Alright, this is for sharing of your observation experience. Or, if you are arranging gatherings, star-gazing expeditions or just want some company to go observing together, you can shout it out here.
International Space Station visible as a bright moving white "star" tonight if sky is clear. Face South East, look up 45 deg. From 7:55pm. Should fly across Canis Major near Sirius.
Mag -3.1 AND high up in the sky.
Looking forward to observing Tiangong 1 soon.
Last edited by Gary on Thu Mar 07, 2013 9:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"The importance of a telescope is not how big it is, how well made it is.
It is how many people, less fortunate than you, got to look through it."
-- John Dobson.
"The importance of a telescope is not how big it is, how well made it is.
It is how many people, less fortunate than you, got to look through it."
-- John Dobson.
"The importance of a telescope is not how big it is, how well made it is.
It is how many people, less fortunate than you, got to look through it."
-- John Dobson.
"The importance of a telescope is not how big it is, how well made it is.
It is how many people, less fortunate than you, got to look through it."
-- John Dobson.
Clifford60 wrote:Thanks for sharing, next time use tripod o, video shaky, head also shake, hehe
Haha. Must shake to create that live youtube feel.
Very last min decision so no time to bring and setup tripod. Will bring along next time if there is such nice framing again. Need a 78x optical zoom camcorder soon.
"The importance of a telescope is not how big it is, how well made it is.
It is how many people, less fortunate than you, got to look through it."
-- John Dobson.
i took a video yesterday via iphone of a very bright satelite i think which i thought might be the ISS but it wasn't moving. any idea what could it be?
jimmyleong wrote:i see that the ISS is moving across the sky.
i took a video yesterday via iphone of a very bright satelite i think which i thought might be the ISS but it wasn't moving. any idea what could it be?
Maybe a very bright star like Sirius, Canopus or Arcturus? Did it disappear from view after a while?
Check the date and stamp on the recorded video and let us know exactly when. And roughly what direction you were facing and how high up you point above the horizion (e.g. 45 degrees up).
Using these info, we can double check with planetarium software like stellarium to confirm what it was.
Last night ISS flyby visible in Singapore was at about 7:37 pm.
"The importance of a telescope is not how big it is, how well made it is.
It is how many people, less fortunate than you, got to look through it."
-- John Dobson.