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Showing results for tags 'sunspots'.
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HR poster of the heart of the solar tornado and its ejections! (February 11, 2024)
andre cassese posted a gallery image in The Sun
From the album: Sun refractor 185 mm Halpha
185 mm Apo Askar refractor - Barlow 3x - Fabry Perot PST optimized and camera player one-
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From the album: Sun refractor 185 mm Halpha
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magnificent sunspots with ejections February 7, 2024
andre cassese posted a gallery image in The Sun
From the album: Sun refractor 185 mm Halpha
185 mm apo Askar halpha refractor with Fabry Perot PST modified and optimized prototype© Andre Cassese
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From the album: Sun refractor 185 mm Halpha
refractor 185 mm APO Askar Alpha February 2, 2024 - Camera player one -
At the heart of a big sunspot, a beautiful flow springing up like a resurgence.
andre cassese posted a gallery image in The Sun
From the album: refractor 150 mm halpha observatoire Rocbaron
150 mm Apo refractor and dual PST etalon Camera Apollo IMX 429© Andre cassese
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At the heart of a big sunspot, a beautiful flow springing up like a resurgence.
andre cassese posted a gallery image in The Sun
From the album: refractor 150 mm halpha observatoire Rocbaron
150 mm Apo refractor and dual PST etalon Camera Apollo IMX 429© Andre cassese
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From the album: refractor 150 mm halpha observatoire Rocbaron
This January 18, 2023 magnificent big spot with a double ejection that we see rising like a huge lasso, the luminous point in the spot and one of the ejection zones. 150 mm Halpha refractor in Coronado PST standard double stack and Apollo imx 429 camera© Andre cassese
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From the album: refractor 150 mm halpha observatoire Rocbaron
A magnificent double-stacked spectacle with a contrast and a striking relief. 13 Janvier 2022 Fabry Perot PST standard 150 mm apo F/D 8 double stack refractor and Apollo IMX 429 camera© Andre cassese
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This January 10, 2023, a very active sun with beautiful eruptive zones
andre cassese posted a gallery image in The Sun
From the album: refractor 150 mm halpha observatoire Rocbaron
This January 10, 2023, a very active sun with beautiful eruptive zones on an infernal boiling cauldron. 150 mm halpha F/D 8 telescope with double PST standard, 2 x barlow and Apollo IMX 429 camera.© Andre cassese
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From the album: refractor 150 mm halpha observatoire Rocbaron
solar flare January 10, 2023 150 mm refractor with double Fabry Perot PST standard modified and optimized .Camera Apollo IMX 429© Andre cassese
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From the album: Soleil Halpha lunette 120 mm et 80 mm
80 mm Halpha F/D 6.3 refractor with double PST standard and Apollo IMX 429 camera in focus.© Andre cassese
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refractor 150 mm h alpha double Fabry perot PST red sunspots December 6, 2022
andre cassese posted a gallery image in The Sun
From the album: refractor 150 mm halpha observatoire Rocbaron
Photo sunspot group made with a 150 mm F/D 8 apo halpha telescope and two optimized Fabry Perot PST standards and an IMX Apollo 429 camera at the Rocbaron observatory (France).© andre Cassese
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high resolutions solar ejections and sunspots very active areas November 11, 2022
andre cassese posted a gallery image in The Sun
From the album: refractor 150 mm halpha observatoire Rocbaron
Refractor 150 mm apo F/D 8 halpha with modified and optimized double fabry Perrot PST standards (DMK 41 camera and 2x barlow)© Andre cassese
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high resolutions solar ejections and sunspots very active areas November 11, 2022.
andre cassese posted a gallery image in The Sun
From the album: refractor 150 mm halpha observatoire Rocbaron
solar ejections and sunspots very active areas November 11, 2022. Refractor 150 mm apo halpha with modified and optimized double fabry Perrot PST standards (DMK 41 camera and 2x barlow)© Andre cassese
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From the album: refractor 150 mm halpha observatoire Rocbaron
150 mm Halpha bezel with modified and optimized double PST etalon + 2x barlow and DMK41 camera© Andre cassese
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It's a question, rather several questions that may seem strange currently by referring to your sites Space weather live and space weather.com we see that there are 7 sunspots, the earth is moving towards sunspots 3075 and 3076 (correct me if I'm wrong) But in this case if what I don't understand is how can sunspots 3068, 3072 and 3073 still send us solar winds? And also when will we be safe from them? I don't know how it works but I imagined the earth would be out of their line of sight
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Howdy All Y’all, There have been a number of interesting posts under other topics regarding Jupiter’s influence - and that of the barycenter of the solar system, particularly when Jupiter is in Sagittarius, pulling the barycenter toward the center of the galaxy. After a little research and following the conversations across various topics, I thought I would create topic just for this stuff… Here is an excerpt from a post a few,days ago which I found particularly interesting: (I can’t seem to quote a post from another topic in here) Archmonoth wrote: (excerpts from Jun 6) So here is my hot take on mass/gravity influence: Distances, Weights, and Speculation: Galactic Core= 4 million solar (Sun) masses. Distance from the Sun: 8,000 parsecs, each parsec is 3.26 light years, each light year is 9.46 trillion kilometers, and 8 parsecs is 246,716.8 trillion kilometers. This means the pull of the core is 4 million masses divided over 246,716.8 trillion kilometers, and via the Inverse Square law, would mean, whenever the distance doubles, the gravitational pull is decreased by a factor of 4. This continues for 40 steps (1/2 distance) until you reach a distance of 897,000 kilometers (edge of Sun’s radius is about 700k) with a pull of 0.000,000,000,000,005,05 solar masses. (1.01x10^16 kilograms) I’m not saying the gravitational pull is 1.01x10^16 kilograms but is the equivalent gravitational pull of that weight at a distance of 897,000 kilometers. Jupiter is 778,000,000 kilometers from the Sun and has a weight of about 1/1047th (.00095) solar mass. Jupiter’s pull on the Sun at 759,765 kilometers (near the Sun’s edge) is 0.000,000,000,898 solar masses. This is many magnitudes above the gravitational pull of the galactic core. (1.796×10^21 kilograms) So, Jupiter increases the pull towards the center of the galaxy when in alignment and inversely changes when on the other side of the Sun. This tells me there is an acceleration and deceleration of the Sun’s velocity as it travels around the barycenter at different times during Jupiter’s orbit. Earth’s mass/distance: Mass: 1/330,000 Solar masses. Distance from the Sun: 149,000,000 kilometers Which is to say the Earth’s pull on the Sun at 582,031 kilometers (Just inside the Sun’s Radius) is 0.000,000,000,453 solar masses. (9.06×10^20 kilograms) Earth has about half the influence as Jupiter has on the Sun. The ratio and the amount are not overly important, just trying to express that there is an additive pull towards the galactic core. Each planet in alignment would add more acceleration and equivalent conservation. So, because of the acceleration, there is a curve/turn occurs in the barycenter and momentum is conserved. My guess is that this conservation duration takes 1 solar cycle (11ish years) to complete, returning to the solar minimum after the sunspots approach the equator (butterfly pattern). This is correlative with Jupiter aligning with Sagittarius (galactic core) and Jupiter’s orbit being 11.82 years. JUPITER IN SAGITTARIUS DATES December 25, 1982 - January 19, 1984 December 9, 1994 - January 3, 1996 November 23, 2006 - December 18, 2007 November 8, 2018 - December 2, 2019 October 22, 2030 - November 15, 2031 Here are the start times of solar cycles: Solar cycle 22: 1986-09 Solar cycle 23: 1996-08 Solar cycle 24: 2008-12 Solar cycle 25: 2019-12 My assumption/guess is that sunspots, flares, and CMEs are partially the result of energy/momentum being conserved after Jupiter (and other planets) changes the Sun’s velocity. End excerpts… I also found an interesting diagram showing the location of the barycenter relative to the sun… Note, a more accurate depiction would be to have the barycenter stationary and the sun orbiting it. Also, this orbit around hi the barycenter is a chaotic non-linear dynamic system. It has no closed form solution, so everything going forward should be taken with a big hunk of salt, due to “sensitivity to initial conditions”. Also note, the path of the sun around the barycenter is confined to what we would call a “strange attractor”. Never repeating, but confined to a bound region. if y’all don’t mind - please repost your posts on this topic here - at least the interesting ones… Sorryit too, so long to get this started! WW
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