Brent's Moon Sketches
Unless otherwise noted, all of my Moon and
Jupiter
sketches are displayed with South at the
top and East to the left. Since they were drawn with a mirror star
diagonal, the original sketches were reversed left for right. After scanning
them, I mirror-imaged each drawing with photo-editing software. Click on any
of these thumbnails to see a larger JPEG image (some are as large as a
quarter-megabyte).
Sketches Drawn using an 8" SCT
One night after a full-moon observation of Mare Humboldtianum,
I returned to the area to see what the advancing terminator had wrought. The libration
was slightly different, too. The combination of libration and terminator
had swallowed up the Mare but the lighting was really favorable for a look
at the basin (unnamed, as far as I know) between Endymion
and the western edge of the Mare. The top of this drawing isn't directly south.
It's more like southwest.
[Observing Notes]
[Sketch Notes]
I also scanned in the
original sketch
that I executed at the eyepiece in order to capture enough detail to work
from in making the final, shaded sketch.
This was the first evening of serious lunar observing I did with my new SCT.
The clouds were constant and thick enough that if I wasn't trying out a new
telescope, I probably wouldn't have bothered. That would have been my loss.
It was one of those nights where hazy, humid, cloudy weather was associated
with amazingly steady seeing. At one point, I put my shortest eyepiece and
my barlow lens in the telescope and wished I could have increased magnification
even more. At the highest magnification I could achieve (580x) the 3-D effect
looking down into one of the craters was breathtaking.
Note that in this drawing the large empty area below Schiller and
on the right-hand (Western) half of the sketch was is shown empty and featureless.
There actually were features visible there, the just didn't make it into
my sketch.
[Observing Notes]
[Sketch Notes]
Sketches Drawn using a 60mm Refractor
Back in 1998, I made a few sketches using a little 60mm refractor on a shaky tripod
and alt-az mount. Here are some of them along with links to the notes I included with
them on the
original version
of this web page.
Grimaldi, Hevelius and Cavelerius
around 8:40PM EDT on the evening of October 3, 1998. Click on the thumbnail image to
see a larger version along with my original sketch notes. The top of this drawing is
not quite true south.
At around 9:15PM EDT on October 2, 1998 with the terminator at approximately the
same selenographic longitude as my sketch of "The Footprint" on August 4, I made
this sketch of just Schikard.
Two versions of my sketch of
Bailly (Rukl's Section 71) as it appeared on
August 5, 1998 (EDT). The left-hand drawing is the one drawn at the eyepiece. The other was
done later and has an inset to show how the shadows inside Bailly changed during my relatively
short observation. Click on one of the thumbnails to see a
larger version along with my original sketch notes for that version.
Note: Since one of these sketches has written annotations, they have not
been mirror-reversed. These are just as they appeared through a refractor with a mirror
star diagonal.
Here are several versions of a sketch of "The Footprint" formed by
Schickard (Rukl's Section 62), Nasmyth
and Phocylides (Rukl's Section 70) at a time when the
terminator was just below their Southern walls around 9:20PM (EDT) on
August 4, 1998. The interaction of the walls, the terminator and a
series of small craters stretching to the East was amazingly intricate.
The left-most sketch is the one I did at the eyepiece and from left to
right you can see subsequent attempts to make sketches that matched my
memory of what I saw. Click on one of the four thumbnails to see a
larger version along with my original sketch notes for that version.
You can contact me at
BHutto@BellSouth.Net.