View allAll Photos Tagged Deepskystacker

 

Equipment

 

Imaging Telescopes Or Lenses

TS-Optics 6" f/4 UNC Newtonian Telescope - Carbon

Imaging Cameras

ZWO ASI 183 MM PRO

Mounts

Sky-Watcher NEQ6-Pro

Filters

Baader B 1.25'' CCD Filter · Baader G 1.25'' CCD Filter · Baader R 1.25'' CCD Filter · Baader L 1.25'' Filter

Accessories

ZWO EAF Electronic Auto Focuser · TSOptics TS Off Axis Guider - 9mm · Pal Gyulai GPU Aplanatic Koma Korrector 4-element

Software

Luc Coiffier DeepSkyStacker (DSS) · PHD2 Guiding · PhotoShop CS5 · FitsWork 4 · CCDCiel

Guiding Telescopes Or Lenses

TS-Optics 6" f/4 UNC Newtonian Telescope - Carbon

Guiding Cameras

Astrolumina Alccd5L-IIc

 

Acquisition details

 

Dates:

March 6, 2021

Frames:

Baader B 1.25'' CCD Filter: 10x180" (30') (gain: 53.00) -20°C bin 1x1

Baader G 1.25'' CCD Filter: 10x180" (30') (gain: 53.00) -20°C bin 1x1

Baader L 1.25'' Filter: 21x180" (1h 3') (gain: 53.00) -20°C bin 1x1

Baader R 1.25'' CCD Filter: 10x180" (30') (gain: 53.00) -20°C bin 1x1

Integration:

2h 33'

Combined from two nights, 14x8 min subs. Modded Nikon D5100, Improved DGM NPB filter, CCDT67 reducer, GSO 6" RC. IOptron iEQ30 Pro, guided via 50mm guidescope, SSAG, and PHD2. Stacked in DeepSkyStacker, processed in StarTools.

Used my 150ED APO triplet refractor and unfiltered 314L+ riding on EQ6 pro to capture 60 subs at 1min each of this comet lying in the region of Perseus and Camelopardalis last night.

Stacked in Deepskystacker and minimal processing carried out in Photoshop CS2.

Image taken 11/10/17

"Roll on over you clouds of doom

The silver lining is coming through

Just say yes, just say yes, just say yes

Quit giving up so soon

Our love will win what war will lose

 

Every little bit of light

Every little bit of light

Helps get us through the night

 

Time fled from the west

Under a crescent moon

Feel the rattled sunset

The stars came unglued and the sky fell in

And the smoke withdrew from these ashes

 

Every little bit of light

Every little bit of light

Helps get us through the night these days

 

Just say yes, just say yes, just say yes

Quit giving up so soon

Our love will win what war will lose

 

Every little bit of light

Every little bit of light

Helps get us through the night these days"

 

—Jason Collett

M42 Orion Nebula

Date: 01-06-2013

Telescope (Lens): Orion 8in f/3.9 Newtonian Astrograph

Addition Optics: Baader Planetarium RCC1 Coma Corrector

Camera: Canon XSi

Exposures: 20 x 5 sec (ISO 400) + 20 x 30 sec (ISO400) + 50 x 150 sec (ISO400)+ Darks x10 @ 5,30,&150sec ,Flats x10, & Dark Flats x10

Processing: DeepSkyStacker, Photoshop

Mount: Atlas EQ-G

Tracking: EQMOD / Stellarium / PHD Guiding

Guidance Camera: Microsoft Lifecam 3000HD

Guidance Scope:Stellarvue SVR 80ED Raptor

 

Astromomy weather as forcasted by Canadian Meteorological Center:

Cloud Cover: Clear

Transparancy: Above Average

Seeing Category: III (Average)

Temp: 23°F

Humidity: 70°

 

Light Pollution: "Red" - Based on Light Pollution Map

 

My first attempt to increase the dynamic range of M42. Three sets of images were stacked and processed separately (5, 30, 150 sec exposures). Then the 3 images were brought together and layered.

Comet ISON take between 0552-06005hrs.

3x120sec (6min total), 2x2 Binned

Stacked in DeepSkyStacker & processed in PS2.

 

Camera: Atik 314L+ Mono

Filters: Baader RGB.

Scope: Sky-Watcher Equinox 80ED .

Mount: AZ EQ6-GT goto, Unguided.

 

Dumbbell Nebula/Nebulosa Planetaria de Dumbbell (M27, Messier 27, NGC 6853)

 

The Dumbbell Nebula is a planetary nebula in the constellation Vulpecula, located at a distance of 1250 light-years.

 

La nebulosa Dumbbell es una nebulosa planetaria​ en la constelación de Vulpecula, que se encuentra a una distancia de 1250 años luz.

 

- Date/Fecha: 23/08/2020

- Location/Lugar: Piedrafita de Jaca - Huesca (42°42'4.4"N 0°19'52.6"W)

 

GEAR/EQUIPO

 

- Tracker/Montura Sky-Watcher AZ-GTi

- Guiding with QHY 5L-II Mono and guidescope EZG-60

- Camera Sony ILC3-A7M3 Modo APS-C

- Lens Sony FE 200-600mm F5.6-6.3 G OSS

 

IMAGE/IMAGEN:

 

- 100 Lights at 900mm, ISO 10000, 20s, f6.3

- 32 Darks at ISO 10000, 20s, f6.3

- Total time of exposition/Tiempo total de exposición 31min. 58seg.

 

SOFTWARE

 

- Stellarium Scope & Stellarium to guide the tracker

- Stacked with DeepSkyStacker

- Guiding with PHD2

- Image viewer Adobe Bridge

- Image processing with Adobe Camera Raw and Adobe Photoshop CC

 

©2020 All rights reserved. MSB.photography

 

Thank all for your visit and awards.

Canon 5DMII + Canon 100mm f/2.8 + Montura vixen Polarie.

WEB -| www.josemiguelmartinez.es

Canon EOS 600D, ISO 1600, f 3.5, 10 minutes, 18 mm, and DeepSkyStacker software

At the top of the mountains, the sky is simply gorgeous ! This place allowed me to take clearer photos of our galaxy than near cities.

This year, I've returned to M31, which is one of my favourite deep sky objects. Conveniently located in the northern sky, large and bright enough, beautifully fits the field of view of my TAIR-3S 300 mm telephoto lens... And in any case an interesting and beatiful object in my opinion! It might even look more spectacular in a few billion years, when it will probably crash head-on into our own Milky Way. Too bad I probably won't be around to watch that...

 

For this take, I've increased the original exposure time from my first try in 2021 by about 12 times, to 4.5 hours. In total, four nights of observation went into this image so far. I also acquired a better tracking mount, and learned a lot about image processing since then (among others, photometric colour calibration using plate solving in SiRiL). Let's see how much more exposure depth I can add next year!

 

Image details:

Lens: TAIR-3S 300 mm f/4.5 @ f/5.6 (except the first 44 subs from 2021, which were taken @ f/4.5)

Camera: Samsung NX30 mirrorless APS-C, unmodified

Acquisition: 544x 30 s (total 4h 32 min) @ ISO3200

Correction: 20x flats, 100x darks

Filter: Rollei AstroKlar light pollution filter

Tracking: Skywatcher Star Adventurer (unguided), clockwork barndoor (for first 44 subs)

 

Processing:

Stacking: Deep Sky Stacker, colour calibration turned off

Colour calibration: SiRiL, photometric using plate solving

Processing: SiRiL, fitswork, Luminar 2018

Excuse me whilst I faff about with old data - just having fun.

 

I'd just got the ED80 and was testing it along with the guiding. Not sure I was pointing at the intended target, but hey ho :)

 

Not a lot you can do with this apart from slap a few spikes about. Looks kinda pretty though, so I thought I'd post it :)

 

SW ED80/EQ5

Nikon D70 modded, Baader Neodymium filter

18 x 180 secs, iso1600, total 54 minutes

Guiding: Quickcam Pro4000/9x50 finderscope, PHD

Stacked in DSS and processed in CS5. Spikes courtesy of Star Spikes Pro

Picture saved with settings applied.

First light with skywatcher star adventurer

pentax k-5

takumar 200mm F4@F5

180s sub * 8

ISO 1600

with dark, flat, and offset

No guiding

@Kirk roadside park

 

HCG 56 (Hickson Compact Group 56) is comprised of 5 galaxies at magnitudes 15-16.

11 x 4-minute, manually guided exposures at f/4 and ISO 1600. Modified EOS 600D & Revelation 12" Newtonian reflector telescope.

Registered and stacked using DeepSkyStacker; curves adjusted in Canon Photo Professional; noise reduction via Cyberlink PhotoDirector.

My first attempt at photographing this galaxy.

 

All processing done in DeepSkyStacker and Gimp.

A Note marks the location of the Type 1a supernova, which I first saw last Wednesday - shortly after it was discovered. The explosion actually happened about 12 million years ago, but the light has only just reached us.

Manually, off-axis guided for 7 x 5-minute exposures at ISO 1600, f/4.

Modified EOS 600D & Revelation 12" Newtonian reflector telescope.

Registered and stacked using DeepSkyStacker; initial curves adjusted and noise reduced in Canon Photo Professional; final curves & colour-balance adjusted using Paint Shop Pro.

somma di 118 foto a 3200iso, nikon d3000, 18-55 a 55mm,f4.5 ,

8 secondi singolo scatto. totale esposizione 15 min circa

software usati deepskystacker + pscs5

NGC2903 is a local barred spiral galaxy about 20million light years away, with some bright tight spiral arms and two much fainter arms stretched out from the galaxy. View at original size to see the outer arms.

 

61 exposures ranging from 30 seconds to 2 minutes, 53 minutes total exposure time. Flat frames also used. Shot on a Canon Ti1 at prime focus on a Meade 10" SN-10-AT.

 

Must get light pollution filter, and fix a few problems.

 

I would have cropped it down more to hide the black band along the lower right (dark part of camera chip at bottom of some sub-exposures, not eliminated by the flat frames) ... but, in that corner there is a cluster of tiny galaxies. I couldn't find much info on them, but by comparing their size to the main target I would guess they are 500+ million light years away.

 

There are several other tiny background galaxies in this shot, fuzzy specs (fuzzier than the splotchy stars) How many can you count?

Camera Only - No Telescope and No Tracking

456 of 570 images stacked in DSS using 3x drizzle

70 darks and 100 bias frames were used to improve processing of the light images

ISO 1600, f/1.8, 1.3 seconds, 85mm prime lines

Canon T2i

Magic Lantern firmware used for intervalometer and 10x live preview focusing

ambient temperature - 33F / 0.5C

faintest identifiable star - 15.4 magnitude

  

This is the best image I have taken of the Andromeda Galaxy. I spent a lot of time this winter learning about astrophotography and trying to utilize my existing photo equipment to image the night time sky with only a camera and tripod. I went so far as to build a barn door tracker to move the camera with the same motion of the night time sky and get longer exposure times. Unfortunately, the longer exposure times brought out more star bloat.

 

This summer I might try pushing this technique of stacking short exposures to the extreme by stacking 1,500 sub-exposures. I would like to see more tonality and color in the Andromeda galaxy.

 

my identifier: Autosave a2 16bit 3

Camera di acquisizione: Canon 600D Baader

Telescopio: Canon EF-S 55-250mm f/4-5.6 IS II

Software: photoshop, DeepSkyStacker, O'Telescope BackyardEOS

Risoluzione: 4337x2891

Date: 09 novembre 2015

Pose: 59x60" ISO1600 14C

Integrazione: 1.0 ore

Dark: ~11

Flat: ~15

Bias: ~21

Giorno lunare medio: 27.05 giorni

Fase lunare media: 6.80%

Scala del Cielo Scuro Bortle: 7.00

Temperatura: 13.00

Astrometry.net job: 842668

Centro AR: 60,169 gradi

Centro DEC: 36,573 gradi

Campionamento: 3,735 arcsec/pixel

Orientazione: 107,177 gradi

The Elephant's Trunk nebula is a concentration of gas and dust located in the constellation Cepheus, ~2,400 light years away. The column of nebulous gas cloud is being ionized and lit up by a massive star inside (picture it inside the round section at the top of the trunk), and is thought to be a site of new star formation.

 

Personally, I like all the dusty, smoky regions surrounding it.

 

I have already attempted this one, but wasn't too happy with the noisiness and colour balance in my first try. So here we are again, this time with much more Hydrogen alpha data (collected 5+ hours, but only used about 3.5 hours worth thanks to clouds and haze).

 

Details:

 

William Optics FLT110 @ f5.6

QHY9 CCD & Canon DSLR

QHY9 = 3.5 hours of Ha exposures (10 mins each) at -30 deg C, Baader 7nm Ha filter

DSLR = 11 x 5min exposures with modified Canon XSI, IDAS LPS filter

Stacked in DeepSkyStacker, Processed in Photoshop CS2

Ha used as Luminance, and Ha also blended into each RGB channel in varying proportions

Taken over two nights in September 2009 from my backyard observatory in Toronto, Canada

 

22 x 30-sec exposures at f/4 and ISO 1600. Modified EOS 600D & Revelation 12" Newtonian reflector telescope.

Registered and stacked using DeepSkyStacker; curves adjusted in Canon Photo Professional.

NGC 2392 is a planetary nebula, which is a star that has shed its outer layers. The object is very small, so this is a very heavy crop.

 

Moon out so I thought I'd try a Globular Cluster.

Sky-Watcher Quattro 8CF, Baader coma corrector, HEQ5-Pro, Canon 600D

8 images, 60 seconds each, DeepSkyStacker 3x drizzle.

 

View in World Wide Telescope

Object Details:

Globular cluster NGC 6712 lies about 22,500 light-years from Earth, contains approximately 94,000 stars and is estimated to be about 10 billion years old. Shining at magnitude 8.6 and having an apparent diameter of just over 7 arc-minutes, it (and IC 1295) can be found in the constellation of Scutum.

 

Planetary nebula IC 1295 is (by comparison a 'mere') 3,300 light-years distant. Glowing at magnitude 12 it spans just 1.7 x 1.4 arc-minutes in our sky.

 

Image Details: The attached was taken by Jay Edwards at the HomCav Observatory on the evening of July 26, 2019 using an 8-inch, f/7 Criterion newtonian reflector and a Canon 700D DSLR tracked on a Losmandy G-11 mount running a Gemini 2 control system. This in turn was guided using PHD2 to control a ZWO ASI290MC planetary camera / auto-guider in an 80mm f/6 Celestron 'short-tube' refractor.

 

This is my first attempt at imaging these object, and as such is a test consisting of a (relatively speaking) very short stack totaling only 45 minutes of exposure (not including darks, flats & bias frames).

 

Although I was fairly pleased with the result, given the large difference in brightness between the core of the globular cluster and the outer regions of the planetary nebula, I look forward to trying an HDR-like approach on these objects in the future in an attempt to bring out additional details in the nebula's outer regions while simultaneously preventing the globular's core from overexposing.

 

Stacked in DeepSkyStacker and processed using PixInsight and PaintShopPro, as presented here in nearly 'full frame' (having only been cropped slightly to remove the minor shifts between frames), re-sized down to HD resolution and the bit depth has been lowered to 8 bits per channel.

Fujifilm X-T10 + Fujinon XF 18-55 f/2.8-4 @ 18mm and f/4, ISO 3200, tracking with iOptron SkyTracker Pro, stacking with DeepSkyStacker, editing in GIMP, taken May 8.

 

This is a 2 x 2 mosaic of tracked 90 sec. exposures for the sky, and untracked exposures for the trees. I stacked 2 exposures for each sky panel to reduce noise, and then combined the 4 panels manually in GIMP.

 

I was aiming to capture the Cygnus nebulae on the right; the inclusion of the Heart and Soul Nebulae and the Double Cluster in Perseus on the left was a happy accident. The light trail at the top is an airplane.

 

It's a huge mess if you pixel peep, but I like the overall impression, and am glad I came away with something for the lost sleep, and considering that I forgot the part to attach my camera to my ballhead and had to use rubber bands.

[Edit: reprocessed]

 

Quando stavo scattando non sapevo della triste notizia, ho fatto appena in tempo a scambiarci qualche email per comprare quello che e' diventato il mio nuovo strumento, e mi spiace e mi rammarica non averlo potuto conoscere meglio :( un saluto giovanni, sperando che ci guardi da lassu!

 

Giovanni Sostero

 

"stavo surgelando a -10, ma ero troppo smanioso di provare la nuova reflex arrivata fresca fresca dalla corea del sud (e sbavata lungo tempo dal medesimo)

ho fatto qualche prova di iso, sparandola a 2500 e ho appurato che il sensore in montagna scende ancora di piu, e' arrivato a -25 e poco piu! (mentre le mie ditina sante avevano un parziale congelamento nell'attesa)"

 

Telescopi o obiettivi di acquisizione: Orion 8" Ritchey-Chretien

Camere di acquisizione: Canon / CentralDS EOS Astro 50D

Montature: Sky-Watcher EQ6 Pro

Telescopi o obiettivi di guida: 80/600

Camere di guida: LVI Smartguider 2

Software: DeepSkyStacker, Adobe Lightroom 3

Filtri: Orion Skyglow 2" Filter

Date: 08 dicembre 2012, 10 dicembre 2012

Luoghi: Fubine (AL), Seggiovia Sauze d'Oulx (TO)

Pose:

Orion Skyglow 2" Filter: 11x180" ISO2500 -18C bin 1x1

Orion Skyglow 2" Filter: 12x480" ISO2500 -24C bin 1x1

Integrazione: 2.1ore

Dark: ~4

Flat: ~16

Scala del Cielo Scuro Bortle: 2.00

Temperatura: -10.00

EXIF - 180X120" (6h), Gain 120

Calibration: Flats - 60, Darks - 60

Camera: ZWO ASI294MC Pro (cooled to -10°C)

Filter: Astronomik L-2 - UV IR Blockfilter 1,25"

Main optics: Sky-Watcher Explorer 200P

Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ6-R Pro

Guiding: Artesky UltraGuide 70 + ZWO ASI120MM Mini

Controller: ZWO ASIair Pro

Software: DeepSkyStacker + Pixinsight + Photoshop

Location: Medviđa

A planetary nebula is formed when a star puffs off its outer layers and these expand into space. They are not related to planets, but rather looked like planets to early telescope users - hence the name.

 

This is an image from April this year, but as with so many of my deep sky work I've included frames taken in previous sessions to reduce noise and therefore to help show subtler details.

29 x 1-minute unguided frames at ISO 6400 (new data) and 15 x 5-minute manually-guided frames at ISO 1600 (older data from 2013 and 2014). Modified EOS 600D & Revelation 12" f/4 Newtonian reflector telescope.

 

Frames registered and stacked in DeepSkyStacker software; curves adjusted in Canon Photo Professional; noise and light pollution colour gradients reduced in CyberLink PhotoDirector. I also used Noel Carboni's astronomy tools in Photoshop Elements to reduce the prominence of the stars (which otherwise dominate after stretching the contrast).

5 scatti uniti con deepskystacker exp totale 20minuti, 800iso nikon d3000 18-55mm f4

Vixen R200SS + EOS60D(ASTRO60D) 9x600sec (-7.2℃)

on TAKAHASI System90(Custmized by K-ASTEC)

(Total:90min)

Guiding:Lodester

RAP2, DeepSkyStacker, StellaImage7, Photoshop CS6

Locations:at the foot of Mt.Hakusan, Ishikakwa, Japan

Sep. 2013

Orion Nebula M42.

My first stacked image and Nebula.

 

Taken with a Canon 6D and 70-200mm + x2. F5.6 (due to the x2), 30 seconds and 25600 ISO

191 images stacked using DeepSkyStacker (thanks Paul) and processed in Lightroom.

 

The galaxy Messier 100, a.k.a. the "Blowdryer Galaxy" (who thinks up these names?) is one of the largest and brightest members of the Virgo Cluster of galaxies. It is located in the constellation Coma Berenices. Messier 100 is an example of a "grand design" intermediate spiral galaxy. It is approximately 55 million light-years] distant from Earth and has a diameter of 107,000 light years.

 

Messier 100 is considered a starburst galaxy, with the strongest star formation activity concentrated in its center - where intense star formation has been underway for about 500 million years.

 

The image also captures several other galaxies of the Virgo Cluster. To the left is the spindle shaped NGC 4312; it too is a spiral galaxy, but we view it nearly edge on. It shows us a brighter nucleus, a dimmer surrounding disk, and an outer rim that blends into the darkness of interstellar space. At the 12:00 position relative to Messier 100 is a small fuzzy ball, the elliptical galaxy NGC 4328. At the 02:30 position relative to Messier 100 is another elliptical galaxy, NGC 4322. NGC 4322 appears to be connected to Messier 100 by a faint glowing stream. These are probably stars and dust/gas clouds that have been wrenched from the two galaxies by the gravitational tides of their interaction. Similar streamers of stars and gas can be seen between our own Milky Way Galaxy and the two satellite galaxies, the Large and the Small Magellanic Clouds. If you look around the image, you might find a few other galaxies - I have not been able to identify them yet; I will tag more as I learn their names. This area of the sky abounds with them!

 

I was having fun observing this galaxy group, up until the local temperature dropped to the dew point. I found myself in need of a way to de-fog my lenses. Not having a battery powered blowdryer... HEY! THAT'S WHERE THIS GALAXY'S NICKNAME CAME FROM!

 

On May 2nd, 2014, I decided to take some photographs of Galaxy Messier 101 (or M101) in the constellation Ursa Major. It is also more commonly known as the Pinwheel Galaxy. I noticed that in the Starry Nights Pro software program that there were a number of New General Catalog (NGC) objects associated with this galaxy, especially in the spiral arms. The 29 minute stacked exposure is my first attempt to examine some of these associated NGC objects that are part of M101. I plan on adding addtional time to this as weather permits. Equipment: Canon T4i, 400mm lens, iOptron ZEQ25GT mount. Software: Starry Night Pro, Backyard EOS, DeepSkyStacker, ImagesPlus and Corel Paintshop Pro. Observation Location: 40.8978786 N,75.8921584 W

Telescopi o obiettivi di acquisizione: Orion Mini Guidescope

 

Camere di acquisizione: SVBONY SV305

 

Montature: Celestron SLT

 

Software: SharpCap Pro 3.2 Sharcap · DeepSkyStacker · Maxim DL · photoshop

 

Date:02 Gennaio 2021

 

Pose: 219x10"

 

Integrazione: 0.6 ore

 

Giorno lunare medio: 18.07 giorni

 

Fase lunare media: 88.13%

- www.kevin-palmer.com - There are a lot of astronomical objects which have names that don't seem to fit. But this object strongly resembles its name: the California Nebula. It is located in the constellation Perseus and is very difficult to see even with a telescope because of its low surface brightness. The nebula is made up of hydrogen gas that glows because of the radiation from the nearby star Menkib. Also known as NGC 1499, this nebula covers roughly as much sky as 5 full moons. On the right side of the image dark nebula can be seen. It is made up of insterstellar clouds of dust so thick that it obscures the light of stars behind it.

 

This was shot with a Takumar 135mm f2.5 lens at f4, iso 1600. It is a stack of of 20 2.5 minute frames, plus 8 darks, and 8 bias frames. An iOptron Skytracker was used to track the stars.

Askar FRA400 with Altair Hypercam 533C

RGB 26 x 120s

Processed with Deep Sky Stacker and Affinity Photo

 

Target:IC1396 Elephant's Trunk Nebula in the Constellation Cepheus. Dense globule within ionised gas region at 2400 light years.

 

Location:05/12/2020 St.Helens UK, Bortle 8, 72% Moon, high cloud present, frosty.

 

Aquisition:19x 180s (SII), 17x 180s (OIII), 17x 180s Ha, Gain 139 Offset 21. Total Integration 159 min.

 

Equipment:Imaging; Skywatcher Esprit 100ED on HEQ5Pro mount. Zwo ASI1600MM Pro with EFW mini and Baader narrowband filters.

Guiding; Skywatcher 9x50 Finder with ZWO ASI120MM.

 

Software:Aquisition; NINA, PHD2.

Processing; DeepSkyStacker, Photoshop, Starnet++.

 

Memories:Enjoyable to be imaging after a very long period of cloud. High cloud interfered with capture and eventually cut short the session so hope for chance of more data soon.

First light for my Sky Watcher Evostar 80ED

This was captured from my back garden in light polluted Nottingham, I just couldn't wait to test out the telescope, gibbous moon or not.

 

I can foresee a visit to a dark sky site in the near future!

 

Canon 60D

SW Evostar 80ED f/7.5

EQ6 Pro (EQASCOM)

Astronomik EOS CLS Clip Filter

29 frames at ISO 1600

180s per frame

Total integration time: 87 minutes

 

Off axis guided using an SPC900 webcam and GuideDog.

 

Stacked in Deep Sky Stacker, processed in Photoshop, no flats, darks or bias frames used.

 

No focal reducer/corrector used.

M42 The Orion Nebula taken by Dan Brandon on 10-25-13 with an Orion 10"Newtonian Astrograph and a Canon T3i DSLR camera. This image is 9x10 S 9x30s 9x60s 9x120s exposures Stacked using DeepSkyStacker

獵戶座大星雲 Orion Nebula

(M42,NGC 1976)

  

NIKON Z6II

Tokina SZX SUPER TELE 400mm F8 Reflex MF

STC IC 內置型濾鏡架組 (Clip Interchangeable Filter Series) - 多波段干涉式光害濾鏡 (Astro Multispectra Filter)

 

ISO 3200 60s F8

Light frame :22p = 22min

Dark frame:10p

Flat frame:15p

DeepSkyStacker

Adobe Lightroom

2020-04-04

Conjunction. Venus and Plejaden

DSS Stack 103 pic's und process in LR

EOS 80D Sigma 150-600c @484

20sec f/7.1 ISO400

exposure time total 2060 sec

I decided to take advantage of the new moon, drag my telescope, and do some astrophotography last night...even with the time change and losing an hour of sleep. I'd say the bit of sleepiness today was worth it to get back into Astro and get this shot of my first time imaging this nebula!

 

The Rosette Nebula (NGC 2237) is 65 light-years across and 5,500 light-years away from Earth. It is visible in the sky between the constellations Gemini and Orion, in the head of the constellation Monoceros.

 

Equipment:

SkyWatcher EQ6-R

Nikkor 500mm f/4 P AI-S at f/5.6

Sony a7SIII (unmodified)

ZWO 30mm Guide Scope

GPCAM2 Mono Camera

 

Acquisition:

Taos, NM: my front yard - Bortle 3

32 x 180" for 1 hour, 33 min, and 31 sec exposure time.

5 dark frames

15 flats frames

15 bias frames

Guided

 

Software:

SharpCap

PHD2

DeepSkyStacker

PixInsight

Photoshop

Lightroom

 

I polar aligned my mount using SharpCap Pro. My Sony a7SIII and adapted Nikkor 500mm f/4 P AI-S were mounted on an ADM vixen rail and secured to the SkyWatcher EQ6-R mount. The guide scope/camera was attached to the camera's hot shoe. I used PHD2 to autogude during the imaging session. DeepSkyStacker was used to combine all frames, and the outputted TIFF file was brought into PixInsight using: STF, Cropping, Dynamic Background Extraction, BlurXTerminator, plate solving, color correction, NoiseXTerminator and then the DSO was separated from the stars, and both files processed and stretched separately and then recombined using PixelMath. That file was brought into Lightroom for Metadata and EXIF tags, light post-processing, and cropping to the final image.

BesT View ------> www.flickr.com/photos/90671057@N02/10592705954/sizes/o/in...

 

Half SizE ------> www.flickr.com/photos/90671057@N02/10592705954/sizes/k/in...

  

Not edited CR2 from camera converted to DNG with . Adobe DNG converter..

Stacking with DSS and reEdit in DPP

 

Light Frames : 121

Dark Frames : 12

Bias Frames : 18

tripod and manual Hand Tracking

 

Single Frame Details :

 

File name_MG_1768.CR2

File Size23.6MB

Camera ModelCanon EOS 600D

FirmwareFirmware Version 1.0.2 Powered by Magic Lantern

Shooting Date/Time10/29/2013 7:24:56 PM

AuthorMzytengaM

Copyright NoticeMzytengaM

Owner's NameMzytengaM

Shooting ModeManual Exposure

Tv(Shutter Speed)3.2

Av(Aperture Value)4.0

Metering ModeEvaluative Metering

ISO Speed2500

Auto ISO SpeedOFF

LensEF75-300mm f/4-5.6

Focal Length75.0mm

Image Size5184x3456

Aspect ratio3:2

Image QualityRAW

FlashOff

FE lockOFF

White Balance ModeColor Temperature(4400K)

AF ModeManual focusing

Picture StyleUser Defined 1(Auto)

Sharpness2

Contrast0

Saturation0

Color tone0

Color SpaceAdobe RGB

Long exposure noise reduction2:On

High ISO speed noise reduction2:Strong

Highlight tone priority0:Disable

Auto Lighting OptimizerStandard

Peripheral illumination correctionDisable

Dust Delete DataNo

Drive ModeSelf-Timer Operation

Live View ShootingON

Camera Body No.x.x

Comment No Comment

First ever Deep Space Object that I have imaged. I recently bought a Skywacher Star Adventurer tracking mount for my DSLR and used it to image the Andromeda Galaxy. Slightly out of focus, but still learning to use a tracking mount for astrophotography.

 

Details:

Canon T5i

75-300mm lens

Skywatcher Star Adventurer

 

Imaging:

64x20" Lights

20 Darks

No flats or bias

 

Processing:

Stacked in DeepSkyStacker

Stretched in Photoshop

Minor edits in Lightroom

 

Photographed from Enchanted Rock, a Bortle 2 site located an hour and a half west of Austin, TX

- Canon 60D stock

- Canon 70-200 f/2.8L w/ 2x extender @ 400mm f/5.6

- Celestron CGEM Mount

- Orion SSAG w/ mini guidescope

- 38 x 500 second light frames ISO 1600

- 20 dark

- 15 Bias

- Stacked in DeepSkyStacker

- Processed in PixInsight

- Shot on February 5th and 6th from a black zone in the California high desert

  

This is my first time combining multiple nights of data and also the first time I've done longer then 300 second exposures. This image has been tricky to process and I'll likely go back and try again. Some of the stars in my stacked image show some noticeable trailing, but that isn't the case with most of my subs. The stars aren't quite pin point in the subs either though. I'm thinking its some refraction or other type of aberration from the extender. That thing is nice to have for the extra focal length, but it really isn't the best and kind of kills the great optics of the Canon 70-200 f/2.8L. I'm going to try stacking the image in PixInsight. Other's have suggested I use that instead of DeepSkyStacker as it's suppose to do a better job, but I haven't had success with it in the past. Worth another shot I suppose. Still, pretty pleased with this image. I know there is a lot of Ha in this region and that can be difficult to pickup with a stock DSLR so I think I did a pretty good job.

Ha channel only.

 

Nights have been mostly cloudy and rainy these past few weeks, hope to get some clear skies soon to capture the remaining Oiii and Sii data.

 

🔭 Saxon AZ-EQ6 GT + Skywatcher Evostar 80ED

📷 QHY 268M + CFW3 Filter Wheel + ZWO EAF

24 x 10min subexposures

DeepSkyStacker | Pixinsight | EasyHDR | Lightroom

The Crab Nebula (M1, NGC 1952, Taurus A) is a supernova remnant and pulsar wind nebula in the constellation of Taurus.

At an apparent magnitude of 8.4, comparable to that of Saturn's moon Titan, it is not visible to the naked eye but can be made out using binoculars under favourable conditions. The nebula lies in the Perseus Arm of the Milky Way galaxy, at a distance of about 6,500 light years from Earth. It has a diameter of 11 light years.

 

Technical:

SkyWatcher 8inch newtonian F5

EQ5 GOTO Mount

Skywatcher Synguider

Nikon D90 afocal + UHC filter

11 min 36 sec exposure

29 light frames (30+60 sec exposures, ISO 3200+ISO6400)

30 dark frames

40 bias frames

DSS + Photoshop

Star Adventurer, stacked

Telescopi o obiettivi di acquisizione: Orion Mini Guidescope

 

Montature: Celestron SLT

 

Camere di guida: SVBONY SV305

 

Software: SharpCap Pro 3.2 Sharcap · DeepSkyStacker · Maxim DL · photoshop

 

Date:02 Gennaio 2021

 

Pose: 186x10"

 

Integrazione: 0.5 ore

 

Giorno lunare medio: 18.07 giorni

 

Fase lunare media: 88.13%

1 2 ••• 29 30 32 34 35 ••• 79 80