Happy Sunday everyone! I've been spending this morning trying to decide whether I should keep my account in this instance or migrate back to mastodon.social. No matter what I decide, it should be transparent to anyone (based on what I've read). Just in case, the recipient account will be

mastodon.online/web/@astromeca

and this one will be just redirecting to the new one.

A las madres se les demuestra que las quieres con cada día, cada momento no con una mierda capitalista. Gracias hijos.🤗🤗

NGC 2768

Magnitude 9.9 lenticular galaxy located 65 million light-years away in the constellation Ursa Major. It’s an example of a Seyfert galaxy, an object with a supermassive black hole at its center.

#astrophotography #astronomy #space #unistellar #citizenscience #ngc2768 #galaxy #ursamajor

For any new users wanting the look and feel of the official app but with the tl, check out app. It looks clean and very nice to use.

NGC 3077

Magnitude 10.6 small disrupted elliptical galaxy located 12.8 million light-years away in the constellation Ursa Major. It was discovered by William Herschel in 1801.

#astrophotography #astronomy #space #unistellar #citizenscience #ngc3077 #galaxy #ursamajor

Happy weekend to everyone! I'm planning to go for a drive 🚗 and find someplace interesting to eat with family, then maybe some tonight if the weather allows (it's new moon 🌑 these days, so we are in peak activity mode). If it gets clouded, then possibly play :blobpirate: or :blobcatgun: .

What are your plans for the weekend ❓

This is a good explainer on how post visibility works on . It may look a bit complex due to the decentralized nature of Mastodon, but in practice, it's a lot simpler than it looks for the vast majority of people.

Cas [back-up]  
A few years ago I made this flow chart of which Mastodon posts end up in which timelines! So, you can see how each instance will have a different l...

:ablobeyes:

New Scientist  
Methane emissions from cows spotted from space for the first time https://www.newscientist.com/article/2318299-methane-emissions-from-cows-spotted-...

whelp, had to suspend imaging activities for the rest of the night due to cloudy skies...

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Currently remotely from my and while the camera is snapping away! It going to be a long night as long as the clouds don’t crash the party.

Within a , the is the darker area that surrounds the , even darker still. Darker in this case means cooler, but not cooler as in cold, but as in "ultra horribly hot" instead of "super mega ultra horribly hot". Pores are like smaller sunspots without a penumbra, light bridges sometimes split the umbra into several sections, and granules are convective cells of plasma on the sun's surface. The look small, but given that the sun's diameter is ~109 times Earth's, all of these sunspots are much larger than Earth!

Ok, that was it! Thanks for reading if you actually made it this far! Bye!

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Well, this thread got longer than I thought! I'm finishing lol! Back to white light imaging, even if not as visually impressive as Ha observing, there's a lot to see in the 🌞 ! Sunspots are very intricate and interesting phenomena, and many features can be observed within them:

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The drawback of hydrogen alpha observing for us amateurs is that the cost of manufacturing the filtering equipment is somewhat high, due to the exacting tolerances and safety precautions needed to handle all that energy concentrated into a telescope. Watching the sun through a telescope without the proper filtering can result in instant and permanent blindness :blobsobglasses: !

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When we observe the sun under Ha filtering, we are able to see the sun's and its . The chromosphere is a gaseous layer, mainly hydrogen, which lays above the . The high temperatures at that layer causes the hydrogen to glow red at that wavelength, hence the Ha name. Also, you could be able to see a , which is an eruption-like event of solar material thrown out into space!

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The other technique commonly available for amateur is hydrogen alpha filtering, which involves using a more specialized equipment to filter out ALL wavelengths of light coming from the sun except a very narrow sliver of wavelength called the hydrogen alpha line (see Balmer lines if you want to know more about that). In the visible spectrum, the hydrogen alpha line (Ha for short) is within the deep red part of the spectrum. This filtering allows us to observe some jaw-dropping activity on the sun at almost all times!

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White light observing is the more accessible technique, given that within the cost range of astronomy equipment, it is relatively inexpensive. It's also very exciting to watch almost daily, since the photosphere changes in appearance all the time! Only "boring time" would be during the solar minimum, when there's not a lot going on *using WL filtering*.

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At the amateur level, there are two main types of solar observation techniques, which depend on the filtering of the light coming from the sun: continuum white light ("white light" to keep it simple) and hydrogen alpha. White light observing consists on using a special filter to block almost all the light coming from the sun to make it safe for viewing, just like the material used for eclipse glasses. That filtering technique lets you see the sun's , which is the visible outer layer of the sun. In there, you'll see what are commonly called (usually appearing in what astronomers call "Active Regions").

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Hello friends!

As an amateur :blobcatnerd: , I have had focused for the last couple of months in imaging. The sun follows a cyclical pattern of activity every 11 years approximately, called a solar cycle. This cycle alternates between lulls in activity (the "solar minimum") and lots of it (the "solar maximum"). We are just starting a new solar cycle, so activity is just starting to ramp up. In other words, now is a good time to start observing our 🌞 star! (WITH THE PROPER FILTERING EQUIPMENT OF COURSE 😎 ).

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