View allAll Photos Tagged ANDROMEDA

Andromeda Outdoor Lifestyle Shoot

Canon 1100d fullspectrum IR/UV cut; Canon 70-200 f4 L; Star Adventurer;

Darks & Flats - DSS + PS (Astronomy Tools) + LR

Date: 26/08/2016 From: Siena

Normally I get a straight line when a satellite passes through an image this one looks like it is spinning pretty fast.

 

Image enregistrée avec les ajustements appliqués.

"The amazing part is not that the dog talks well, it's that he talks at all."

 

The nucleus of the Andromeda Galaxy imaged with a point-n-shoot digital camera.

 

Our "nearby" neighboring galaxy Andromeda contains a mind staggering trillion stars, but "only" a billion or so are in the nucleus region imaged above. It took 2.5 million years for the light from that galaxy to reach my camera lens, or our eyes - this is the only naked eye galaxy in the Northern Hemisphere. On a very clear night even to my old eyes it looks like a small glowing cloud.

 

Virtually all the stars we see at night, including the ones in this photo, are part of the Milky Way, our galaxy.

 

Scotch Mount

Canon A85

f4.8

ISO400

15 sec per exposure

fl 16.2mm (35mm film equivalent: 105mm)

 

18 images, stacked

 

I know what you're thinking. What, that blob? So what? Well, try it with a 105mm untracked and unstacked and get back to me. I only post this as a reference - I want to compare it with different levels of increasing light gathering and tracking ability (as I anticipate a new scope soon). Vignetting added to simulate telescope view, and some sharpening.

Mass Effect Andromeda is an action RPG developed by BioWare and published by Electronic Arts.

 

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andromeda taken last night , 100 stacked images, ISO 1000, 70-200mm F4, 4 second exposures,

Looking north just up from Perseus and Cassiopeia. Andronema in low right center. Faint Perseid in lower right corner. Lots of faint Perseids if you zoom in.

M31, the Andromeda Galaxy taken on the night of November 3rd, 2010. 22x5 minute exposures at ISO 800, autoguided. Total exposure time: 110 minutes. Scope used was an AT66 fitted with a field flattener. Camera was a Nikon D50. Stacked with DeepSkyStacker using 40 dark frames, 20 flat frames, 30 dark flat frames, and 30 offset/bias... frames. Post processing in Photoshop CS3 using levels, curves, color balance, selective hi pass filter, and unsharp filter.

 

I finally figured out how to use flat frames effectively. Made a big difference this time. Turns out that it's better to just eyeball your flat frames rather than relying on the numerical advice I've been reading.

I thought I would see if I could get a shot of the Andromeda galaxy with minimal equipment. So this is taken with the Sony A300 with a modest zoom of 60 mm, ISO 3200, f4, with 11 exposures of 8 sec stacked with DeepSkyStacker. This galaxy is 2.5 million light years from us and is the nearest galazy outside of the Milky Way. It is the furthest object visible to the naked eye, though it's difficult to see without binoculars where it appears as a fuzzy wisp of cotton as in this photo. See large size.

Andromeda Galaxy

IMO number : 9355422

Name of ship : ANDROMEDA J (since 01/10/2006)

Call Sign : DFQX

MMSI : 218015000

Gross tonnage : 8273 (since 01/10/2006)

DWT : 11052

Type of ship : Container Ship (since 01/10/2006)

Year of build : 2006

Flag : Germany (since 01/10/2006)

 

New Andromeda with a new scope, Skywatcher Startravel 102, EQ3, Prime focus 500mm with a canon 11100D. 19 lights at 59s, 10 darks, ISO 1600.

 

Quite pleased with this as the tracking wasn't set up perfectly.

Took advantage of some clear skies!

 

10 Bias, 12 Dark, 45 Light Frames

Stacked in Deep Sky Stacker

M31 Andromeda Galaxy along with M32 and M110

SW Explorer 150P-DS

ZWO ASI071MC

19 x 300 seconds @ Unity Gain = Total exposure time of 1:35 hours.

Darks + Flats + Bias

SkyWatcher HEQ5 Pro + Autoguider

Captured using SGPro

guided by PHD2

 

Stacked using DSS and processed using PixInsight and Gimp

Flora Assignment © Ray Pfortner / RayPfortner.com

Andromeda Galaxy. A stack of 58x30s exposures 200mm F5.6 Iso 800.

First astrophotography from the new place. Only 3 hours of usable data, had to throw away a lot due to clouds..Going to start building an observatory to maximize collection time.

"Andrómeda" Mandala

 

Acrílico sobre tela

50 x 50 cm

Puntillismo (dotillism)

Poco más de 13,500 puntos (ó gotas)

...flowers for the weekend

2 Meteors and Andromeda. This was an unplanned capture, I was just testing the new camera and just happened to capture 2 meteors and the andromeda galaxy in the shot. I believe this is the Orionid meteor shower. I've never seen Andromeda before, let alone captured it.

Taken with an 8" AstroSysteme Austria Newtonian F3.6 (720mm Focal Length), 10 x 30 second luminance exposures.

M31, the Andromeda Galaxy taken on the night of November 3rd, 2010. 22x5 minute exposures at ISO 800, autoguided. Total exposure time: 110 minutes. Scope used was an AT66 fitted with a field flattener. Camera was a Nikon D50. Stacked with DeepSkyStacker using 40 dark frames, 20 flat frames, 30 dark flat frames, and 30 offset/bias... frames. Post processing in Photoshop CS3 using levels, curves, color balance, selective hi pass filter, and unsharp filter.

 

I finally figured out how to use flat frames effectively. Made a big difference this time. Turns out that it's better to just eyeball your flat frames rather than relying on the numerical advice I've been reading.

This is a copy of the Andromeda Galaxy photo with annotations added. There are actually 3 galaxies visible. The largest is Andromeda, also known as M31. The second largest in the picture is a satellite galaxy of Andromeda known as the Elliptical Galaxy or M110. The 3rd galaxy appears the same size as a star. It is also a satellite galaxy of Andromeda known asthe Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy or M32. The brightest star in the picture is a magnitude 2 star know as Mirach. When you view the full size picture you can also see a diagonal line that is probably a satellite that was passing just as the exposure was finishing. Total exposure time was 5 minutes and 27 seconds. The "secret" to this picture was the wonderful dark skies our near Barry's Bay, plus the telescope mount to track the stars during the exposure.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andromeda_Galaxy

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messier_110

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messier_32

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirach

Andromeda Galaxy from Rocky Gap State Park Amphitheater, Flintstone, Allegany, Maryland, USA (2022-09-29). www.nicolesharp.net/

Complete Andromeda Galaxy Stack

© All rights are reserved, please do not use my photos without my permission

 

Name:Andromeda J

IMO:9355422

Flag:Cyprus

MMSI:209850000

Callsign:5BKR3

Vessel type:Container Ship

Gross tonnage:8,273 tons

Summer DWT:11,052 tons

Length:139 m

Beam:22 m

Draught:6.7 m

Home port:Limassol

Class society:Germanischer Lloyd

Build year:2006

Builder :Detlef Hegemann Rolandwerft

Berne, Germany

2013.05.25 Siikajärvi, Espoo, Finland

Stacked set of 4x30 sec at ISO 800, one 63 second ISO 1600. Each had dark frames subtracted (using Blackframe NR) and stacked using DeepSkyStacker. Taken with Celestron 20cm SCT at prime focus with Canon 40D.

Another sign of spring. Bees aren't far behind.

Til ECCO Walkathon skal du møde en ny ven. Han hedder Evin, og du kan se ham her på siden. Evin kommer fra planeten Eris i den fjerne galakse Andromeda, millioner af lysår fra Jorden. Nu er Evin kommet på besøg på Jorden. Her har han mødt den skøre professor Orcus,og sammen finder de på masser af sjove ting og mærkelige fiduser.

Læs mere om maskotter på www.bamsefabrikken.dk/

Incoming! The Andromeda galaxy will be colliding with our Milky Way galaxy in about 4.5 billion years....give or take a few days. This image is a combined 90 minute exposure using sixty frames.

Mass Effect: Andromeda takes you to the Andromeda galaxy, far beyond the Milky Way. There, you'll lead our fight for a new home in hostile territory - where WE are the aliens.

Object name: M 31

Popular Name: Andromeda Galaxy

Object type: Galaxy

Magnitude: 3.6

Size: 190.5'x61.7'

Constellation: Andromeda

 

Image captured and processed in Nebulosity. Atik 16IC-S CCD camera on 72mm f/6 WO Megrez APO Refractor. Autoguided using a Watec 120N video camera on ST80 using PHD software. Astronomik CLS filter.

 

CLS = 20x150s (three frame mosaic stitched in Autostitch)

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