RE: Jupiter, Saturn and the Crescent Moon ?

 
From: "trevorwilliampitt@PROTECTED trevorwilliampitt@PROTECTED [Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List]" <aasmail@PROTECTED>
Subject: RE: Jupiter, Saturn and the Crescent Moon ?
Date: December 20th 2020

The five moons of Jupiter and three of Saturn.  Well that is what I saw tonight in the view as the pair descended into the murk. Just looking at Stellarium – SAO 188965 is added onto the end of the string of Jupiter’s moons, so a bit of an oddity.  Even at 250x I could see all features of the pair in the EP.

 

Hope others were able to take an image – obviously not worth it in the EP of the 20 inch.

 

Trevor

 

From: aasmail@PROTECTED <aasmail@PROTECTED>
Sent: 20 December 2020 12:57
To: Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List <aasmail@PROTECTED>
Subject: RE: [aaslist] Jupiter, Saturn and the Crescent Moon ?

 

 

From: o.brazell@PROTECTED

I think the weather has not been kind for imaging yet. We had hoped for tonight but I see from the satellite pictures we are likely to be on the south side of a bunch of cloud so will probably miss it. There have been images posted to the FB page and I can’t think of any reason why images should be stripped unless your mail software is doing it. Most images have been really poor phone camera photos that people get excited about even though they are dreadful.

 

Owen

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Mark Rowan mark_ituk@PROTECTED [Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List]
Sent: 20 December 2020 11:00
To: Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List
Subject: Re: [aaslist] Jupiter, Saturn and the Crescent Moon ?

 

 

From: mark_ituk@PROTECTED

oh i see, no photos. Just discussing!?

 

There have been many images though that I do not see???

 

Thanks again

 

 

Mark

 

 

 

On Sunday, 20 December 2020, 10:34:47 GMT, trevorwilliampitt@PROTECTED trevorwilliampitt@PROTECTED [Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List] <aasmail@PROTECTED> wrote:

 

 

 

From: trevorwilliampitt@PROTECTED

Hi Mark

 

These are all visual observations.

 

Trevor

 

From: aasmail@PROTECTED <aasmail@PROTECTED>
Sent: 20 December 2020 09:42
To: Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List <aasmail@PROTECTED>
Subject: Re: [aaslist] Jupiter, Saturn and the Crescent Moon ?

 

 

From: mark_ituk@PROTECTED

Hi Owen,

 

I can never see any images attached. Just a blanl window area. I'm on windows 10 laptop.

 

Any ideas?

 

Kind regards,

 

 

Mark

 

Mark Rowan

 

 

On Saturday, 19 December 2020, 18:34:47 GMT, Owen Brazell o.brazell@PROTECTED [Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List] <aasmail@PROTECTED> wrote:

 

 

 

From: o.brazell@PROTECTED

Did manage a brief look with the STF between showers. Like Julian I had to go on a short road trip to get a horizon. The seeing was awful and the wind was buffeting the telescope. You could just about tell they were Jupiter and Saturn 😊

 

Owen

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Julian Mole julianmole@PROTECTED [Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List]
Sent: 19 December 2020 17:05
To: Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List
Subject: Re: [aaslist] Jupiter, Saturn and the Crescent Moon ?

 

 

From: julianmole@PROTECTED

Hi Trevor,

 

Thank you for the kind words. 

 

It had looked likely for me to get another chance this afternoon/ evening but other than a quick sighting through the telescope sadly, after locating them in binoculars, the weather gods have not been so generous.

 

Currently sheltering  in my car hoping that the rain shower has  clear skies behind it!

 

 

Regards to all, 

 

Julian.

 

PS. Hope others are having better luck!  Showers pretty localised.

Sent from my iPhone

 

On 18 Dec 2020, at 11:04, Trevor Pitt trevorwilliampitt@PROTECTED [Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List] <aasmail@PROTECTED> wrote:



 

From: trevorwilliampitt@PROTECTED

Hi Julian

Just read your report. You really know how to enthuse the reader. I opened a bedroom window and had a look through my 15 x 70s last night.  I cannot see them from the observatory. I can, at a push, see Saturn's rings at that magnification and all four moons of Jupiter.  At 0.5 deg a good target in my 8 inch and a DSLR but too much cloud to set up another the EQ mount where I could take an image. 

As for the weather I am getting some new kit on Tuesday so bound to be cloudy thereafter,  on the night you will be looking for gaps.

Trevor

 

On Thu, 17 Dec 2020, 23:42 Chris Pickford chrspickford020@PROTECTED [Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List], <aasmail@PROTECTED> wrote:

 

From: chrspickford020@PROTECTED

Well, I got sight of the crescent Moon for a few secs, and a bit later a quick glimpse of Jupiter through the cloud, but no Saturn. Judging by the current forecasts (Trevor?) we will probably not see very much on the 21st at closest approach. This was two nights ago (300mm Nikon prime, Nikon DSLR) - the moons of Jupiter are just about visible in the original.

 

Chris

 

On Thu, Dec 17, 2020 at 4:46 PM Julian Mole julianmole@PROTECTED [Abingdon Astronomical Society Mailing List] <aasmail@PROTECTED> wrote:

 

From: julianmole@PROTECTED

All visible to those with a clear SW horizon at present*.

  • Your cloud cover may vary

Sent from my iPhone

 

                                                           

 

                                                           

Image removed by sender.

 

                                                           

 

                                                           

Image removed by sender.

 

 

                                                           

Image removed by sender.

 

                                                           

Image removed by sender.

 

                                                           

Image removed by sender.

 

                                                           

Image removed by sender.

 

 

                                                           

Image removed by sender.

  • This mailing list is a public mailing list - anyone may join or leave, at any time.
  • This mailing list requires approval from the List Owner, before subscriptions are finalized.

  • This mailing list is a group discussion list (unmoderated)
  • Start a new thread, email:

    aasmail@abingdonastro.org.uk

This mailing list is for email discussions of astronomical topics and the exchange of messages, notices of meetings and events organised by Abingdon Astronomical Society and others, and astronomical news between members of Abingdon Astronomical Society.

Privacy Policy:

AAS Privacy Policy, Issue 0.2, 27/10/2019

What personal data does Abingdon Astronomical Society (AAS) collect? The data we routinely collect includes members’ names, addresses, telephone numbers and email addresses. We also collect the names and some contact information for visitors to meetings that are prospective members. We collect these data directly from our members when they join the club or are prospective members attending their first meeting.

For some of our members we may have additional information such as committee memberships. For all members we maintain data on whether they have paid their AAS subscription.

How does AAS use these data? We use members’ data for the administration of your membership and communicating with members of concerning membership and our events.

Do we share your data with other organisations? AAS does not share your data with any other organisations.

If you register with aaslist email mailing list, the data you share with the list will be subject to this privacy policy. Membership of aaslist is optional and provides email discussions of astronomical topics and notices of meetings and events organised by AAS and others. When you apply to join the aaslist mailing list your email address is supplied to the administrators of the list, who are members of the AAS Committee.

How do we collect your data? Data are collected from members when they join AAS and complete our subscription form. Data are collected from visitors when they enter their first meeting. Email addresses are also received via applications to join the aaslist list; although, in many cases, members will already have supplied this on joining AAS.

How is your data stored? Completed subscription forms are stored securely in the private homes of the AAS Treasurer and/or Secretary.

Members’ data in electronic form are stored on the personal computers of the AAS Treasurer and Secretary, which have Internet security and anti-virus measures in place. No data are stored remotely except the data provided to the optional aaslist mailing list, which is stored on the UK servers of fasthosts.co.uk and subject to their GDPR policy.

Who takes responsibility for ensuring data protection compliance? We do not have a statutory requirement under the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulations) to have a Data Protection Officer. The Committee of AAS is the Data Controller. The person who is responsible for ensuring that AAS discharges its GDPR responsibilities is the AAS Secretary.

Fasthosts.co.uk is a Data Processor of email addresses of AAS members and others who choose to join the optional aaslist email mailing list.

Who has access to your data? Committee members of AAS have access to members’ data in order for them to carry out their legitimate tasks for the AAS.

What is the legal basis for collecting these data? AAS collects data from members and prospective members that are necessary for the purposes of its legitimate interests as a membership organisation.

How can people check what data AAS holds about them? If you would like to see the name and contact data which AAS holds, you should contact the AAS Secretary.

You can contact us with a ‘subject access request’ if you would like us to provide you with any other information we hold about you. If you are interested in any particular aspects, specifying them will help us to provide you with what you need quickly and efficiently. We are required to provide this to you within one month.

There is not usually a fee for this, though we can charge a reasonable fee based on the administrative cost of providing the information if a request is manifestly unfounded or excessive, or for requests for further copies of the same information.

Does AAS collect any sensitive personal data? The GDPR uses the term “special categories of personal data” to indicate sensitive personal data. AAS does not record any such data.

Can you ask AAS to remove, limit or correct the data held about you? You could maintain your club membership with your correct name but with limited contact details. AAS needs to have at least one method of contacting you. You could for example simply maintain an up-to-date email address.

Alternatively, providing you supply your correct name, you can attend AAS meetings as a returning visitors and pay the returning visitor meeting charges.

If you find some aspect of the data AAS holds about you to be incorrect, please contact the AAS Secretary in person or in writing and ask for the data to be amended.

How long does AAS keep your data for and for what purpose? AAS keeps members’ data after their membership subscription runs out in case they wish to rejoin. However, we will delete any contact data for former members at their request or, in any case, after four years of lapsed membership.

What happens if a member dies? Once we have been told of the death of a member or recently lapsed member, by a relative or estate executor, we will delete the contact data we hold for them.

Where can members see this Privacy Policy? The AAS Privacy Policy will be shown on the AAS website. Paper copies can be provided by the AAS Secretary.

Chris Holt, Secretary, Abingdon Astronomical Society Date: