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Amazing pictures of the sun taken from St Margaret's back garden

This close-up of a region on the surface of the sun shows a number of sunspots and hydrogen gas flowing along magnetic lines. Picture: Paul Andrew
This close-up of a region on the surface of the sun shows a number of sunspots and hydrogen gas flowing along magnetic lines. Picture: Paul Andrew

This close-up of a region on the surface of the sun shows a number of sunspots and hydrogen gas flowing along magnetic lines. Picture: Paul Andrew

Here is the sun as you've never seen it before - from a Kent back garden.

The amazing pictures were taken in St Margaret's, near Dover, by amateur astronomer Paul Andrew.

Using a solar telescope costing thousands of pounds, the 58-year-old took the photographs capturing the sun's surface that give NASA a run for their money.

Paul is president and founder of South East Kent Astronomical Society and lives in the village.

This looping prominence is seen on the edge of the sun. The Earth has been added to scale to give an idea of the size how we shape up. Picture: Paul Andrew
This looping prominence is seen on the edge of the sun. The Earth has been added to scale to give an idea of the size how we shape up. Picture: Paul Andrew

This year is the 40th anniversary of SEKAS, which has 120 members, drawn mainly from the Deal-Dover area but also from the Canterbury, Thanet and Folkestone-Hythe areas.

Solar telescopes are specialised and highly powerful, costing several thousands of pounds.

"They allow people to view the sun in hydrogen alpha light which is not visible in normal white light," said Paul.

"Of course, no one should ever look directly at the sun with any optics unless you have a specially modified telescope and you know what you are doing."

The full disc picture of the sun has been published in some of the top astronomy websites in the UK and the US.

What looks like a squiggly line on it is a filament, which is more than 600,000 kilometres long.

"Filaments are clouds of cooler gas suspended above the surface of the sun by magnetic fields.

It is because they are cooler than their surroundings that they appear dark. But if they appear on the edge of the sun, they then appear brighter than space behind them. In that case we call them prominences.

"Basically filaments and prominences are the same thing, but seen either against the surface of the sun or against the blackness of space."

The other picture, showing a close-up of the solar surface, shows what astronomers call an active region – a very turbulent area where the gas on the sun is more active, with the sun's magnetic field bursting through its surface and causing explosions.

The hair–like line in this view of the sun is a filament more than 600,000 kms long. Picture: Paul Andrew
The hair–like line in this view of the sun is a filament more than 600,000 kms long. Picture: Paul Andrew

The hair–like line in this view of the sun is a filament more than 600,000 kms long. Picture: Paul Andrew

All three pictures were also used in the Russian newspaper Pravda.

Paul, who works as a photographer, said: "I have had photographs used in books and magazines before, but this was the first time they have been used in Russia.

"Someone from Pravda noticed them on a website and got in touch with me."

Having the pictures used in Pravda and on some of the top astronomy websites is an appropriate accolade in SEKAS's 40th anniversary.

Paul, who has lived in St Margaret's since 1963, started the society in 1972. He got hooked on astronomy after reading a book on the subject by Patrick Moore when he was 11. He bought his first telescope shortly afterwards.

He met his wife Catherine, a retired primary school teacher, through the society in 1978.

Catherine is another keen astronomer who got to hear about SEKAS and started coming along to meetings.

The couple's 28-year-old daughter Claire, who lives in Dover, is another keen astronomer. And, of course, she is a SEKAS member.

Paul Andrew and fellow amateur astronomer Henry Williams with the solar telescope
Paul Andrew and fellow amateur astronomer Henry Williams with the solar telescope

Paul Andrew and fellow astronomer Henry Williams with the solar telescope

Paul, who now has seven telescopes, has built two observatories at his home. He will shortly start work on another for his solar telescope.

"Keen astronomers tend to buy one telescope and then get other, more powerful ones.

"But astronomy does not have to be expensive. People can start with a pair of binoculars. They can learn the constellations and find out about the Milky Way and be blown away by that.

"But they will find that if they come along to our meetings or observations, they get so much out of it."

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