Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
- Flyhigh7
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Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
Telescope: Celestron Evolution 9.25 with Celestron Motor Focus
Evolution WiFi Mount Head/ built in 10 Hr Battery and CPC Tripod
Binoculars: Celestron SkyMaster Giant 15x70 / Heavy Duty Tripod
Orion 2x54 Ultra Wide Field
Camera: Canon Digital Rebel XT EOS 350D
Diagonal: Baader 2" BBHS Sitall Mirror
EPs: Baader Hyperion Aspheric 36mm 1.25"/2", Pentax XW 20mm, Pentax XW 7mm,
Tele Vue Delite 11mm, Plossl 40mm & 13mm
Barlow Lens: Tele Vue 2.5x - 1.25" Powermate
Filters: Baader Planetarium Neodymium Moon & Skyglow Filter
- Thefatkitty
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
I took a shot of the Moon and Venus with my
Hope this helps and all the best,
"The Hankmeister" Celestron 8SE, orange tube Vixen made C80, CG4, AZ-EQ5 and SolarQuest mounts.
Too much Towa glass/mirrors.
Solar:
H/A - PST stage 2 mod with a Baader 90mm ERF on a Celestron XLT 102 (thanks Mike!)
Ca-K - W/O 61mm, Antares 1.6 barlow, Baader 3.8 OD and Ca-K filters with a ZWO ASI174mm.
W/L - C80-HD with Baader 5.0 & 3.8 Solar film, Solar Continuum 7.5nm and UV/IR filters with a Canon EOS 550D.
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- OzEclipse
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
So Venus, Jupiter, Mars, Saturn, Mercury can all be observed during the day. As you say, take care with the inner planets especially now that Mercury is only at 5o elongation. Observed means discern a brightish disc against the background sky. You won't see much detail because the darker areas that contrast the bright to provide this detail will be washed out by the blue sky.
Joe
Amateur astronomer since 1978...................Web site : http://joe-cali.com/
Scopes: ATM 18" Dob, Vixen VC200L, ATM 6"f7, Stellarvue 102ED, Saxon ED80, WO M70 ED, Orion 102 Maksutov, ST80.
Mounts: Takahashi EM-200, iOptron iEQ45, Push dobsonian with Nexus DSC, three homemade EQ's.
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
Twilight on the other hand is great time to resolve planetary details. My best ever views of Jupiter and Venus were an hour or so before sunset.
Mounts: SW: SkyTee2, AzGTi; iOptron: AZMP; ES: Twilight I; Bresser: EXOS2; UA: MicroStar.
Binos: APM: 100-90 APO; Canon: IS 15x50; Orion: Binoviewer, LG II 15x70, WV 10x50, Nikon: AE 16x50, 10x50, 8x40.
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Diagonals: Baader: BBHS mirror, Zeiss Spec T2 prism, Clicklock dielectric; TeleVue: Evebrite dielectric; AltairAstro: 2" prism.
Filters: Lumicon: DeepSky, UHC, OIII, H-beta; Baader: Moon & SkyGlow, Contrast Booster, UHC-S, 6-color set; Astronomik: UHC.
Solar: HA: Lunt 50mm single stack, W/L: Meade Herschel wedge.
Observing: DSOs: 3122 (Completed: Messier, Herschel 1, 2, 3. In progress: H2,500: 2196, S110: 77). Doubles: 2461, Comets: 34, Asteroids: 261
- Lady Fraktor
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
Take a look at the lunar surface as well
The only culture I have is from yogurt
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
One of the projects I just started focuses on the moon. Some features will need to be seen during the day.
Telescopes: 50mm refractor, ED80 triplet, 90mm makcass, 10" dob, 8"SCT, 11"SCT
Mounts: Celestron CGX, Orion Sirius + several camera tripods
Cameras: Canon 6D, Canon 80D, ZWO-ASI120MC
Binoculars: 10x50, 12x60, 15x70, 25-125x80
Observatory: SkyShed POD XL3 + 8x12 warm room
AL Projects Completed: Lunar #645, Outreach #0280, Universe Sampler #93-T, Binocular Messier #871, Messier #2521, Messier Honorary #2521, Constellation Hunter Northern Skies #112, Planetary Transit Venus #1, Galileo #26, Outreach Stellar 0280, Meteor Regular #157, Solar System Telescopic #209-I, Observer Award #1
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- John Baars Online
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
GrabnGo on Alt/AZ : *SW Startravel 102 F/5 refractor( widefield, Sun, push-to), *OMC140 Maksutov F/14.3 ( planets).
Most used Eyepieces: *Panoptic 24, *Morpheus 14, *Leica ASPH zoom, *Zeiss barlow, *Pentax XO5.
Commonly used bino's : *Jena 10X50 , * Canon 10X30 IS, *Swarovski Habicht 7X42, * Celestron 15X70, *Kasai 2.3X40
Rijswijk Public Observatory: * Astro-Physics Starfire 130 f/8, * 6 inch Newton, * C9.25, * Meade 14 inch LX600 ACF, *Lunt.
Amateur astronomer since 1970.
- Richard
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
Refractors None
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- DeanD
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
I have observed all 5 brightest planets during the daytime with a TV76, Tak 102, and 8"
If you want to chase stars in the daytime, start off with really bright ones like Sirius or Rigel to get used to training your eyes. It can be fun trying to split bright doubles, like Alpha Centauri for us southerners. In fact the first time I saw the "pup" next to Sirius was in twilight: easier because Sirius itself wasn't so glare-y (is that a word?).
The fainter planets are easier from clear, dust-free skies like in outback South Australia. A lot harder near polluted cities.
I generally use my old iOptron Mini Tower Pro, and I set it up by lining up on the Moon (when visible), or more usually the Sun. For the Sun I cover the objective and minimise the shadow initially, then use a Baader solar filter to centre it. The software always tells me off when I do this, but I ignore it.
Traps for young players: always cover the objective of your finder as well!!!
I have also spotted Venus, Jupiter, and even Mars (near opposition) and Mercury naked eye in the daytime. This is easiest when they are favourably located near the Moon, and it helps if you stand in the shade of a building and use polarised sunglasses (mine are prescription). Again, all that blue stuff up there makes it difficult, but that is part of the fun. (Tip: once you have found the planet, don't look away or it will take ages to find it again! Alternatively, line up the planet wrt a foreground object like a post or a tree to make it easier to spot, and use binos to make sure you are looking in the right area).
Once I had a class of Grade 1 children (6-7yo) looking (naked eye) at the Moon in the daytime, when they started asking about the star they could see near the Moon (ie: Venus)... Their teacher was upset, because she couldn't see it!
Have fun!
Dean
Binos: Steiner Wildlife XP 10x26, Swarovski 8x30 Habicht, Zeiss SFL 8x40, Vanguard Endeavour 10.5x45, Fuji FMTR-SX 10x50, Tak 22x60, Orion Resolux 15x70
Eyepieces: way too many (is that possible?), but I do like my TV 32mm plossl, 13mm Nagler T6, 27mm Panoptic and 3-6mm Nagler zoom, plus Fujiyama 18mm and 25mm orthos and Tak 7.5mm LE
- Flyhigh7
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
As far as trying to align during the day. I won't try that as I'll see if I can find them based on where Stellarium shows them for that day and time.
I may check out the moon tonight if the sky stays clear as i have not really checked it out at high mag with this 9.25 scope yet.
Thanks again for the good news.
Telescope: Celestron Evolution 9.25 with Celestron Motor Focus
Evolution WiFi Mount Head/ built in 10 Hr Battery and CPC Tripod
Binoculars: Celestron SkyMaster Giant 15x70 / Heavy Duty Tripod
Orion 2x54 Ultra Wide Field
Camera: Canon Digital Rebel XT EOS 350D
Diagonal: Baader 2" BBHS Sitall Mirror
EPs: Baader Hyperion Aspheric 36mm 1.25"/2", Pentax XW 20mm, Pentax XW 7mm,
Tele Vue Delite 11mm, Plossl 40mm & 13mm
Barlow Lens: Tele Vue 2.5x - 1.25" Powermate
Filters: Baader Planetarium Neodymium Moon & Skyglow Filter
- Flyhigh7
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
This was my first viewing with this scope in the daytime and it was a lot of fun to change EPs and add filters when you can see exactly what you're doing.
Telescope: Celestron Evolution 9.25 with Celestron Motor Focus
Evolution WiFi Mount Head/ built in 10 Hr Battery and CPC Tripod
Binoculars: Celestron SkyMaster Giant 15x70 / Heavy Duty Tripod
Orion 2x54 Ultra Wide Field
Camera: Canon Digital Rebel XT EOS 350D
Diagonal: Baader 2" BBHS Sitall Mirror
EPs: Baader Hyperion Aspheric 36mm 1.25"/2", Pentax XW 20mm, Pentax XW 7mm,
Tele Vue Delite 11mm, Plossl 40mm & 13mm
Barlow Lens: Tele Vue 2.5x - 1.25" Powermate
Filters: Baader Planetarium Neodymium Moon & Skyglow Filter
- jrkirkham
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
I always like experimenting and trying new things.Flyhigh7 wrote: ↑Fri Apr 19, 2024 1:27 am The moon looked great in all my EPs all the way up to 336x (7mm EP) but at 336x the wind was too much to study detail so I didn't bother to try out the 2.5X Barlow and take the magnification any higher. I did try a few filters and that's when the clouds came in and told me to put the telescope away. Moon looked great at 214x showing the big depth of several craters at the terminator.
This was my first viewing with this scope in the daytime and it was a lot of fun to change EPs and add filters when you can see exactly what you're doing.
Telescopes: 50mm refractor, ED80 triplet, 90mm makcass, 10" dob, 8"SCT, 11"SCT
Mounts: Celestron CGX, Orion Sirius + several camera tripods
Cameras: Canon 6D, Canon 80D, ZWO-ASI120MC
Binoculars: 10x50, 12x60, 15x70, 25-125x80
Observatory: SkyShed POD XL3 + 8x12 warm room
AL Projects Completed: Lunar #645, Outreach #0280, Universe Sampler #93-T, Binocular Messier #871, Messier #2521, Messier Honorary #2521, Constellation Hunter Northern Skies #112, Planetary Transit Venus #1, Galileo #26, Outreach Stellar 0280, Meteor Regular #157, Solar System Telescopic #209-I, Observer Award #1
AL Projects Currently in Process: Double Stars, Comet, Lunar Evolution
- Baurice
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
- pakarinen
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
Man... That's some icky-tasting stuff!
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- DeanD
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Re: Observe Planets on a sunny day with a Telescope?
You have to train your eye to find the fainter (and smaller) planets amid all that blue, but it is definitely do-able, even with a 3" scope.
The sky was a clear and a lovely blue: very little human-produced haze so far away from any cities.
Have a good one folks,
Dean
Binos: Steiner Wildlife XP 10x26, Swarovski 8x30 Habicht, Zeiss SFL 8x40, Vanguard Endeavour 10.5x45, Fuji FMTR-SX 10x50, Tak 22x60, Orion Resolux 15x70
Eyepieces: way too many (is that possible?), but I do like my TV 32mm plossl, 13mm Nagler T6, 27mm Panoptic and 3-6mm Nagler zoom, plus Fujiyama 18mm and 25mm orthos and Tak 7.5mm LE
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