Lousy supermoon was hidden by superclouds where I was.
*grumble*
It wasn't really perceptibly bigger, but it certainly seemed a lot brighter. I've had my head in the books lately, so I hadn't heard about it. What prompted me to look it up was that it woke me up two nights ago. I thought someone was shining a flashlight in my eyes. last night was the official perigee, but it'll still be pretty super tonight.
We call that a stealth Supermoon.Lousy supermoon was hidden by superclouds where I was.
*grumble*
That's no moon! It's miles and miles of cloud cover.We call that a stealth Supermoon.
A more ridiculous way to show yourself this is to bend over and look at the moon upside-down through your legs. Not that I would do this.Well, it didn't look much bigger, certainly. I read something like 20%.
Fun fact (and not saying you don't know this, red 31, just rambling): Where the moon is in the sky doesn't really matter, though. Beware the famous Moon illusion. The moon above you is the same size as the one on the horizon, but because of the way the animal brain maps the sky, it looks much larger at the horizon. You can prove it to yourself by tracing it on a piece of paper at the horizon and then directly above you. Even when you know, you can't shake the illusion, either. It still looks way bigger at the horizon.
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/b...hy-does-the-moon-look-so-huge-on-the-horizon/
Well i was taking the illusion into account when I said moonrise/set. But it sounds like what we're talking about here is the fact that said illusion would be impossible to photograph because the illusion is due to human processing as opposed to actual physical refraction.Well, it didn't look much bigger, certainly. I read something like 20%.
Fun fact (and not saying you don't know this, red 31, just rambling): Where the moon is in the sky doesn't really matter, though. Beware the famous Moon illusion. The moon above you is the same size as the one on the horizon, but because of the way the animal brain maps the sky, it looks much larger at the horizon. You can prove it to yourself by tracing it on a piece of paper at the horizon and then directly above you. Even when you know, you can't shake the illusion, either. It still looks way bigger at the horizon.
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/b...hy-does-the-moon-look-so-huge-on-the-horizon/
Easiest way is to find a coupler adapter for your particular camera and telescope, if both items have screw threads. If not, you may have to look deeper. I will recommend starting at these places.Thanks.
Does anyone have a good way to take these photos? I literally just held the camera lens up to the eyepiece.