(meteorobs) New here 2

alfredo caronia alfredoc49 at gmail.com
Mon Dec 23 10:01:55 EST 2013


Good evening!

Hello Ivan!

My name is Alfredo Caronia

I also am a member of meteorobs!
I am an astronomer amateur!
I live in Romania ( Piatra Neamt ) and i am italian!
Probably can you do something together related to meteor search?

If you want, please keep in contact!

Regards!

Alfredo
Il giorno 22/dic/2013 18:27, "Иван Брюханов" <betelgeize_astro at mail.ru> ha
scritto:

> Guten Morgen, guten Tag, guten Abend, gute Nacht ;-)
>
> Hello everyone,
>
> This is Ivan S. Bryukhanov (Belarus, Minsk) - betelgeize_astro at mail.ru
>
> Observe meteors since 1996.
>
> I also recently joined in meteorobs.
> Some of my work
>
> http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/basic_connect?qsearch=ivan+bryukhanov&version=1
>
> http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2012pimo.conf..102B
>
> Rose Marie, if you want to come to Belarus and see our work - I invite to
> visit Minsk.
>
> Clear skies!
>
> Ivan
> Minsk
> ==============================
> Суббота, 14 декабря 2013, 11:20 -05:00 от rmbehr at istar.ca:
>
>   Hello everyone,
>
> Just recently joined this list, happy to see more people like me who
> enjoy the "sparklies"!! The short bio: middle-aged woman whose hobby
> is photography, got drawn into shooting the night sky after attending
> talks by local astronomer Terrence Dickinson showing what one can get
> with long exposures, remembering how when teenagers older brother
> would recruit me to help carry gear to his observatory, now back into
> astronomy and a member of the local chapter of RASC. Living near
> Kingston, Ontario, where the weather has turned to crap ever since I
> started pointing my camera upwards after sunset a few years ago.
> Didn't help when I bought a 12 inch Skymaster truss dobsonian, it does
> a great job of gathering dust.
>
> Anyway, back to the subject of sparklies: Bruce, I feel your pain and
> share your grumpiness. Perseids clouded out, Orionids clouded out,
> Leonids clouded out, now brutal cold has teamed up with the clouds and
> moon to ruin the Geminids. Came home last night around 10:00 p.m.
> after enjoying a henfest Christmas gathering, stood in the driveway
> for a couple minutes, saw one meteor skipping between the gathering
> clouds. Realized after 2 minutes that "it ain't happening out here",
> not only -15C but a bit of breeze making the windchill unbearable,
> headed back inside to stoke up the woodstove. Set the alarm for 3:00
> a.m. when Orion and Gemini head around to the west and can be seen in
> a narrow band out my diningroom window, wanted to put the camera on
> set-it-and-forget-it to run a continuing series, hopefully catching a
> meteor or two, but the clouds had thickened up considerably. *sigh*
> One can only hope for clear skies during the Quadrantids, and maybe,
> maybe, maybe something will happen when Earth goes spinning through
> the path of the now-defunct ISON. Dare we hope it gave us something
> useful on the incoming run?
>
> RoseMarie
>
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>
>
> --
> Иван Брюханов
>
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>
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