The traditional name for the full moon of December is the "Cold Moon". Full moon occurred near 2 am MST on 15 Dec. These images were taken more than 15 hr later with an AT72EDII refractor (432mm FL, f/6).
Cold Moon rising over the Sangre de Cristo mountains. |
Four hours later, above the clouds:
Jupiter is the second brightest object in the sky at this hour.
Jupiter (overexposed) and its Galilean moons (from LL): Callisto, Europa, Io, Ganymede. |
The four Galilean moons can be seen with very modest equipment. I was able to spot them easily with a tripod-mounted 50-mm refractor at 10 x. Twenty power (20 x) is enough to see not only the moons but the disc of Jupiter as well. The moons should be visible with a 7x50 binocular if the instrument is on a stable mount. I tried to spot them hand-held, but there is too much shake. The telescope that Galileo used was a 20x30mm refractor (20 power, 30 mm diameter).