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Kevin Kilburn
Kevin Kilburn
After Apollo, Pioneer and Voyager, my interest in visual observing waned.
I spent some years systematically wide-field photographing the whole of the northern celestial hemisphere.
Since 1990, I have been selective in my reading and have 'cherry-picked subjects for study. In some cases these are ones that have been overlooked or are otherwise inadequately described in general texts.
My next project, apart from writing a detailed MAS history, is to photograph the analemma
 
 
 
Wide Crescent
Total Lunar Eclipse 2001
Total Eclipse 2007
 
 
 
 
Wide cresent - 12" f5.6 Newtonian, 2x Barlow projection
Pentax ME Super
Total Eclipse - 9th January 2001
Total Eclipse 2007
 
 
 
 
Total Lunar Eclipse
Lunar/Solar eclipse
Messier 31
 
 
 
 
Total Eclipse, 4/4/96 - 400mm plus two 2x teleconverters, Kodak Panther 1600
See Solar Eclipse 1996 for further information about this image
Total Eclipse 2007
Kinked umbra
 
 
 
 
 
The night sky has always fascinated me. I certainly recall, aged about three, being pushed home in a baby buggy and watching the night sky for flying saucers. The full moon sailing behind clouds gave me the willies! My dad prepared smoked glass to watch the solar eclipse of June 1954 and I collected an astronomy series of PG Tips (tea) picture-cards in the mid '50s. I could recognise the main constellations before I was 10 and I used my great-grandfather's pre-1908 Galilean binoculars to pick out the details. In the mid '60s, and after joining the BAA (lapsed 1980's!), I became a keen moon observer with a home-made 6" Newtonian
I now have a 127mm Maksutov-Cassegrain and a digital camera after many years of using slide film
 
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