火星 ALPO-Japan Latest

Mars Image 2010/04/26(UT)
Fattinnanzi Cristian,Richard Hill,Sadegh ghomizadeh,Damian Peach,Paul G. Abel
C.Fattinnanzi,R.Hill,Sadegh.GH,D.Peach,P.Abel
Fattinnanzi Cristian (360mm Newtonian) |
[Fattinnanzi Cristian : Montecassiano ITALY]

[R.Hill:Arizona:USA]
Sadegh ghomizadeh (235mm SC) |
seeing was average & Atmosphere was good.
[Sadegh ghomizadeh: Tehran IRAN ]
Damian Peach (350mm Celestron SCT) |

[Damian Peach: Loudwater,Buckinghamshire,United Kingdom]
Paul G. Abel(203mm reflector) |
Brief view of the Red Planet. Mars now presents a tiny disk, only 7.5" wide. None the less, at 312x the prominent features are detectable. The seeing was only average, but there a few good steady moments and I was able to make a reasonable drawing.
Syrtis Major was by far the easiest feature to see, and still noticeable darker in places. IN the south, Hellas was once again a whitish colour and rather bright. The Proc. limb seemed to be fairly bright too and I suspected a bright cloud in the Arabia/Moab region.
Boreosyrtis is still detectable, although nowhere near as detailed as before.
The NPC is now very small.

[Paul G. Abel:Leicester:United Kingdom]