View allAll Photos Tagged Deepskystacker
Localisation : CastresmallObservatory (Castres, Tarn - France)
Acquisition Date : 2017-07-11
Auteur/Author : ROUGÉ Pierre
Mouture/mount : Orion Atlas EQ-G
Tube/Scope : Newton Orion 200/1000 (f/5) + MPCC Baader
Autoguiding : Skywatcher Synguider (v1.1) & Meade ETX 70/350 mm
Camera : Canon EOS 400D (Digital Rebel Xti) refiltré Astrodon in Side (modded Astrodon in Side)
+ EOS CLIP CLS Astronomik
Exposure : 62 minutes [31 subexposures of 120 sec each (selected from 31)] @ ISO 400
Calibration : Dark & Bias : 10/0 @ ISO 400 - Flat & Dark-Flat : 0/0 @ ISO 400
Temps/Weather : Bonne transparence. Vent nul. T=22°C. Humidité faible. Moon/Lune
Constellation : Herculum / Hercule
Software Used : Astro Photograph Tool (v3.20), DeepSkyStacker 3.3.6, Pixinsight LE, PhotoShop 7, xnview, Noiseware Community Edition
Date: 7/7/13. UK.
Exposure: 24min (6x240s), iso 400, f/6.3, Guided.
Celestron 8SE OTA, Celestron Advanced Vx mount, Canon 1100d DSLR (modified) with UV/IR filter, Orion 10x50 finder, LifeCam Cinema (modified) guide camera.
Backyard EOS, PHD, DeepSkyStacker, Photoshop.
Imaging telescopes or lenses: Canon 70-200 f4 IS L
Imaging cameras: Canon 600 astro-modificated
Mounts: Skywatcher Star Adventurer B
Software: DeepSkyStacker, Photoshop, Fitswork
Filters: Astronomik Clip-Filter (EOS) / CLS
Resolution: 2090x3150
Dates: Dec. 21, 2014
Frames: 81x60"
Integration: 1.4 hours
Imaged on the first clear, moonless night for 4 weeks.
Manually guided for 8 x 4-minutes at ISO 1600; 6 x 5-minutes at ISO 1000.
Registered and stacked using DeepSkyStacker software.
Unmodified EOS 40D with Pentacon 300mm f4 lens, piggybacked on a Celestron C8 telescope.
Shot is taken on a Canon 40D with a specialized clip-in light pollution filter using the 35mm f/1.4L lens @ 1.4
A stacking of 9 light, 11 dark, and 9 bias frames with DeepSkyStacker.
I'm not completely sure what the "scratches" are in the image, but they don't appear anywhere in the source images. The "blotchiness" in the sky is caused by mixtures of clouds overhead as a result of the stacking process. I should redo with no clouds :(
I plan to add a few more nights of data to this and present a more widefield view.
Taken 4-27-16 at Lake Ray Roberts, TX
Scope: William Optics GT81 w/ 0.8x reducer (382mm focal length at f/4.7)
Mount: Orion Sirius EQ-G
Guidescope: Orion 50mm guidescope
Guiding camera: StarShoot Autoguider
Imaging camera: Canon t3i (unmodified)
ISO400
6x600" lights
5x darks
30x flats
150x bias
Stacked in DeepSkyStacker (2x drizzle custom rectangle)
Processed in Photoshop CS6
A stack of 10x60s captured in Nebulosity3 and processed in DeepSkyStacker. QHY22 camera on 300mm F/4 Newtonian telescope.
M81 and M82 form part of the M81 Group, a grouping of galaxies located approximately 11MLy from Earth in the constellation of Ursa Major. A total of 34 galaxies have been identified as belonging to the group (see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M81_Group#Members). For a higher resolution image of these two galaxies see flic.kr/p/dGoT2Y.
This image also includes two other members of the group; NGC 2976 and NGC 3077.
Exposure: 83 x 50s exposures @ ISO800 equiv. Darks & bias/offset, no flats.
Camera: Canon EOS 60Da
Lens: EF 70-200mm 1:4 L USM @ f/5.0. 200mm (x1.6).
Filters: Astronomik CLS
Mount: Piggy-backed on 8" Meade LX10. Rough polar alignment.
Guiding: None
RAW images stacked in DeepSkyStacker, processed in PSPx5.
Since I think I am at the limit of what is possible with the Andromeda Galaxy without a means of tracking, I thought I'd switch targets.
The next obvious thing to try was the Pleiades, so here's the result of tonight's exposure stacking. Around 180 two second exposures @ ISO 1600.
Just a hint of the reflection nebula, particularly around Merope.
While the telescope is collecting it's data with Canon 6D attached, the Canon 5D mk2 with 16mm lens took 20, one minute pictures around 03 am today. Stacked in DeepSkyStacker (no alignment and HDR selected)
November 16, 20:30 UT
Canon EF 50mm lens (MK I), at f/2.8, ISO 800
22 hand-tracked exposures: 10x30 secs, 12x15 secs (total exposure time 8 minutes)
Combined in DeepSkyStacker and processed in Photoshop
The comet is now large enough for me to image at 50mm (where the tracking requirements are a lot more forgiving). I was planning to go really deep to see if I could pull out the faint outer halo and the short tail, but the freezing cold put paid to that idea.
Best viewed large. The small version really doesn't do it justice.
I wasn't going to post this.
I have processed this thing to death, stretched it far too much, and clipped it in all sorts of places, but having said all that I'm sort of pleased. At least you can see what it is!
Had terrible trouble with ice (Saturday night) and had to bin most of the subs as Alnitak looked like it was peering through frosted glass (even more so than it does now), so this is just 16x60second frames (hence the reason I had to stretch it to death). I took 90. Also the master dark didn't fit anymore as I took the darks at the end (all iced up!)
My next attempt will be better (I hope)
16 x 60 second subs
20 darks
20 bias
10 flats
On my diy modded full spectrum Nikon D70, 200p, EQ5 unguided. DSS and processed til it squeaked in CS5.
Reprocessed here
Telescopio: Maksutov Celestron 127 mm
Montatura: Celestron SLT.
Fotocamera: Canon EOS R100 (non modificata).
Pose: 51x15 secondi @3200 ISO.
Elaborazione: DeepSkyStacker, Siril, Pixinsight, Gimp.
As hard as I tried, this was about the best I could get from Phoenix. From a Bortle 6 zone, I captured 500 2 second exposures of C/2020 F3 #NEOWISE, the #neowisecomet, on July 18th from 9-9:40pm. I ended up with a massive .tiff file and not a whole lot of detail for my trouble :/ I think I was just too late to the party (Neowise was much brighter a few days prior), and was shooting through too much light pollution, atmosphere, and haze.
Nikon D7200
f/5.6
2 sec x 500
ISO-12800
Nikon 200mm
Canon EOS T3i (600D)
Rokinon FE14M-C 14mm F2.8 Ultra Wide Lens
7 x 15sec subs, ISO 3200, f/2.8
Stacked in DeepSkyStacker
Finished in Lightroom
Taken July 2013 from Green Point Dunes, MI
Cropped from a DSS stacked image using some shots that I captured yesterday using an unmodified Canon EOS 60D mounted onto a Skywatcher 200 reflector in a light polluted city suburb. No guiding or filter used. Photoshop CS6 used to process the stacked image of 237 frames (ISO 2500;15 sec exposures).
From Wikipedia: “The Crab Nebula (catalogue designations M1, NGC 1952, Taurus A) is a supernova remnant in the constellation of Taurus. The now-current name is due to William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, who observed the object in 1840 using a 36-inch telescope and produced a drawing that looked somewhat like a crab.[5]Corresponding to a bright supernova recorded by Chinese astronomers in 1054, the nebula was observed later by English astronomer John Bevis in 1731. The nebula was the first astronomical object identified with a historical supernova explosion.”
Canon 550D with Celestron CGEM 1100HD. ISO 800 with 15 minute exposures plus 15 minutes dark frame for each shot. Stacking of 7 shots taken 2012-03-17 (1/2 hour per shot) using Deepskystacker. Post processing including gamma curve, brightness and overall contrast adjust using Canon DPP. Manual guiding using Celestron's off-axis guider and Orion's 12.5mm illuminated reticle eye piece.
Did one with the CPC 800 last year, using the 11: scope, this one seems to have more resolution and clarity - however, I need more stacks, too much grain in the nebulous areas.
UPDATE: Added 8 more to the stack 2012-03-24 to bring it to 15 total.
Sh2-252, nota talvolta anche col nome proprio Nebulosa Testa di Scimmia, è una nebulosa a emissione visibile nella costellazione di Orione. Si trova nella parte settentrionale della costellazione, al confine coi Gemelli. La sua declinazione non è particolarmente settentrionale e ciò fa sì che essa possa essere osservata agevolmente da entrambi gli emisferi celesti, sebbene gli osservatori dell'emisfero boreale siano leggermente più avvantaggiati; il periodo in cui raggiunge la più alta elevazione sull'orizzonte è compreso fra i mesi di novembre e marzo. Sh2-252 è una grande regione H II estesa per circa 25' situata entro i confini della costellazione di Orione, distante circa 6.500 anni luce dal sistema solare. Telescopio SV503 102/714 Svbony con spianatore Artflat 2, Cam Qhy294c pro, guida Phd2 con Asi 224 e tubo guida 60/240 no brand, acquisizione N.I.N.A scatti da 300" filtri usati L-ultimate 2" 8 ore, SII Svbony 2" 5 ore e 35 m. uv ir cut Svbony 2" 20 minuti per le stelle. Focuser by DeppyAle. Somma DeepSkyStacker Elab Pixi+PS
Orion Nebel M42
Ein neuer Versuch den Orion Nebel abzulichten.
12 RAW Einzelbilder gestackt mit DeepSkyStacker und mit DPP etwas nachbearbeitet.
10 Fotos mit einer Belichtungszeit von 50sec. und einer Blende von f4.5 ISO 400 bei 200mm und 2 Fotos mit einer Belichtungszeit von 50sec, Blende f4.5 ISO 160 bei 200mm.
Leider war der Mond schon so hell und nahe am Orion das nichts besseres mit meiner Ausrüstung möglich war. Schade das ich den Running Man nicht mit rauf bekommen habe.
Astrotrac TT320x-AG, Canon EOS7D, Canon EF 70-200 2.8 IS II USM, Astronomik CLS Clip Filter Manfrotto
055XPROB Pro Stativ, Manfrotto Getriebekopf 405, Manfrotto Kugelkopf 498RC4
Orion Nebular M42
A new attempt to get a good shot from the Orion nebular.
12 RAW single pictures are stacked with DeepSkyStacker and modified a little with DPP.
10 Pictures with an exposure time from 50sec, Apature f4.5, ISO 400 at 200mm and 2 Pictures with 50sec. exposure time, apature f4.5, ISO 160 at 200mm
The problem was the very near and bright moon. So i can’t get better picture on this day with my Equipment. A shame that i can’t figure Running Man on picture.
Astrotrac TT320x-AG, Canon EOS7D, Canon EF 70-200 2.8 IS II USM, Astronomik CLS Clip Filter Manfrotto 055XPROB Pro Tripot, Manfrotto Geared Head 405, Manfrotto Ball Head 498RC4
Prologue
In the constellation of Cygnus
There lurks a mysterious, invisible force
The black hole
Of Cygnus X-1
Six stars of the northern cross
In mourning for their sister's loss
In a final flash of glory
Nevermore to grace the night....
1
Invisible
To telescopic eye
Infinity
The star that would not die
All who dare
To cross her course
Are swallowed by
A fearsome force
Through the void
To be destroyed
Or is there something more?
Atomized — at the core
Or through the astral door —
To soar....
2
I set a course just east of Lyra
And northwest of Pegasus
Flew into the light of Deneb
Sailed across the Milky Way
On my ship, the Rocinante
Wheeling through the galaxies,
Headed for the heart of Cygnus
Headlong into mystery
The x-ray is her siren song
My ship cannot resist her long
Nearer to my deadly goal
Until the black hole —
Gains control....
3
Spinning, whirling,
Still descending
Like a spiral sea,
Unending
Sound and fury
Drowns my heart
Every nerve
Is torn apart....
To be continued
—Rush
Altair Astro 72ED-R with 0.8x flattener/reducer at f/4.8
Altair Hypercam 183C Pro (Offset: 50, Gain: 2500, Bin: 1x1)
Optolong l-enhance filter
3min. subs for 1hr total
Rowan-modded SkyWatcher HEQ5 Pro
Processed with Deep Sky Stacker and Affinity Photo
EXIF - 120X120" (4h), Gain 120, f5
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
Electronic focuser: ZWO EAF
Software: DeepSkyStacker + Pixinsight + Photoshop
Location: Medviđa, Croatia
Comet C/2014 Q2 Lovejoy, taken at McDermott Court at MIT.
Camera settings: 50mm F/1.4 lens @ F/2.2, 2 sec. per frame, 641 frames, ISO 1250. Stacked with 98 dark, 30 flat, 64 dark flat, and 100 offset frames subtracted.
Stacking settings: comet stacking, average mode, center ~40% cropped, 2x drizzle.
Celestron Nexstar 130SLT
Canon EOS 10D
DeepSkyStacker
Photoshop
73Frames Iso800 10Dark 10Flat
I wasnt sure, if telescope was in right position, but I just started shooting :)
Ok, I've posted the Orion Nebula before, but nowhere near this detailed. This is a total of about 20 minutes of exposures, and combined with a really dark location, so much structure came out, I was kind of blown away. This complex is MASSIVE. Our entire solar system would be invisible if it were placed in the heart of the nebula. It's truly enormous. About 141,087,008,956,406 miles across. (144 trillion miles) This is how we know the process of star formation. It's happening right here in this image.
01/28/12
Joshua Tree, CA
26 frames = 19 min 27 second exposures ISO 6400
Images stacked in DeepSkyStacker, processed in Gimp 2
6" Meade Newtonian Reflector LXD75 EQ Mount
Canon Rebel T3 DSLR
Canon 500D (mod) mounted on Astrotrac, Canon 40mm f/2.8 stop down to f/5.6, ISO 800, total exposure time 16*5min
Images calibrated by bias, dark and flat frames in DeepSkyStacker, background gradient removal in MaxImDL, colour & intensity adjustment in Photoshop.
The brightest star in this pic is Jupiter. Dwarf planet (1) Ceres is also well visible in this image, but excuse me for being too lazy to label it out. The total exposure is less than the expected because I had to stop taking photos due to increasing obstruction of a treetop, which has been largely removed by the median algorithm. The only remaining artefact is that it causes a faint dark splodge near the bottom right corner, though people may not be able to discern it whatsoever. It can certainly be removed completely by discarding the last several images which have the treetop, but this will reduce the overall total exposure time so I will just leave it there.
53Frames*30sec
Iso200
No Darks, flats, bias
Taken with
Celestron Nexstar 130SLT
Canon EOS 10D
DeepSkyStacker
Photoshop (with some plugins)
It has been so cloudy for so long time.. I started re-editing project..
crop of the constellation of orion showing the belt and sword. Taken with a canon 300d + 50mm f/1.8 on a tripod. Stack of 12 x 8 sec exposures at ISO 1600. Stacked in DeepSkyStacker post processed in PS CS3.
This is a stack from three thirty-second exposures. I used Local Adaption when converting from a 32-bit format down to 8-bit in Photoshop CS2 to enhance the nebular detail. The main nebula of interest is NGC 7000, or the North America Nebula, so named because it actually resembles the outline of that continent.
Rosette nebula
Barnards loop
Flame nebula
Horsehead nebula
Orion nebula
15x180s lights and 15x180s darks
iso 400
Canon EF 50mm F/1.4 USM @ F/4.0
Modded Canon 450d
Astronomik CLS
iOptron SkyTracker
deepskystacker & photoshop
---Photo details----
Stacks : 9 frames, 3darks
Exposure Time : 9x8min (1h 24min total) @ ISO 400
Stack program : DeepSkyStacker
Stack mode : Auto Adaptive Weighted Average
Post processing : CS5 for : curves adjustments, Lightroom 4 for local adjustments (contrast, exposure)
---Photo scope---
Camera : Sony SLT-A77
Tube : Skywatcher Explorer 150P
Type : Newton
Focal length : 750 mm
Aperture : F/5
---Guide scope---
Camera : Starlight Xpress Lodestar
Tube : Skywatcher StarTravel-102
Type : Refractor
Focal length : 500 mm
Aperture : F/4.9
---Mount---
Mount : Skywatcher EQ-6
---Image details---
Now in a new flavor : Extreme coma!
Objects
----------
--
Source : dso-browser.com/
NGC 7635, also known as the Bubble Nebula, Sharpless 162, or Caldwell 11, is an H II region emission nebula in the constellation Cassiopeia. It lies close to the direction of the open cluster Messier 52. The "bubble" is created by the stellar wind from a massive hot, 8.7 magnitude young central star, SAO 20575 (BD+60°2522). The nebula is near a giant molecular cloud which contains the expansion of the bubble nebula while itself being excited by the hot central star, causing it to glow. It was discovered in 1787 by William Herschel.
Imaged on 10-20-20 from my backyard.
Explore Scientific ED102/ASI 533 MC Pro camera with Optolong L-eNhance filter, and Stellarview FF/0.80FR.
180 second exposures at gain 104/offset 50
Total integration of 5 hours.
Processed in DeepSkyStacker and Photoshop CC.
First image completely processed in Photoshop CC.
Time: 2019. 7. 9. 22:00 ~
Location: Mauna Kea Visitor Station
Optics: Fujifilm XF56.2 (at F/3.2)
Exposure: Fujifilm X-E1 ISO 1600 x 30s x 28 subs (No Dark, No Flat, No Bias frames)
Mount: Toast Pro (TP2)
Software: DeepSkyStacker, Astronomy Tools, GradientXTerminator, Adobe Photoshop
Imaging telescope or lens:Explore Scientific 102mm ED CF APO triplet ED 102 CF
Imaging camera:Altair Hypercam 183C
Mount:iOptron iEQ30 Pro iOptron
Guiding telescope or lens:Starwave 50mm guidscope Starwave
Guiding camera:Altair Astro GP Cam 130 mono Altair
Focal reducer:Altair Lightwave 0.8 Reducer/Flattener Altair Lightwave
Software:Stellarium, StellaiumScope Stellarium, FITS Liberator 3.0, PHD2 2.6.4, APT - Astro Photography Tool APT 2.43, DeepSkyStacker (DSS) Deepskystacker 3.3.2, Photoshop CC 2017 Photoshop
Filter:Badaar Moon and SkyGlow Badaar
Resolution: 3163x2678
Date: Sept. 27, 2018
Time: 06:18
Frames: 60
Locations: Home Observatory, Newmarket, Ontario, Canada
Data source: Backyard
Equipo: Star Adventurer - Canon 6D - Canon 24/105mm f/4
30 x 120s @f/5 105mm ISO 3200
Procesado: Deepskystacker - Photoshop - Lightroom
Febrero 2022 - Punta Indio - Bortle 3
This is a very cropped version from the original image shot with a 50mm lens. A IDAS LPS-P2 light pollution filter was added to the lens. Digital Development Processing in AIP4W was used to pull the blue reflection nebula out of the background. A number of curve and level adjustments were made in Photoshop CS2 to enhance the blue.
Not the best in terms of star shape but the goal here was to see how much of the Merope Nebula I could coax from the sky fog and light polluted background. Obviously quite a bit when you filter out the street lamps. :O
I posted a picture of the Orion nebula for my previous upload which only used 16 minutes of light. This one used an hour and 15 minutes. Much prettier.
Nikon D7000 - Sigma 400mm f/5.6
66 x 1 minute exposures at ISO3200
16 x 30 second exposures at ISO1600
2 x 30 second exposures at ISO200
Flats, darks, and offsets for all
The whole collection tossed into DeepSkyStacker and combined via entropy weighted average method.
M101, NGC5474, NGC5422, NGC5473, NGC5477. ISO 800.15x120s.Skywatcher 120 ED. Canon EOS 6D. DeepSkyStacker. Pixinsight . Adobe Lightroom
Nikon D7100
50)subs 5 sec, f1.8, ISO-1600
Sigma 18-35mm f1.8
DeepSkyStacker - lights darks
Edited with Gimp
30 lights (25s f/3.5 ISO1600); 20 darks; 40 bias. Canon EOS 450D 18-55mm lens @18mm. DeepSkyStacker > PixInsight > Photoshop
Shotdate: 7-4-2013
Camera: Nikon D3x
Optics: Nikon 80-400mm f4.5-5.6 @ 400mm f8
ISO: 1600
Mount: AstroTrac
Subexposure: 195 seconds
DeepSkyStacker settings:
Stacking mode: Standard
Alignment method: Bicubic
Stacking 28 frames total exposure: 1 hr 31 mn 0 s
RGB Channels Background Calibration: Yes
Per Channel Background Calibration: No
Method: Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
Offset: 108 frames exposure: 1/8000 s
Method: Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
Dark: 5 frames exposure: 3 mn 15 s
Method: Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
Flat: 32 frames exposure: 5 s
Method: Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
Postprocessing in PixInsight Core 01.07.06.0793 Starbuck (x86_64)
Copyright (C) 2003-2012 Pleiades Astrophoto
open 20130407_M101_400mm_f8-0_195sec_ISO1600/Autosave.tif
DynamicCrop: Processing view: Autosave
5 times:
ChannelExtraction: Processing view: Autosave
ATrousWaveletTransform: Processing view: Autosave_L
HistogramTransformation: Processing view: Autosave
Autosave_L: Masking from swap files...
DynamicBackgroundExtraction: Processing view: Autosave
ImageIdentifier: Processing view: Autosave_DBE
id = org
ChannelExtraction: Processing view: org
ATrousWaveletTransform: Processing view: org_L
HistogramTransformation: Processing view: org
org_L: Masking from swap files...
ATrousWaveletTransform: Processing view: org_clone
ImageIdentifier: Processing view: org_clone
id = ss
PixelMath: Processing view: ss
Executing PixelMath expression: combined RGB/K channels:org-ss: 100%
Truncating to [0.0000000000,1.0000000000]: 100%
ChannelExtraction: Processing view: org
HistogramTransformation: Processing view: org_L
HistogramTransformation: Processing view: blur
org_L: Masking from swap files...
CurvesTransformation: Processing view: blur
org_L: Masking from swap files...
PixelMath: Processing view: blur
Executing PixelMath expression: combined RGB/K channels:org+ss+blur: 100%
Rescaling to [0.0000000000,1.0000000000]: 100%
ImageIdentifier: Processing view: itr1_clone
id = itr1_ss
ATrousWaveletTransform: Processing view: itr1_ss
PixelMath: Processing view: itr1_ss
Executing PixelMath expression: combined RGB/K channels:itr1-itr1_ss: 100%
Truncating to [0.0000000000,1.0000000000]: 100%
ChannelExtraction: Processing view: itr1_blur
HistogramTransformation: Processing view: itr1_blur_L
HistogramTransformation: Processing view: itr1_blur
itr1_blur_L: Masking from swap files...
CurvesTransformation: Processing view: itr1_blur
itr1_blur_L: Masking from swap files...
PixelMath: Processing view: itr1_blur
Executing PixelMath expression: combined RGB/K channels:itr1+itr1_ss+itr1_blur: 100%
Rescaling to [0.0000000000,1.0000000000]: 100%
HistogramTransformation: Processing view: itr2
CurvesTransformation: Processing view: itr2
ACDNR: Processing view: itr2
Building lightness mask: 100%
DynamicBackgroundExtraction: Processing view: itr2
HistogramTransformation: Processing view: itr2_DBE
OTA: Celestron C8N, 8" newtonian reflector and MPCC-III
Camera: ZWO ASI1600MM
Exposure: H-alpha 7x10min
Mount: CGEM-DX
Captured with SGP
Registered and stacked with DeepSkyStacker
Photographed from Round Rock TX (light pollution zone: red)
Got an hour of this tonight, much better result than my first one :)
Date:22/11/2009
Location:Brisbane Australia
Imaging Camera: Canon 1000D prime focus
Imaging Scope: 200mm Newtonian
Focal Length: 1000mm F5
Guide Camera: SSAG
Guide Scope: Orion 80mm F5 Refractor
Guided with PHD Guiding
Mount: Celestron EQ5 GT
Exposure: 60 min (30x2min) full colour
Darks: 8x2min
ISO: 800
Processing: DeepSkyStacker, CS3, Noel Carboni's Astronomy Tools