Astronomers can now view real-time conditions at the observatory from our AllSky camera! Whether you’re planning observations, checking cloud cover, or just enjoying the night sky, you can access the live feed any time on our website.
Live AllSky View: https://www.yorku.ca/science/observatory/observers/
Clear skies and happy observing!
#AllSkyCamera #Astrophotography #Astronomy #Astronomer #Space #YorkU #Observatory #AllanICarswellObservatory #Stargazing #Telescope #Planets #Stars #Science #Physics #Toronto #YorkUObservatory #ClearSkies #FreeEvents #FamilyFriendly #ScienceOutreach #Tour #AICO
Astronomers can now view real-time conditions at the observatory from our AllSky camera! Whether you’re planning observations, checking cloud cover, or just enjoying the night sky, you can access the live feed any time on our website.
Live AllSky View: https://www.yorku.ca/science/observatory/observers/
Clear skies and happy observing!
#AllSkyCamera #Astrophotography #Astronomy #Astronomer #Space #YorkU #Observatory #AllanICarswellObservatory #Stargazing #Telescope #Planets #Stars #Science #Physics #Toronto #YorkUObservatory #ClearSkies #FreeEvents #FamilyFriendly #ScienceOutreach #Tour #AICO
Oh my sweet baby, what have the years done to your once beautiful features?
To be fair, it's been 4 years on the highest point for miles around, 24 hours a day, 364 days a year, in the worst weather the Northern Highlands can throw at electronics. Yet it persists.
Main problems are plastic, internal camera mount has degraded/slipped, the dome is seriously clouded by age and the quarter turn screws are NOT coming out despite my best brute force and ignorance.
#AllSkyCam #AllSkyCamera
Really bright flare on the #AllSkyCamera about 01:20 this morning. Meteor-bright, but covered about 10 degrees of arc and showed up in 3 frames of 20 second each. Guessing it's something orbital and a good bit higher than the ISS etc, but big/reflective. Best match I can find is the SL-16 rocket, but that doesn't seem high enough, orbital period is only ~10 mins longer than ISS.
Any ideas?
(Sorry, not got copies of the pics, will tomorrow.)
Caught a nice burst of #aurora on the school #allSkyCamera last night. North is the 9 o'clock position.
The #SpaceX #Falcon9 #RocketPlume was captured on 3 of our #RaspberryPi #MeteorCameras, #auroracam + #AllSkyCamera. I've put the clips into one video with extra DSLR photos. Oxfordshire, UK 19:55-20:05UT 24 March '25. Watch here: https://youtu.be/-BH_Eg4hWaw
Space X Falcon 9 NCOL-69 Rocket Plume - meteor, aurora & all sky cam + DLSR view from Oxfordshire

YouTube
The usual problem with an #AllSkyCamera is the sensor pumps out a lot of heat. When the temperature rapidly plummets to minus 10C however...
(Aurora flickers still visible near the bottom)
https://youtu.be/dPeAGEnecUU
Tain Royal Academy All Sky Camera - Minus Ten Celsius

YouTube
Nothing particularly spectacular, but a nice night on the #AllSkyCamera last night. Bit of aurora flicker near the horizon, not enough for the naked eye by a long way. The big obnoxious light is that Moon. https://youtu.be/7nV3dbo6dtY
Tain Royal Academy all sky camera: pretty winter night

YouTube

Wow - a whole year of #AllSkyCamera timelapse, day and night, in about 22 minutes!
WARNING: Rapidly flashing images.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ki8jMwBaZ78

Making a 1 Year Timelapse on my All Sky Camera

YouTube
Nice clear night on the #AllSkyCamera last night. Milky Way, Moon near the beginning (right), Jupiter is the big bright "star" above Orion (near the bottom). Quite a few satellites in near-polar orbits, so either Earth monitoring stuff like ESA's Sentinels or spy stuff. Aurora on the left near the beginning, not a substantial naked-eye show.