View allAll Photos Tagged Celestron
A Celestron C90 telescope adapted to a Canon 60D body that I hope will make a nice combo. The lens is a 1000mm f/11 and so far it looks like getting the focus set is pretty touchy but promising. We've had cloud cover every single night since I got these two mated but that can't last forever.
Canon PS A420
Orion SkyView 6LT 6" Newtonian reflector scope
Celestron Number 21 orange filter
I chose the orange filter, because it tends to highlight some of the contrast in the shadows of the craters.
I contemplated doing afull moon shot, but the 1/4 moon here shows more contrast in the craters.
A Celestron C90 telescope adapted to a Canon 60D body that I hope will make a nice combo. The lens is a 1000mm f/11 and so far it looks like getting the focus set is pretty touchy but promising. We've had cloud cover every single night since I got these two mated but that can't last forever.
Celestron AVX with 6" C6N Telescope
Nikon D7000 @ ISO 200
9 x 240 second exposures
Stacked in DSS and processed in Startools and Lightroom
SuperMoon Eclipse
Equipment used: Celestron NexStar 80GT (80mm Refractor). Canon EOS SL1 using a T-Adapter and a 20mm Plossl eyepiece.
Celestron Nexstar 127 SLT, Nikon D3300, Meade 3x Barlow. 3900 stacks post processed in Pipp, AS3, Registax and finally Photoshop.
Celestron NexStar 6SE, ZWO asi224mc with IR cut filter, 2.5x TeleVue Powermate and ZWO ADC. 3 minute video Captured in SharpCap, processed in PIPP, AutoStakkert, RegiStax Wavelets then Lightroom.
Location: Düsseldorf (Germany) on July 28th, 2016, 8:18 AM
Celestron 6 Evolution on Celestron AVX mount
ZWO ASI 224mc camera + Baader 685nm ir-pass filter
Processed using AS!2, Fitswork & PS CS6
Took this apart the other day to fix what I thought would be just a dry joint problem. There was no soldering, just a crimp of wires. Sprayed it with WD40, hope for the best. Was nightmare to reassemble. All working again now though. We shall see.
M97 - Owl Nebula
Imaged: 18 Feb 2012
Imaging Scope: Celestron CPC800XLT (@ f/6.3)
Imaging Camera: Atik 314L+
Guide camera: StarlightXpress Lodestar
Integration details:
Ha: 9x900s
OIII: 8x1200s
Total integration time: 4hrs 55min
Stacked in Nebulosity, Processed in Photoshop using "Annie's Astro Actions"
I don't do planetary nebulas very often but thinking of doing them a bit more. Gorgeous night out last night and I was able to get a decent amount of data on this, esp in OIII so I could just start to pull out the outer shock wave. Need a few more hours in OIII to get more definition in the shock wave but happy with it for now. Processed as Ha/OIII/OIII and then color balanced as needed
Celestron 1000/102mm refractor with Solarscope DSF 70mm filter. Hinode guider. Skyris 273m CCD camera
Ioptron ZEQ25GT mount.
Equipment- Celestron NexStar 6SE on a homemade wedge, Celestron f/6.3 focal reducer and a Canon 600d. 135x 30 second ISO 1600 exposures, 40x darks, 40x flats 30x Bias frames stacked in Deep Sky Stacker and processed in GIMP.
Telescòpio: celestron 130 slt(130mm/f5) modificado
Montagem: celestron nexstar slt altazimutal computadorizada
Câmera: Canon sl1 modificada com filtro astrodon ad40 clear
Baader MkIII coma corretor
Filtro astronomik cls ccd eos clip
Deep sky stacker: calibração e integração dos frames
Processamento: photoshop cs2, astronomy tools, star spikes pro 3
Exposição total: uma hora e 10 minutos minutos
04/2016
serra negra- são paulo
Sunspot 2415 photographed on September 17, 2015 using a Canon 6D and Celestron 6″ telescope. From spaceweather.com “INCREASING CHANCE OF FLARES: Sunspot AR2415 is increasingly active on Sept.17th and appears poised to produce a moderately strong M-class solar flare. Any eruptions today would be geoeffective because the sunspot is facing Earth.”
Geoeffective simply means it is capable of causing a geomagnetic disturbance.