosphere should provide much incentive for planetary imagers.
Al Ernst
Thanks again Al, they did a great job capturing these shadows as they zoomed across the planet's surface. You can easily determine which is the closer moon Io's shadow. It's great seeing this quality of work coming from high school students. I wish more US schools had this level of interest in astronomy, along with volunteers like you to guide their work.
We'll keep spreading the word...
Thank you!
Keith
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