I had taken the day off work in case I had to travel to get clear skies, but as luck would have it, I was able to watch the transit from my balcony till the sun disappeared behind clouds about 10 minutes before sunset. My photo does not do justice to what the event looked like visually - so much more detail was visible looking through the scopes. Three layers were used in this image. One was taken with a Canon XT attached to a 1000mm (focal length) F9.8 filtered (Baader solarfilm - white light) refractor, and two layers - one optimized for surface detail & one for prominences (flame-like appendages) - from a single shot taken with a Nikon Coolpix 4300 camera shooting afocally through the eyepiece on a PST (Hydrogen-Alpha filtered scope). Note: These hydrogen-alpha solar filters are different from photographic HA filters. Don't use those to look at the sun! One more comment about the transit. I've heard many newcasters refer to how small Venus looked when compared to the size of the sun. Venus, though, is about halfway between the earth and sun. It would be a lot smaller if it were actually next to the sun.
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