View allAll Photos Tagged ANDROMEDA
Andromeda Galaxy (M31 or NGC224) is a spiral galaxy approximately 2.5 million light-years from Earth, and the nearest major galaxy to the Milky Way.
9 x 45s Lights 390 gain
5 x 45s Darks 390 gain
0 x Bias
0 x Flats
Galaxia de Andromeda obtenida por apilamiento de 18 imagenes de 4 segundos a ISO 1600 sin seguimiento y un lente zoom de 150mm en la Olympus E500.
One of the first nights since May or June that had low humidity, no moon (yet), and not cloudy. Thus say hello to M33, better known as the Andromeda Galaxy.
Reprocessed Andromeda Galaxy. 6x5m, Orion short Tube 80, 300mm, Modded canon 1000d, CLS-CCD filter, 800iso.
second try in photographing our galactic neighbor. still couldnt get longer exposure time because of the light pollution - hence the noise in the galaxy itself (had to push the brightness a lot).
8 frames@1min + 9frames@2min. 90mm tamron macro. tonemapped in photomatix and editied with photoshop.
Tomada con mi Canon 550D y el telescopio Meade LX50 de Andreu.
Aunque los datos EXIF no son correctos (no se muy bien por qué), estuvimos aproximadamente 2 minutos y 40 segundos de exposición con ISO3200.
First try at Andromeda where I can actually see some structure.
Canon 1100D with 300mm lens at F/5.6. ISO6400
10 Lights at 29s
10 Darks
Andromeda polifolia
Ericaceae
bog rosemary
in cultivation
photo by Kerry Woods
This is the cultivar 'Blue Ice'. The leaves seem to be generally shorter and broader than the wild plant in my other photos here, and the flowers comparatively 'squat'.
AndrĂłmeda, gobernante de los hombres.
"sors salutis
et virtutis
michi nunc contraria,
est affectus
et deffectus
semper in angaria.
Hac in hora
sine mora
corde pulsum tangite;
quodper sortem
sternit fortem,
mecum omnes plangite"
Carmina Burana - O Fortuna - Carl Off
Analog photography with two exposures.
Camera analog electronic Canon EOS 500N
The Andromeda Galaxy can be spotted just left of center in this frame. It is the closest galaxy to our Milky Way.
Free download under CC Attribution (CC BY 4.0). Please credit the artist and rawpixel.com.
In this collection of illustrations from Traité des arbres et arbustes que l'on cultive en France en pleine terre (1801–1819), you will find more than 400 public domain images from the "Raphael of Flowers" – Pierre-Joseph Redouté (1759–1840) and Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau (1700–1782). Appreciate the variety of flowers, shrubs, trees and other botanical artworks from these distinguished illustrators.
Higher resolutions with no attribution required can be downloaded: https://www.rawpixel.com/board/567691/traite-des-arbres-et-arbustes
ANDROMEDA STAR
FLAGSINGAPORE
REGISTRY SINGAPORE
IMO8126800
TYPEM.BULK CARRIER [GEARED]
BUILDERDONGHAE SHIPBUILDING CO LTD. ULSAN
COUNTRYSOUTH KOREA
YD NR8032
SHIP DESIGN
BUILT1982
GRT7958
DWT11244
OWNERAUG. BOLTEN
EX
LOCATIONROZENBURG 1 MAY 1986
Borg 101ED with 0.7x reducer
Astro-modded Nikon d5300
Guiding with asiair and asi120mcs on Takahashi EM-11
11x600s, 10 darks
Reprocessed in Nebulosity and Photoshop with Astronomy Tools.
Just outside our house in southern Sweden. Nikon D3, 17mm, iso 3200 & 30 sec. I parked the camera on the middle of the road, and it just made the shot before i had to bail because of the car that came. I think i can spot the Andromeda.
Loads of 30 second shots at 250mm while piggybackEd on a Tal-1m and stacked in DeepSkyStacker.
Scope was roughly polar aligned by eye and only has a fixed-speed motor which, I think is set at moon speed. So obviously there is star trailing and loss of detail but I'm just pleased to have got something.
Any advice for simple things I can do to improve it would be gratefully received.
This is the most detailed shot I have yet taken of the Andromeda Galaxy. This month coming up, I'll be getting a rather decent filter and a field flattener so I can image in the narrow band (dual narrow band in this instance) so hopefully I can correct for a number of issues. The colour, for instance, is wrong here as the filter I used was almost entirely wrong as it's a rather aggressive visual observation filter (UHC) that cuts out a huge range of the spectrum where the new filter will be far more selective and hopefully leave me with the desirable wavelengths.
I think I caught a tiny shooting star near the bottom of the photo
I saw six of them that night after the Auroras <<<< !
Canon 30D & a 50mm
Nikon D5300
Nikkor AF-S DX 55-300mm f4.5-5.6 ED VR lens at 300mm
Orion EQ-3 equatorial mount with single-axis motor drive
89 x 30 second exposures ~45mins total exposure time
It may not be Hubble quality, but even being able to see this fuzzy patch of light is impressive considering the distance. At about two and a half million light years it is likely the most distant object that can ever be seen with the un-aided eye. Shot un-guided, from the Cohen Woodlands, Colchester, CT.
Taken with a 135mm lens at F/3.5, with my tripod-mounted Digital Rebel. I'm still having problems getting my Orion mount/tripod to properly track the stars. I used an ISO of 3200 (I had modified the Rebel using Wasia's firmware hack), which naturally was very noisy, so I converted to b/w to remove the flecks of color.
The mighty Andromeda Galaxy. Imaged from Micksburg, Ontario in August 2014. About 6 hours of exposure. Canon 60DA, Skywatcher ED100 and Skywatcher AZ-EQ6 mount.
Galáxias de Andromeda e Triangulo c/ Integrated Flux Nebula Ha
Branda da Aveleira - 2021.07.10
Canon EOS 6Da CDS
Sigma ART 50 f/1.4
Skywatcher Star Adventurer
60 x 60seg ISO1600
Astroart + Pixsingight + Photoshop