This is what I experienced when I was in Soe, a small town, capital of TTS district in Timor island, October 2014 for a duty. I already knew that in the night of 8 October 2014, after sunset, there will be a total moon eclipse, and I have purposely brought a handy, collapsible tripod for my Nikon D7000 to take the picture of the eclipse.
Since 5:15pm (already almost dark there) I have already set my equipment and, surrounded by local people, I took the moon eclipse in a few minutes interval. I also used movie mode of the camera. My first attempts were not very successful. With almost dark surrounding, and the small tripod, I could hardly make focus adjustment. Finally I got a good photo of the moon eclipse and I am satisfied with the results.
When I was back in hotel room and checked the Stellarium, I found a small dot at the upper side of the moon which, to my surprise is Uranus! I hurriedly checked my photo again and enlarged it. And yes! A small dot emerged, which I highly confident that it was Uranus.
Here are the photo series I took on the eclipse, and below are the enlarged photos of Uranus, with relative distance to the moon and a close-up photo. Not very clear, but as amateur astronomer I am glad that I could take one of the sun's planet, the sister planet of the Earth.
This is for the second time I accidentally identified a planet. Previously I was able to capture Neptune. Read my article about this in the following link: The first observation of moon and planet
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First attempt, at 5:31pm local time (WITA), blurred |
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Second attempt, at 5:38pm, getting better |
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This is the 19th attempt at 6:24pm, the earth's shadow already receded |
And these are the photos of Uranus (i) relative to the moon (on the upper right), and (ii) close-up photo:
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(i) Uranus, seen as blue dot on the upper right side |
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(ii) Planet Uranus in close-up, the blurred tail is because the camera is set on a fixed tripod with longer exposure |
Uranus is the seventh planet from the Sun. It has the third-large planetary radius and fourth-largest planetary mass in the Solar System. Uranus is similar in composition to Nepture, and both are of different chemical composition to the larger gas giant Jupiter and Saturn (Wikipedia).
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Uranus as taken by Voyager 2 in 1986 (Wikipedia) |