View allAll Photos Tagged ORION
Orion Nebula taken with my Fuji X-t3 ans Fujinon 55-200. I used my home made tracker (barn door tracker) for this image.
She’s got everything she needs
She’s an artist, she don’t look back
She’s got everything she needs
She’s an artist, she don’t look back
She can take the dark out of the nighttime
And paint the daytime black
A deep image of the orion nebula area. Taken with a Borg ED101 and an STL11k camera.
A total of 60.9 hours of data were collected between November 2009 and March 2011.
a larger image as well as a bw-image can be found here:
www.starpointing.com/ccd/orion.html
Equipment used: BorgED101, STL11000M, Baader HaRGB filter set
Hydrogen Alpha and Color Composite Image.
Exposure:
H-a: 25x300second exposures at ISO 1600, f/1.4, 12nm Ha Filter
Color: 9x300sec exposures, ISO 800, f/2.8, CLS LP FIlter
Camera: Canon EOS 60Da
Lens: Sigma 35mm f/1.4
Mount: Losmandy G-11
Unguided
Date: 12/23/2016
Exposures shot RAW in BYEOS, stacked in Deep Sky Stacker, and processed in Photoshop
Equipment:
Askar ACL200 F4
Canon T1i Mod
Optolog 2" CLS Filter
Sky-Watcher AzGTi
39x180sec frames - ISO1600
AsiAir + PixInsight + Photoshop
Brazil
Bortle 3/2
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Bessemer 904 is back in town and spent alot of the last week going up and down Proctor Hill on ore. Seen from Skyline drive west of 27th they're done dumping and are pulling towards Collingwood
The most beautiful constellation in the night sky is back again followed by bright zodiacal light.
The best time to look out for them is in the morning hours on the south-east.
Taken on 1.9.2016 from Chopok (2024m), Slovakia.
Canon 60Dmod+Sigma 18-35mm, f1.8...Panorama from 6 images for the sky - 10x20sec, f2.8, ISO 6400 and 3 images for the foreground
with Sigma 4/500 Sports and Nikon d850
40 pics (selected from 100), low tripod, 2nd Lens support with grain pad, no tracking;
0,8 sec Exposure time
4.0 Aperture
ISO 4000
Live View Modus (no mirror movement);
20 dark- and 20 bios-frames;
stacked with DeepSkyStacker, result processed in lightroom
digital enlarged : about x2,5
Lugar: Finca La Pomarrosa, Barlovento, centro norte de Venezuela.
Por agosto de 1998, cuando era apenas un minino de dos semanas, Aristóbulo fue adoptado como mascota por Orión, por entonces un perro también muy joven de apenas tres meses de edad. Como se ve en la foto, gato y perro siguen comportándose como los amigos del alma que siempre han sido.
Place: La Pomarrosa Farm, Barlovento, north-central Venezuela.
By August 1998, when it was only a two weeks old kitty, Aristobulo was adopted as mascot by Orion, at that time also a young dog being only three months old. As you can see in the photo, cat and dog continue to be the very good friends that they always have been.
La constellation d'Orion prise avec un EOS760d et un Samyang 16mm. Juste pour le plaisir, une simple prise avec la Star Adventurer.
I can't take the credit for this shot. It was taken by my 6 year old son, Orion, on the way to school one morning. I set the camera up for him but it is entirely his composition.
A starless version of the lower portion of Orion, including the Witch Head nebula, supergiant star Rigel,a piece of Barnard's Loop, and Messier 42 The Great Orion nebula. Removing the stars reveals the large amounts of colorful dust clouds and nebulous emission decorating the region.
The sky and foreground landscape look reasonably bright and colourful in this scene I photographed in April of 2022 at the Boco Rock wind farm near Nimmitabel, Australia.
Unfortunately, the night was so dark I couldn’t see that I had my camera pointed at a cloudy section of the western sky. It wasn’t until I began editing my photos that I saw the brown haze caused by high-altitude clouds nor the grey shapes of other clouds closer to ground level. It took a lot of editing to draw some brightness and colour out of the original shots that make up this fourteen-frame stacked photograph. Maybe you can make out the shape of the constellation Orion in the photo, with the flaming torch-like glow of the M42 nebula at the top of the composition.
Looking at the image on a screen larger than a mobile phone might help you make out the crimson arc of “Barnard’s Loop”, an emission nebula stretching approximately 300 light-years of space.
As mentioned above, this photo was created by shooting fourteen single frames (10x lights and 4x darks) that I then stacked in the Mac application, Starry Landscape Stacker. I shot each of the 14 frames with a Canon EOS R camera, a Canon 50 mm f/1.8 lens @ f2.2, using an exposure time of 8.0 seconds @ ISO 6400.
Ive had this itch for several years to get into astro photography, but my attempts have been a dismal failure for many reasons, not least faffing around in the cold for hours trying to do polar alignments and locating objects to photograph. So I called a halt to my attempts a couple of years ago.
But the urge didn't go, and this week I bought one of these all-in-one astro telescope thingies. It's designed for beginners, and I suspect also idiots like me. It arrived on Thursday and amazingly the following evening was clear skies, so I gave it a go.
A full moon rather inhibited light gathering of the distant nebulae, but I did manage to capture an hours worth of Orion images. Then followed it with my feeble attempts to process the FITS raw file in Siril and Photoshop.
While this image has many warts and I am sure real astro photographers will grimace while looking at it, for me, it was the first time I had ever managed to capture an astro image in a way that I had intended. If I can work the telescope and produce this then it truly is idiot proof!
Hope my Flickr pals are all well, prospering and happy.
Joe
The next subject for some emission line imaging was the south west region of Orion, with the bright star forming region of the Orion Nebula, the Flame and Horsehead Nebulae and the fainter arc of part of Barnard's Loop.
Full spectrum modified Sony NEX-3N, Asahi Pentax Super Takumar 135mm lens.
17 minutes total exposure time
Herbert C. Jackson arrives Duluth with limestone for Hallett Dock 5 while CSL's Thunder Bay loads export ore for Quebec City. In the distance a BNSF coal train unloads at MERC.
My first attempt at the Orion Nebula. Shot in central Texas under Bortal 2 skies.
Shot on a Sony A7R3 with Sony 100-400mm @ 5.6. ISO 1600.
215 30" exposures. 20 Dark frames.
Stacked in Starry Sky Stacker and processed in photoshop
©AstroPhotoBooth 2021
Orion Nebula taken in Arizona Bortle 3 clear skies. My first foray into deep space object astrophotography! Taken with ZWO ASI183MC-Pro using Rokinon 135mm lens, ZWO 30mm Guide Scope, ZWO 120mm mini Guide Camera, ASIAir and EAF.
My effort at processing some pics of the orion nebula that me and my dad took. using my skywatcher 200p and his canon 60da. stacked and processed in pixinsight. Around 300 seconds in total.
This beautiful constellation is called Orion the Hunter. It covers huge area of the sky. The image is 35 x 22 degrees. The three stars in the middle is the Belt of the hunter, the two stars in the right is the lower extremities while Hunter’s shoulders are the two stars on the left and the head is surrounded by emission Red circular nebula. This complex cloud includes many astronomical objects like, Bernard’s loop sh2-276 which is supernova remanent happened before 2 million years ago. Orion nebula M42 and Horse head nebula IC 434 ( in the center of the image) which are both emission nebulae. M78 and witch head nebula IC2118 in the upper right of the image opposite to Rigel star which is reflection nebula. Lights 40 x 180, Optolong L-Pro, 40 x 180 Antlia Tri color ultra filter. Exposure time 4 hours. Gear setup: Rokinon 50mm @ f/2.8, ZWO 2400MC @ 0, ZWO Mini Guide scope, iOptron Sky Guider pro, ZWO ASIAir. Stacked in APP, Processed in PI + PS. Sky Bortle class 4. Cropped.
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The Orion Nebula (M42) blazes brightly in the constellation Orion. This stellar nursery has been known to many different cultures throughout human history. The nebula is only 1,500 light-years away, making it the closest large star-forming region to Earth and giving it a relatively bright apparent magnitude of 4. Because of its brightness and prominent location just below Orion’s belt, M42 can be spotted with the naked eye, while offering an excellent peek at stellar birth for those with telescopes. It is best observed during January.
SETUP:
SW Newtonian 150/1200
Canon T1i Mod
11x90"
Celestron CG5 Advanced GT Mount
Guider: 60mm + ASI120mc
Bortle 5 site
Porto Real-RJ / Brazil
First light on my new telescope the William Optics Minicat 51. I went to my private dark sky site to test it out. This is a 2 panel mosaic of Orion and Horsehead nebula. This is a HALRGB image. Hope you all enjoy and thanks for any constructive comments.
Equipment:
Telescope - William Optics Minicat 51
Imaging Camera- Qhy268m
Mount - Sky-watcher EQ6-R Pro
Software:
Sequence Generator Pro
Pixinsight
Lightroom
Photoshop
Lights:
R-120x15sec
G-120x15sec
B-120x15sec
Lum-120x30sec
Ha-60x120sec
35 Darks
100 Bias
Total integration 4.5 hours