Astro ImageBarlowPowermate

Tele Vue’s 2021 Solar Gallery

Active Region 12866 (left) and 12868 (right) by flickr user Carlo Casoli. All rights reserved. Used by permission. This hydrogen-alpha solar chromosphere image was taken at 2021 09 07, 10h 32’00” CET. Imaged with filtered Tecnosky 80/480 APO (DayStar Quark Chromosphere Model H-Alpha Filter with 4.2X telecentric Barlow) using Tele Vue 2x Barlow (effective focal length = 4000 mm) with ZWO Electronic Filter Wheel and ZWO ASI174MM camera. All carried on Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier. Software: FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, and Photoshop. From Casalecchio di Reno, Italy.

It’s time to revisit the Sun! This nearby yellow-dwarf star is entering middle-age and is showing some spots! Here we have a  selection of solar images, taken from around the world, made with Tele Vue Barlows and Powermate image amplifiers.

3 Big Flares in Active Region 12860 (movie) by flickr user Carlo Casoli. All rights reserved. Used by permission. “I was very lucky to film a series of flares lasting about 2 minutes. The energy released in this very short time is incredible; the largest of the flares has an extension equal to at least 3-4 times the Earth’s diameter”. For this Hydrogen-alpha animation, 10-second exposures were taken every 30 seconds for a total of 1 hour from 2021 08 29 11h 30′ – 12h 30′ CET. Imaged with filtered Tecnosky 80/480 APO (DayStar Quark Chromosphere Model H-Alpha Filter) using Tele Vue 2x Barlow (effective focal length = 4000 mm) with ZWO Electronic Filter Wheel and ZWO ASI174MM camera. All carried on Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier. Software: FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, ImPPG, and Photoshop. From Casalecchio di Reno, Italy.

We are currently almost 2-years into the 11-year Solar Cycle Nº 25. This Solar Cycle Progression diagram shows the observed Sunspot Number and forecast (red line). 

Sunspot Number chart. Our current Sunspot Cycle 25 started in December 2019 when Cycle 24 was at a minimum. (Space Weather Prediction Center, NOAA.)

Sunspot numbers vary over longer periods than the 11-year cycle. One report in Nature magazine, based on tree ring data, says that solar maximums in modern times haven’t been so high in 8,000 years! We are living at an instant when the Sun is more active than in the past. 

Chromosphere and Prominence by flickr user Carlo Casoli. All rights reserved. Used by permission. This hydrogen-alpha solar chromosphere image was taken at 2021 08 16 11h 31′ 21 sec CET. Imaged with filtered Tecnosky 80/480 APO (DayStar Quark Chromosphere Model H-Alpha Filter) using Tele Vue 2x Barlow (effective focal length = 4000 mm) with ZWO Electronic Filter Wheel and ZWO ASI174MM camera. All carried on Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier. Software: FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, and Photoshop. From Casalecchio di Reno, Italy.

Meet the Tele Vue Line of Barlows
Tele Vue Barlows come in 1¼” (3x & 2x) and 2″ BIG size (2x).

Several of the images here were made with our Barlows. Properly designed Barlows do wonderful things: They amplify power, slow the telescope’s f/# (improving eyepiece sharpness), and give designers the opportunity to compensate for eyepiece aberrations.

Tele Vue Barlows use multi-coated high index glasses for optimum aberration correction, exceptional contrast with virtually no light loss. Observed performance is aberration-free, even when tested with f/4 scopes. They even improve our competitor’s eyepieces and telescopes!

For more info see the Tele Vue Barlow page (mobile site).

 

Solar Filter Safety
Solar imaging is done with filters. Often a filter on the front opening of the scope is used to reject most of the energy of the Sun. They may or may not require a second filter or filtering device on the focuser.  One must be careful to make sure the correct filter is used for the intent: front filters designed for imaging will not reject enough energy for safe visual observations.  Due to the wide variety of front aperture diameters among telescopes,  amateurs often make their own filter from solar film. If you go this route, be sure to label the filter for visual or imaging and if it needs another filter on the focuser.

Sol 2021-05-26 – AR 12824 y 12826 by flickr user Fran Cisco. All rights reserved. Used by permission. Filtered EvoStar 120ED scope with Tele Vue 2.5x Powermate amplifier and ZWO ASI178MM camera. Solar filtering with Baader Solar Continuum Filter 1¼”, Baader Neutral Density Filter 1¼”, Baader 540nm double-stacked Solar Continuum Filter 1¼”, and Baader 2″ Cool-Ceramic Safety Herschel Prism. All carried on iOptron iOptron CEM40 mount. Software: FireCapture, PIPP, AutoStakkert, Registax, and Photoshop. From 2 videos of 1 minute each (35 fps, stacked best 25% of 2150 x 2) taken 2021-05-26, 13:38 UT from Bembibre Spain.

Filter Types
White light filters cut down the light from the Sun across the spectrum. These allow observations of the solar photosphere. The photosphere is home to granulation (rising and sinking convective cells); faculae (bright patches of concentrated magnetic energy); and sunspot groups. 

Hydrogen-alpha filters allow views of the Sun in a narrow wavelength of light given off by hydrogen atoms. This allows views of the chromosphere. Much of the action in the chromosphere is above the photosphere. In addition to sunspots, here you see prominences, spicules, fibrils, flares, and more.

Sol 2021-05-19 – AR 12824 by flickr user Fran Cisco. All rights reserved. Used by permission. Filtered EvoStar 120ED scope with Tele Vue 2.5x Powermate amplifier and ZWO ASI178MM camera. Solar filtering with Baader Solar Continuum Filter 1¼”, Baader Neutral Density Filter 1¼”, Baader 540nm double-stacked Solar Continuum Filter 1¼”, and Baader 2″ Cool-Ceramic Safety Herschel Prism. All carried on iOptron iOptron CEM40 mount. Software: FireCapture, AutoStakkert, Registax and Photoshop. From 2 videos of 1 minute each (42 fps, stacked best 26% of 2523 x 2 frames) taken 2021-05-19, 14:00 UT from Bembibre Spain.

Features of the Sun
Sunspots
are cooler regions on the Sun’s surface. The spots would appear to be as bright as the full Moon if seen by themselves. But against the Sun they appear dark. Sunspots reveal the presence of magnetic disturbances deeper in the Sun. Because activity like solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CME) are associated with these magnetic regions, they are labeled active regions

Plages appear as white regions around sunspots that are visible in hydrogen-alpha light. They are very apparent in the lead-off image of this blog.

Sol 2021-09-03 – AR 12863 by flickr user Fran Cisco. All rights reserved. Used by permission. Filtered EvoStar 120ED scope with Tele Vue 2.5x Powermate amplifier and ZWO ASI178MM camera. Solar filtering with Baader Solar Continuum Filter 1¼”, Baader Neutral Density Filter 1¼”, Baader 540nm double-stacked Solar Continuum Filter 1¼”, and Baader 2″ Cool-Ceramic Safety Herschel Prism. All carried on iOptron AZ Mount Pro mount. Software: FireCapture, AutoStakkert, Registax and Photoshop. From 3 min video (60 fps, stacked best 12% of 10830 frames) taken 2021-09-03, 14:10 UT from Bembibre Spain.

The above image is teaming with Granules — irregular grains on the Sun’s disk caused by temperature variations. Granules deliver energy from deeper in the Sun to the surface through a convection process. Each granule survives about 5-minutes and delivers as much energy in that time as Hoover Dam does in a millennium.

Faculae are bright areas visible on the limb of the Sun between solar granules. Sunspots always have faculae but faculae may exist alone. In white light, they are usually most easily seen near the limb, or edge, of the solar disk due to limb darkening.

Spicules are furry-looking features visible along the edge of the solar disk. Made of super-heated plasma, they’re jets of hot gas that can reach 10,000 km high.

Fibrils are spicules against the solar disk on the solar disc.

Meet the Tele Vue Line of Powermate Amplifiers
Powermates come in 1¼” (2.5x & 5x) and 2″ (2x, & 4x).

Tele Vue’s Powermate line has some distinct advantages over simpler Barlows for visual and imaging. Powermate™ photo / visual amplifiers increase the focal length of your scope with reduced aberrations, greater magnification potential, and compact size compared to typical Barlow lenses. Also, Powermates™ can be stacked with no adverse impact. Powermates are available in different barrel sizes and powers to meet your mission needs: 1¼” (2.5x & 5x) and 2″ (2x, & 4x) formats.

Powermate T-Ring Adapters (left-to-right): PTR-2200 for 2x, PTR-4201 for 4x, and PTR-1250 for 2.5x & 5x Powermates.

Imaging with Powermates is easy: the visual tops all unscrew to accept a specific Tele Vue Powermate T-Ring Adapter for use with standard camera T-rings.

Read more on our Powermate page (mobile site).

Solar prominence is caused by plasma flow along a magnetic loop between sunspots on the limb of the Sun. Reaching thousands of kilometers above the apparent solar surface, they can last months.

Filaments are prominences away from the solar limb. They appear as dark ribbons against the face of the Sun. 

Active Region 2859 (colorized) by flickr user Mauri Rosenthal. All rights reserved. Used by permission. “While the dark ejected material (looks like a cobra in my image) is cooler and denser than the surroundings, on an absolute basis it’s very hot and very bright indeed.” Solar filtered 3.5″ Questar (Dielectric Baader Energy Rejection Filter [D-ERF]and DayStar Combo Quark Chromosphere Model H-Alpha Filter) with Tele Vue 2.5x Powermate amplifier for a total effective focal length of about 3,000 -3,500mm. The camera used is a QHY 5III 174M mono camera. Software used includes FireCapture, AS!3, ImPPG, PIPP, GIMP, and ACDSee. Imaged from New York City area.

Solar flares are explosions that release a large amount of energy. It is caused by a loop of the Sun’s magnetic field that snaps. They can last for hours and if strong enough can form a coronal mass ejection (CME). CMEs are plasma bursts that move away from the Sun along magnetic field lines. CMEs arriving at Earth can cause auroral displays and impact radio communications and the power grid.

Active Region 2845 (inverted image) by flickr user Mauri Rosenthal. All rights reserved. Used by permission. Solar filtered 3.5″ Questar (Dielectric Baader Energy Rejection Filter [D-ERF]and DayStar Combo Quark Chromosphere Model H-Alpha Filter) with Tele Vue 2.5x Powermate amplifier for a total effective focal length of about 3,000 -3,500mm. The camera used is a QHY 5III 174M mono camera. Software used includes FireCapture, AS!3, FFmpeg, and ACDSee. Imaged from New York City area.
Tele Vue Eyepieces for Solar Viewing
The DayStar Quark (when used with an energy rejection filter) is a great Hydrogen-alpha filter for imaging the chromosphere. You’ll note that many of the images on this blog were created with the Quark. So how is it for viewing the chromosphere? That depends on the eyepiece.
 
If you read the DayStar manual, you’ll read the following: 
Daystar Recommends Tele Vue Plössl series eyepieces of 25mm, 32mm, and 40mm.
They explain why:
It should be noted that repeatedly in side-by side tests, we found Tele Vue brand Plössl eyepieces to offer the highest contrast, most even view and widest exit pupil. In Solar Observing, contrast is achieved by control of scattering. Tele Vue Plössls stand out in superior design. Furthermore, the adjustable eye cup offers additional contrast by allowing the user to dark adapt during sunny days.

 
Active Region 2824 by flickr user Mauri Rosenthal. All rights reserved. Used by permission. “H-alpha imaging reveals the roiling activity in the sun’s chromosphere layer”. Solar filtered 3.5″ Questar (Dielectric Baader Energy Rejection Filter [D-ERF]and DayStar Combo Quark Chromosphere Model H-Alpha Filter) with Tele Vue 2.5x Powermate amplifier for a total effective focal length of about 3,000 -3,500mm. The camera used is a QHY 5III 174M mono camera. Software used includes FireCapture, PIPP, AS!3, FFmpeg, GIMP, and ACDSee. Imaged from New York City area.
Solar viewing and observing, with the right filter, is a readily accessible astronomical hobby that can be done most anywhere in the world. In fact, several images in this bog were taken by Mauri Rosenthal in the area just outside New York City — not exactly an astronomy mecca. Mauri conducts online imaging courses for the Amateur Astronomers Association (AAA) of New York. They accept members from around the world. There will be a planetary / solar imaging course starting on Sept. 30th. You can attend this space-limited course by joining AAA and paying the course fee. Visit: https://aaa.org/event/urban-astrophotography-101/2021-09-30/.
 
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