Sunset
was a little hazy, but I noticed a temperature boundary as the Sun was
setting. Note the small mock mirage (the little piece of the Sun
breaking off at the top) that formed. I saw a couple of others in the
process of forming, but they were small and the small ones are difficult
to time your pics to get them (unlike the big ones I got a few weeks ago!)
You
might notice it looks a little hazy out there. Lots of haze scatters
shorter wavelength light making a green flash less prominent, but didn't
totally obscure it tonight.
Shortly
after sunset, there was a nice gathering in the west. The crescent Moon
was joined by (from left to right) Mercury, Pollux and Castor.
After
it got dark, I walked by over to the VLBA dish and got a shot of a nice
starry sky behind it. Look closely and you can see the 4 meter
telescope dome in the background. The lights you see behind the mountain
come from Tucson, over 50 miles away.
Finally,
as it got darker, the summer Milky Way rose above the eastern horizon. I
had to look southeast to see it and couldn't find a trial to get the
VLBA dish in the foreground that didn't lead off the side of the
mountain. I still got the four meter and a couple of others in this one.
The tree in the foreground was illuminated by light coming from the
bathroom window. I went inside to try and turn out the lights and there
was no light switch! I assume the mountain staff know how to turn it
off, but seems like a design oversight to not give people the option to
turn it off themselves! Fortunately, it wasn't too bright at this
distance to hamper the photography and in the end, I kind of like the
way the tree came out.
Reprinted with permission from the Half-Astrophysicist Blog.