- Turkey Total Solar Eclipse
© M. KnowlesTotal Solar Eclipse, taken using a Nikon D50 digital camera set to ISO 200, with a 70-300mm lens, and a x2 tele converter. This image was taken from Side, Antalya in Turkey during the total solar eclipse on 29th March 2006.First Contact: 12:37:33.
Second Contact: 13:54:24.
Midpoint: 13:55:59.
Third Contact: 13:57:34.
Fourth Contact: 15:12:47
- Turkey Eclipse 2006
© M. KnowlesTotal Solar Eclipse, taken using a Nikon D50 digital camera set to ISO 200, with a 70-300mm lens, and a x2 tele converter. This image was taken from Side, Antalya in Turkey during the total solar eclipse on 29th March 2006.First Contact: 12:37:33.
Second Contact: 13:54:24.
Midpoint: 13:55:59.
Third Contact: 13:57:34.
Fourth Contact: 15:12:47.
- Double Transit
© P. DingleyOver the last couple of years in the U.K. we have been graced by transits of both Mercury (2003) and Venus (2004), both of which were visible in their entirety from the Sherwood Observatory.The image below shows the difference in scale between the size of Mercury, seen transiting the Sun on the 7th May 2003, and Venus, seen transiting the Sun on the 8th June 2004. Two images, both taken within an hour of third contact, have been overlaid, and rescaled so that the Sun is the same size in each image.
- Sun with Sunspots
© P. DingleyThe Sun on 29th September 2002 at 15:00 GMT using a Canon G-2 digital camera and a Meade ETX-90-EC with a hand-made $15 Solar Filter.Two clusters of sun-spots are clearly visible in the image, one to the left, and one just off centre to the right, with a third cluster just visible near the extreme left side of the image.
- Van Slyke Focuser
© P. DingleyThe Venus transit photographs on this page were all taken using a 10 inch Meade LX-200 telescope, fitted with a Van-Slyke M3 focuser and a Canon D60 SLR digital camera, as pictured below.The telescope was fitted with a BC&F White Light solar filter via a BC&F Focusmaster.
- 10:31 GMT Fourth Contact
© P. DingleyThe Sun on 7th May 2003 using a Canon D60 digital camera and a Celestron C-150 6 inch Refractor with a hand-made $15 Solar Filter.The last few seconds of the 2003 Mercury Transit seems Mercury barely visible as it moves away from the face of the sun. Fourth contact is within a few seconds of this photo being taken.
- Mercury Transit 09:48 GMT
© P. DingleyThe Sun on 7th May 2003 using a Canon D60 digital camera and a 6 inch Celestron Refractor telescope fitted with a hand-made $15 Solar Filter.This image was taken at approximately 09:48 GMT from Sherwood Observatory, the home made Solar filter consisting of a sheet of Baader AstroSolar film, stretched across a tubular cardboard former was fitted to the front of the telescope optical tube.
- Mercury Transit 09:48 GMT
© P. DingleyThe Sun on 7th May 2003 using a Canon D60 digital camera and a 6 inch Celestron Refractor telescope fitted with a hand-made $15 Solar Filter.This image was taken at approximately 09:48 GMT from Sherwood Observatory, the home made Solar filter consisting of a sheet of Baader AstroSolar film, stretched across a tubular cardboard former was fitted to the front of the telescope optical tube.
- Mercury Transit 08:59
© P. DingleyThe Sun, taken on 7th May 2003 at 08:56 GMT from Sherwood Observatory using a Canon G-2 digital camera and a Meade ETX-90 Maksutov Cassegrain telescope fitted with a hand-made $15 Solar Filter.<p> The disc of Mercury is clearly visible in the upper portion of the image, while a fairly large sunspot can be seen in the lower middle. - Mercury Transit 08:56 GMT
© P. DingleyThe Sun, taken on 7th May 2003 at 08:56 GMT from Sherwood Observatory using a Canon G-2 digital camera and a Meade ETX-90 Maksutov Cassegrain telescope fitted with a hand-made $15 Solar Filter.<p> The disc of Mercury is clearly visible in the upper portion of the image, while a fairly large sunspot can be seen in the lower middle.