| Welcome to my Astronomy pages. As you can see they are under
construction at the moment, after dwindling around on some lone corner
of my former home page displaying nothing more than an ancient hubble
deep field picture. On the left, you can see the instrument I use for
observing: A Super Polaris C8 which I bought from the States back in
1994 or so from wholesale optics of Pennsylvania, which later turned
into Pocono Mountain Optics and then sadly went out of business, I
believe. I have been interested in Astronomy for nearly as long as I can remember, and while my observing activities have lessened a bit over the last couple of years I still lug out the scope on a regular basis. The area of Germany we live in is rather rainy to say the least, so even when we do get a clear night every once in a while our view of the night sky is severely hampered by street lights from the surrounding neighbourhood, so even at the best of times the limiting mag never gets much better than 4-5m.
Venus transit 2004Some pictures of this fabulous celestial event can be found here. The MoonSome pictures of the Moon, also taken through a hand-held Nikon Coolpix looking into the eyepiece. SoFi1999One of the major astronomical events of the last decade in Germany was, of course, the total solar eclipse in August 1999. I had been looking forward to this event since my childhood days when I would not have to travel over half the planet in order to view the totality, but life is what happens if you have other plans. And so it happened that my wife Ulla was pregnant with our second kid "Hannah", only a couple of days from giving birth, so we could not travel the 500km (about 300miles) or so that would have been required to reach the totality zone down in southern Germany1.So, for us it was still only a partial eclipse, although at over 90% occultation, it was still very impressive especially as much of southern germany was clouded out. For the event I set up my C8 on the local primary school's backyard so the kids could take a look, too. The pictures can be found here. NEVER USE THE SOLAR PROJECTION METHOD with your C8!!! I cannot emphasize this enough, and my telescope got away undamaged because there were some clouds in the sky the let the inside cool down every once in a while, and of course the occulted sun. I put on the primary cover for a minute or two every other minute to allow additional cooldown, too. However, this is no way to observe a fully unobstructed sun, esp. in Summer! Links
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1: as it happened Hannah wasn't born until Sep. 1st, 1999, so I could have gone anyway, but hindsight is always 50/50 as the saying goes ;-)
Last update: 2011/06/09 13:17:31.237 GMT+1