View allAll Photos Tagged ANDROMEDA
A merge of two Andromeda Photos. Due to tracking errors, the field of view had rotated, so the 2 photos don't combine perfectly. Taken with a Nikon D3000 DSLR and a Sky Watcher Evostar 80ED telescope on an EQ3-2 Mount.
M51 (NGC 224) or Andromeda Galaxy as seen during a 9 second exposure at ISO 4000 at a focal length of 200mm. Another galaxy, M110 or NGC 205 can be seen behind it. They are 2.5 million light years away.
A coisa lindaaaa do Andrômeda e Maxi anel (que só serve mesmo pra foto, pq tá super largo ;_; ).
Relevem as cagadinhas, pintei bem mal mesmo D: OSDKAODKASOP.
Shot during the 2007 Gateway to the Universe star party. Canon 300d and Tak E130 telescope. Nine minutes total exposure.
Gentee essa mãozinha delicada é da minha amiga Lari, dormi ontem na casa dela, ai levei meus esmaltinhos e pintei as unhas dela com essa belezuraa!
Nossa gente que esmalte lindo é esse? me deu até vontade de usar o andromeda, achei mto lindoo!
Beijooos!
Sorry for the blur: I was holding the camera against the back step of the house.
Post-upload Google Earth helped me orientate myself and Starry Night Backyard confirmed that it is Andromeda.
2008-07-04 - Cut Copy @ Andromeda. More photos here: www.rockfoto.net/artists/Cut Copy/gig/20080704/6874/photos
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.
Light_Stack_162frames_ASILive_2sec_Bin1_9
sharpend by wavelet filter in Registax
This year marks the 100th anniversary of the discovery by Edwin Hubble that the Andromeda Nebula is a group of stars outside our galaxy. The distance to the Andromeda Nebula was measured from the relationship between the period of Cepheid variable stars and their absolute luminosity.
ASI662MC + FUJIAN TV LENS 35mm F1.7 + 5mm Cmount spacer with 162 stacked 2-second exposures.
A 5mm CS mount spacer was required.
Tripod only, no equatorial mount was used.
The stacking was done with ASILive, a PC software running on Windows 11 pro, which allowed me to remotely log in from a PC in a warm room for observation and control.
Without a guide scope, the 35mm focal length was the limit of my ability to find the target object by aiming.
The ASI662MC uses SONY's IMX662 CMOS sensor, which is a very small 1/2.8-inch sensor, so even at a 35mm focal length, it is a telephoto lens with a full-size equivalent of almost 200mm.
Oct 6th 2010 22:26 BST
Vixen ED 102SS 660mm f6.6
Canon 300d
19 x 55 seconds exposure
ISO 1600
Full Field View
Stacked with Deep Sky Stacker
This picture is noisy and out of focus, but it's also Andromeda! That light is 2.5 million years old! It pre-dates Homo Erectus by half a million years! How cool is that!?
6 images @ 2 minutes exposures = 12 minutes stacked in Deep Sky Stacker and experimenting with levels.
Another attempt at Andromeda. 14 x 10 minute exposures at 1000mm and f/4.9, taken with a IDAS LPS2 light pollution filter.
Used my 50mm to get a shot of M31/M32, andromeda galaxy. Simple tripod grab with a single dark frame subtraction.
Andromeda Galaxy taken by Michael Anderton from Redditch, Worcestershire, UK during October-November 2010
This evening got bad weather, but moved my lazy butt slightly away from the town. Not sufficiently far, but at least something better. And discovered that DeepSkyStacker has problem with converting 32 bit/pixel to 16 bit/pixel - really bad job. So, instead, now I am using 'Autosave.tif' and then adjust everything in Adobe Photoshop. Still wrong colors and trace of stacking, but much better than previous picture of the Andromeda galaxy. At least good as it can be with 1 second exposures (no star tracking).
M31 is also known as the "Great Nebula in Andromeda." It is a large spiral galaxy, about the same size as our own Milky Way Galaxy, located about 2.5 million lightyears from Earth. M31 and the Milky Way are on a collision course, approaching one another at a speed of about 80 miles per second. The collision will get started in earnest in about 4 billion years. Also shown in this image are M32 and M110, two small companion galaxies of M31. This image was taken using a remotely-operated telescope at the Nerpio, Spain, observatory administered by iTelescope.net.