View allAll Photos Tagged CCD
Another concert last night and this lady was getting it out of her cello.
Thanks very much if you have time for a comment.
Cygnus Sky-scape featuring the bright star Cygni 32 and the Propeller nebular. This is made up of 4 panels..
This image was photographed from my back yard.
Imaging telescopes or lenses: Vixen VSD
Imaging cameras: Starlight Express SX ccd camera
Mounts: Sky-Watcher & MX
Guiding telescopes or lenses:Vixen VSD
Guiding cameras: sx loadstar
Missing my old faithful M8 CCD rendering. There's something nostalgic and magic in the same time to it, I can hardly explain why I still prefer its 70s tones...
Explored December 19, 2024
Several times a year, I visit this small oak tree and love the different perspectives and portraits I get from it. I'm sure it is my favorite in the park. I am revisiting all places with my vintage Nikon D200, a 10 MP CCD sensor camera.
(Spanish: Varias veces en el año visito este pequeño roble y lo retrato de diferentes perspectivas y angulos. Muy seguro que es mi favorito en el parque).
(Press "L" or "Z" or Click on the image for a large view).
Location: Lake Ashby Park, New Smyrna Beach, Florida.
Image ID: _D206420
Email: photobysamuel@gmail.com
Thanks for the comments, likes, and views, it always appreciated!!
Last CCD sensor used by Nikon/D200.
I gave it a whirl.
Best I could do first attempt.
(working backward)
My first galaxy with the F4 Quattro, M33 - Triangulum Galaxy. The galaxy is located approximately 3 Million light years away in the constellation of Triangulum, it is the third largest member in a cluster of galaxies which includes our own and the famous M31 Andromeda Galaxy
The image was the first taken with my Nichrome wire in front of the Mirror Fan to prevent dew forming on the Primary.....And it worked!!!
Image Details:
21x300S in LRGB
16x600S in HA
The HA was added as a Lighten Layer to the Red Channel, all frames have 25 Flats and 25 Darks applied
Equipment Used:
Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ8 Pro
Imaging Scope: Sky-Watcher Quattro 8-CF @ F4
Imaging Camera: Atik Cameras 383L+ Mono Cooled to -20C
Filter Wheel: Starlight Xpress Ltd 7x36mm unmounted USB Filter Wheel
Filters: Baader Planetarium 36mm LRGB + 7nm HA
Guide Scope: Celestron Telescopes C80ED
Guide Camera: Qhyccd QHY5L-II
Software Used:
Image Acquisition: Main Sequence Software Sequence Generator Pro
Image Stacking and Combining: Maxim-DL
Post Processing: Photoshop CS5, Noise Ninja
Taken with dx ccd sensor camera
Haven't understood why the impression of spatiality is clearly stronger with the ccd sensor compared to a cmos cameras
Subjectively it seems so to me at least
S272 CCD, a Volvo Olymoian operated by Hunters Coaches of Daventry, seen descending Royal Oak Way after setting off on afternoon school duties. I thought I would spend a short time here in the hope of getting the Gemini, but no sign of it, and this was one of only 2 deckers I saw leave the depot today.
23rd April 2021.
An HaLRGB image of M82
The HaLRGB image comprises of:
L - 16 hours 30 minutes
Ha - 14 hours 30 minutes
R - 4 hours
G - 4 hours
B - 4 hours
Total - 43 hours
15 minute subs.
Acquisition - Planewave 12.5" CDK, PME, QSI 583 8WSG CCD, Lodestar auto guider, TSX, Maxim DL.
Processing Pixinsight 1.8
I started this image in 2014.
Hunters S312 CCD, a Volvo Olympian, heads along Braunston High Street on a school contract.
7th September 2018.
JPGs straight out of camera using Nikon's NATURAL colour profile. The old CCD sensors have been said to be more filmic (if not noisier) and this is the Nikon D60, an old DSLR which was first announced back in Jan 2008 (a 15 year old camera)
While I was at a traffic stop this afternoon, I looked to my left and saw this humongous Samsung building. I quickly took out my point and shoot from the middle compartment and attempted to do a panorama sweep of this building. Unfortunately, the traffic green, before I completed my sweep. So the resulting panorama was cropped. Still it shows you the scale of the building an how uniform those office windows are. Thank goodness I don't need such office building for my work.
NGC 4565, also known as the Needle Galaxy, is an edge-on spiral galaxy approximately 40 million light years from Earth. Astronomers believe that our own Milky Way galaxy would appear this thin if viewed edge-on.
To the upper left is galaxy NGC 4562 (59 million light years away), and the small smudge just below and to the right is galaxy IC 3571 (58 million light years away).
This is the first image taken with our new mount, an Officina Stellare direct drive polar fork mount, through an Officina Stellare RiLA 600mm f/5.0 telescope and an FLI ML16200 CCD cooled to -25C. All subexposures were unguided. 80 8-minute luminance shots collected detail, while 140 4-minute RGB images added color. In total, more than 20 hours of light was collected over six nights, at our observatory one hour west of Bangkok.
Imaged and processed by the SC Observatory team: Mike Selby, Stefan Schmidt and Andy Chatman.
S272 CCD, a Volvo Olympian operated by Hunters of Daventry, photographed descending Royal Oak Way as it sets off on an afternoon school contract.
22nd September 2021.
Those colours from the CCD sensor are sublime! Not a very exciting picture but I got lucky with the coincidental colour theme in this shot. The cats green eyes matching some green reflections in the cupboard door (and green cloth hanging on the oven door) and then his ginger fur matching the tungsten lights from the kitchen hob light. There's even some red from the oven gloves being reflected elsewhere. Red, orange and greens everywhere :D
Happy Whiskers Wednesday!
this is what happens when you suffer from CCD (Chronic Crochet Disorder). You end up with loads of crocheted bits and pieces(, flowers in this case) waiting to be used some day