Contains:  Solar system body or event
Pluto, Marc Whitsett
Pluto, Marc Whitsett

Pluto

Pluto, Marc Whitsett
Pluto, Marc Whitsett

Pluto

Equipment

Loading...

Acquisition details

Loading...

Description

I missed my opportunity 20 years ago to see Pluto with a 10 inch DOB so I decided despite it's faint magnitude [currently at 14.63] to try to image it from a Bortle 7 zone with a 120 mm Esprit f/7.

To demonstrate the tiny star-like dot as a solar system [moving] minor planetary object I took sequential images.

As you hover over the image the image is from 5/31/23. When you unhover you can see Pluto move ever so slightly near the left-center of the screen on 6/1/23.

Two difficulties to prep for this:

1. locating Pluto in the original images as it looks like a star; and
2. setting the pixel sizes in the images to be equal to place into Astrobin to hover.

Can you see Pluto??

Pluto is a dwarf planet that lies in the Kuiper Belt, an area full of icy bodies and other dwarf planets out past Neptune. Pluto is very small, only about half the width of the United States and its biggest moon Charon is about half the size of Pluto. [credit: NASA].

Currently Charon is magnitude 16.27 and is beyond my skill set at present.

Comments

Revisions

  • Final
    Pluto, Marc Whitsett
    Original
  • Pluto, Marc Whitsett
    B

Histogram

Pluto, Marc Whitsett