View allAll Photos Tagged PixInsight

ASI 294 MC PRO.

72 ED Skywatcher con reductor/aplanador 0.85.

Star Adventurer 2i.

Guiado Asi 120mm Mini.

Ganancia 123/ 30 offset/ -10ºc

367x120s

L-Pro

Bortle 8.

PixInsight,

Peek toward the handle of the Big Dipper with a telescope and you can find the Pinwheel Galaxy also known as M101. It lies 21 million light-years away, meaning the light traveled for 21 million years before hitting my camera's sensor. Discovered in 1781 by Pierre Méchain, one of Charles Messier's colleagues, the spiral arms stretches 170,000 light-years wide—almost twice the size of our Milky Way Galaxy.

  

Equipment:

SkyWatcher EQ6-R

Nikkor 800mm f/5.6 AI-S at f/5.6

Sony a7rIII (unmodified)

ZWO 30mm Guide Scope

GPCAM2 Mono Camera

 

Acquisition:

Taos, NM: my front yard - Bortle 3

40 x 212-second exposures for 2 hours, 11 minutes and 20 seconds of exposure time.

5 dark frames

15 flats frames

15 bias frames

Guided

 

Software:

SharpCap

PHD2

PixInsight

Photoshop

Lightroom

 

My a7rIII and adapted Nikon 800mm f/5.6 lens were mounted to my SkyWatcher EQ6-R mount using a vixen rail. The guidescope/camera was fixed to the front of the rail. I used SharpCap to achieve "excellent" polar alignment. I shot ISO 1600 at f/5.6. I took 212-second exposures using PHD2 with my guidescope to keep tracking accurately. I brought the lights/darks/flats/bias frames into PixInsight for stacking and aligning and then used: STF, Cropping, GraXpert, Dynamic Background Extraction, BlurXTerminator, plate solving, color correction, NoiseXTerminator, and then the galaxy was separated from the stars using StarXterminator, 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. I used Photoshop to sharpen the final image.

8x1800s Ha, 6x1800s OIII

 

R = Ha

G = OIII

B = 0.2*Ha + OIII (rescaled)

 

processed in pixinsight 1.8

NGC 281 a.k.a. Pacman Nebula

…………………………..

Discovered nearly 130 years ago by E.E. Barnard, an American astronomer, NGC 281 is an emission nebula that spans nearly 100 light-years and is located about 9,500 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cassiopeia.

NGC 281 is also known as the Pacman Nebula for its resemblance to the video game character.

Although it is an emission nebula, the Pacman Nebula is bright enough to be seen with a medium-sized telescope, preferably from low-light locations.

…………………………

Equipment and settings:

Mount: Skywatcher EQ6R Pro

Telescope: Explore Scientific 102ED

Flattener/reducer: APM Riccardi 0.75x

Camera: ASI 533MM Pro

Filters: SHO Astrodon 5nm

Total integration: 18 hours ( Ha 57 x 5 min, Sii 70 x 5 min, Oiii 88 x 5 min)

Edit in Pixinsight.

Location: my Bortle 6+ backyard

ASI 294 MC PRO.

72 ED Skywatcher con reductor/aplanador 0.85.

Star Adventurer 2i.

Guiado Asi 120mm Mini.

Ganancia 123/ Offset 30 -10ºc

L-Extreme 51x300s

Bortle 8.

PixInsight.

Hi guys,rho ophiuchi region.

Telescope: SharpStar 150 f2,8

Guide Scope:Evoguide

Mount : Skywatcher HEQ5

Imaging camera: ZWO 2600MC

Guiding camera: ZWO 290 MC

Filters: Lpro

Plate solving: SGpro

Imaging software: Sgpro

Guiding software: PHD2

Processing software: Pixinsight

Lpro: 30x600s exposure @ 100 Gain

Integration: 5hrs

 

Abell 39 è una nebulosa planetaria visibile nella costellazione di Ercole.

 

Si tratta di una delle nebulose planetarie più grandi della nostra Via Lattea, con un diametro di ben 5 anni luce; studi sulla nebulosa indicano che essa contiene circa la metà dell'ossigeno presente nel Sole.

La stella centrale, di magnitudine 15,7 e con una temperatura di 150.000 K, è spostata di circa un decimo di anno luce dal centro, per ragioni ancora da chiarire.

Dista dal Sole 7000 anni-luce.

(fonte Wiki)

 

Strumentazione:

RC12GSO su EQ8

CCD G24000

Astrodon Filter O3RGB

 

30x600" O3 - 35x300" x R - 20 x 300" G - 20 x 300" B

Circa 10 ore di integrazione totale

 

Elaborazione tramite Pixinsight/Photoshop

 

Link al nostro sito: www.3zobservatory.com/immagini/nebulose/abell-39-la-palla...

  

Autori: Paolo Zampolini e Giorgio Mazzacurati @3zObservatory

ASI 294 MC PRO.

72 ED Skywatcher con reductor/aplanador 0.85.

Star Adventurer.

Guiado Asi 120mm Mini.

Ganancia 200/ Offset 30 -10ºc

104x120s

L-Pro

Bortle 8.

PixInsight, Topaz Denoise AI.

ASI 294 MC PRO.

72 ED Skywatcher con reductor/aplanador 0.85.

Star Adventurer 2i.

Guiado Asi 120mm Mini.

Ganancia 123/ Offset 30 -10ºc

L-Extreme 30x300s

Bortle 8.

PixInsight,

Bill Blanshan's Color Palette.

Capture TelescopeLive CHI-2 Coquimbo Regon Chile..90 minutes capture at 1525m altitude.Processing Jan Zettergren, PixInsight and LR

Comet A3 is fading fast but still was visible in binoculars while overlooking Cheyenne, Wyoming.

 

Tech specs: RAW sub 9x30s, iso 800, f/5.6, FL 180mm, Fujifilm X-T5, PixInsight, Astrotrac 320X-AG. Fixed star with no comet drift in 4.5 minutes of integrated time. Bortle 5.5, transparency 8 of 10, clear moonless skies. Faint anti-tail still visible.

Ha 21x300s OIII 31x300s (4,3 hours total)

Canon 400mm 2.8 III + TCx2

AP GTO1100

Zwo 1600 MM Pro + EFW

Processing Pixinsight/LR

 

Nébuleuse en émission située dans la constellation du Cygne, à environ 5 000 années-lumière.

Egalement appelée nébuleuse du Croissant, est une bulle cosmique d'environ 25 années-lumière de diamètre soufflée par les vents de sa brillante et massive étoile centrale.

L'étoile expulse son enveloppe externe sous la forme d'un puissant vent stellaire qui l'amène à perdre une masse équivalente à celle du Soleil tous les 10 000 ans

LDN1235 nebula is a reflection nebula in the constellation Cepheus. It is so thick with interstellar dust that it blocks most of the light from the stars behind it.

It is also known as the Shark Nebula, because of its resemblance to a shark, with a distinct nose, dorsal fin and tail fin.

ccd: Moravian G3-16200 with EFW + OAG

filters: Optolong LRGB and Astrodon 5-nm Ha/O3

telescope: FSQ 106N f/5

mount: 10Micron GM2000 QCI

guider: Lodestar X2

exposure: L 30x10min + RGB 20x5min + RGB 12x1min + Ha 15x30min (all 1x1)

location: Les Granges, 900 m (Hautes Alpes, France)

software: TheSkyX Pro, CCD Commander, Pixinsight, PS CC

date: 1 - 29 Oct 2019

Clouds were problematic but I managed to get 30 subs exp 10s at iso 500, F/4 with my 180mm telephoto lens. Transparency was a 2 of 10. Stacked and post process in PixInsight.

 

The green nucleus is a new feature and the comet is around 4.5 magnitude. The anti-tail is barely visible at the lower right in this 7.5x5.0 degree field of view image.

 

Picture of the day

IC1848 emission nebula located in Cassiopeia.

 

Processed in Hubble palette colours.

 

Skywatcher 100ED

Canon 700d

Celestron CGEM DX

14x180s (42 mins) ISO800

Processed in PixInsight

 

10328px x 6833px

 

Resolution ............... 0.797 arcsec/px

Rotation ................. 90.001 deg

Observation start time ... 2023-01-21 21:29:28 UTC

Observation end time ..... 2023-01-21 22:31:41 UTC

Focal distance ........... 554.90 mm

Pixel size ............... 2.15 um

Field of view ............ 2d 17' 14.8" x 1d 30' 48.1"

Image center ............. RA: 2 53 17.192 Dec: +60 26 17.38 ex: +0.053614 px ey: -0.001726 px

 

ASI 294 MC PRO.

72 ED Skywatcher con reductor/aplanador 0.85.

Star Adventurer 2i.

Guiado Asi 120mm Mini.

Ganancia 123/ Offset 30 -10ºc

L-Extreme 40x300s

Bortle 8.

PixInsight,

Bill Blanshan's Color Palette.

The Seagull Nebula NGC2177The Seagull Nebula, also referred to as IC2177 and NGC 2327 The Seagull’s Head in the constellations of Monoceros and Canis Major, lying at a distance of 3,600 light-years from Earth. Captured from Whitewater CO in Narrowband using a QHY600 60 Megapixel Full Frame Monochrome CMOS camera mounted on a Takahashi 130 FSQ.

In this Hubble Palette version (SHO) the H-Alpha is mapped to green channel, SII is mapped to red channel and OIII is mapped to the blue channel. The raw data was

preprocessed using Pixinsight, the stars were removed in Photoshop using StarXTerminator and then later replaced with more natural stars from the RGB image. Captured over 4 nights in February 2022 for a total acquisition time of 17.6 hours.

Technical Details

Captured and processed by: Terry Hancock

Dates of Capture February 9, 11, 12, 13 2022

HA 315 min, 63 x 300 sec

OIII 260 min, 52 x 300 sec

SII 305 min, 61 x 300 sec

Blue 60 min,30x120 sec

Green 60 min, 30x120 sec

Red 60 min, 30x120 sec

Narrowband Filters by Chroma

Camera: QHY600 Monochrome CMOS Photographic version, water cooled

Gain 26, Offset 76 in Read Mode Photographic 16 bit, bin 2x2

Calibrated with Dark, Dark/Flat Frames

Optics: Walter Holloway's Takahashi FSQ 130 APO Refractor @ F5

Mount: Paramount ME

Image Scale:2.39 arcsec/pix

Image Acquisition software Maxim DL6, Pre Processing in Pixinsight Post Processed in Photoshop

Astro-Physics 130 GTX + QUADTCC @ F/4.5

Moravian G3 11002 + Astrodon RGB

Astro Physics 1200

TMB LZOS 152 + Riccardi Reducer @ F/6

Moravian G3 16200 + Chroma Ha 8nm

Parallax Instruments HD200c

 

8 Panels:

 

Ha: 6x1800s bin 1x1

L: 10x300s bin 1x1

 

4 Panels:

 

RGB: 25x300s bin 1x1

  

Total exposure: 59h

  

Captured with Sequence Generator Pro

Processed with Pixinsight, Astro Pixel Processor

Processed in PIxinsight which is normally used for astrophotography but it strips the EXIF.

Nouveau traitement V5.

Sky: Class 8 Bortle.

 

Lights: Total 3H

36x300s Optolong L-Extreme

DOF: 20x

 

Prétraitement: Siril

Traitement: PixInsight / EZ Processing Suite / PS / DxO PhotoLab

 

Canon 450D Défiltré

Skywatcher 80ED Equinox (80x500)

Télévue TV85 Field Flatteneur 0.8x

Skywatcher Neq6 Pro

Guide Scope: Zwo 30mm F/4

Guide Cam: Zwo Asi120MM

Guide Soft: Phd2 on Rpi

Comet C/2020 M3 Atlas in emerald green color passes by the main colorful nebula of the Constellation Auriga in this image captured and processed from Grand Mesa Observatory on 12/8/2020 by Terry Hancock and Tom Masterson. This image was captured using QHYCCD’s latest offering the QHY410C Back Illuminated Full Frame one shot color CMOS camera that we have the honor of testing.

 

The main nebulae in this image are the Flaming Star Nebula (IC 405) the comma shaped red and white/purple nebula to the top and right along with the Tadpole Nebula (NGC 1893) located to the center left. Comet C/2020 M3 Atlas is seen almost ‘touching’ the Tadpole Nebula in this image. Distance-wise Comet C/2020 M3 Atlas was a mere 3.74 light-minutes from Earth when this image was captured while the Flaming Star Nebula is about 1,400 light-years distant and further still is the Tadpole Nebula which is roughly 12,400 light-years away.

 

Technical Info:

Total Integration time 3.3 hours

Location: GrandMesaObservatory.com Purdy Mesa, Colorado

Date of capture: December 9th, 2020

Color RGGB 200 min, 100 x 120 sec

Camera: QHY410C Back Illuminated Full Frame Color CMOS

Gain 0, Offset 76

Read Mode: High Gain Mode

Calibrated with Dark, Bias and Flat Frames

Optics: Takahashi E-180 Astrograph

Image Acquisition software Maxim DL6

Pre-Processed in Pixinsight

Post Processed in Photoshop

 

1st of Jan. 2025: First light for my new Vespera Pro. Just a short test, due to poor weather conditions. Just 30min of data, integration done in PixInsight. CLS Filter used. Moon: First quarter 5%

Out last night with my Seestar S50.....dodging the clouds.......Jellyfish Nebula (IC443)......is the remnant of a supernova lying 5,000 light years from Earth.........240 x 10secs exposures........processed in Pixinsight and Photoshop

M78

 

Optics:

Sky-Watcher Esprit 100ED

Camera:

QHYCCD QHY268 M

Filters:

Blue: Antlia

Green: Antlia

Ha: Antlia (3nm)

Luminance: Antlia

Red: Antlia

Mount:

Astro-Physics 900GTO

Integration Time: 102h 45m

starbase.insightobservatory.com/home

nova.astrometry.net/user_images/11488908#annotated

My mom was offended when she found out that California has it's own nebula, but Colorado (our home state) does not. I guess I'll have to be on the lookout for a perfectly rectangular cloud of gas... but then we might not be able to tell it apart from Wyoming...

 

Technical Details:

Telescope: Tele Vue NP101 @ f/4.3

Camera: QSI 6120

Mount: Takahashi EM-200 Temma2

Guiding: Off-Axis with QHY 5IIL-M

Filters: Astrodon 3nm Narrowband

12x5min H-Alpha

32x5min OIII

12x5min SII

4.7 hours total integration time over two nights

Sequence Generator Pro

PHD2 Guiding

Processed with PixInsight

 

Captured in the Central District, Seattle

NGC7635

 

Vespera Pro: 1599x10sec Dual Filter= 4h26min30sec

Moon: 27%

Processed with PixInsight.

 

nova.astrometry.net/user_images/13638230#annotated

The Veil Nebula is a cloud of heated and ionized gas and dust in the constellation Cygnus, at about 2400 light years from us.

It constitutes the visible portions of the Cygnus Loop,a supernova remnant, many portions of which have acquired their own individual names and catalogue identifiers. In modern usage, the names Veil Nebula, Cirrus Nebula, and Filamentary Nebula generally refer to all the visible structure of the remnant, or even to the entire loop itself. The structure is so large that several NGC numbers were assigned to various arcs of the nebula. There are three main visual components: 1. The Western Veil (also known as Caldwell 34), consisting of NGC 6960 (the "Witch's Broom", Lacework Nebula, "Filamentary Nebula"; 2. The Eastern Veil (also known as Caldwell 33), whose brightest area is NGC 6992, trailing off farther south into NGC 6995 (together with NGC 6992 also known as "Network Nebula"; 3. Pickering's Triangle (or Pickering's Triangular Wisp), brightest at the north central edge of the loop, but visible in photographs continuing toward the central area of the loop.

The source supernova was a star 20 times more massive than the Sun which exploded between 10,000 and 20,000 years ago. At the time of the explosion, the supernova would have appeared brighter than Venus in the sky, and visible in the daytime. The remnants have since expanded to cover an area of the sky roughly 36 times the area of the full Moon.

Equipment and settings:

Mount: Skywatcher EQ6 R pro

Lens: Rokinon 135mm F2

Camera: ASI 533MM Pro

Filters: Astrodon SHO

Total integration: 10h30 ( Ha 49 exposures x 5 min, Sii 30 x 5 min, Oiii 77 x 3 min )

Edit in Pixinsight.

Location: my Bortle 6+ backyard.

NGC3293

 

SHO data from Telescope Live. Processed with PixInsight.

 

app.telescope.live/en

nova.astrometry.net/user_images/13388654#original

 

A different view of Carinae

 

Telescope Service 115/800

TS Flattener/Reducer 0.80

ZWO ASI 1600 MMPRO

ZWO FW 8x1.25

SHO filter Optolong

Frames:

SII: 60 x 300

OIII: 60 x 300

Halpha: 60 x 300

Total: 15 hours

DSS + Pixinsight + PS6

IC1848 emission nebula located in Cassiopeia.

 

Skywatcher 100ED

Canon 700d

Celestron CGEM DX

14x180s (42 mins) ISO800

Processed in PixInsight

 

10328px x 6833px

 

Resolution ............... 0.797 arcsec/px

Rotation ................. 90.001 deg

Observation start time ... 2023-01-21 21:29:28 UTC

Observation end time ..... 2023-01-21 22:31:41 UTC

Focal distance ........... 554.90 mm

Pixel size ............... 2.15 um

Field of view ............ 2d 17' 14.8" x 1d 30' 48.1"

Image center ............. RA: 2 53 17.192 Dec: +60 26 17.38 ex: +0.053614 px ey: -0.001726 px

 

Captured by David Wills at PixelSkies, Castillejar, Spain

 

www.pixelskiesastro.com

 

Lum x 154 300 secs

Red x 116 300 secs

Green x 66 300 secs

Blue x 49 300 secs

 

32 hrs 5 mins hours in total.

 

Equipment used:

 

Telescope: Takahashi Baby Q FSQ-85ED F3.9

 

Camera: Xpress Trius SX-694 Pro Mono Cooled to -10C

 

Image Scale: 2.82

 

Guiding: OAG

 

Filters: Astronomik Lum, RGB

 

Mount: iOptron CEM60 "Standard" GOTO Centre Balanced Equatorial Mount

 

Image Acquisition: Voyager Advanced

 

Observatory control: Lunatico Dragonfly

 

Stacking and Calibrating: Pixinsight

 

Processing: Pixinsight 1.8, Photoshop CC, StarXTerminator, StarNet v2,NoiseXTerminator

Tech Specs: Nikon d7100, Nikkor 85mm f/1.4 @ f/4, iso 3200, 17x60s. Processed in PixInsight, Lightroom, and Photoshop, guided with Astrotrac Mount. This is an uncropped image measuring 10.5hx17.5w degrees.

Tech Specs:

 

Taken 21-22 Dec 22, Oracle, Arizona, Bortle 4,

Transparency 9/10, calm, temperature 38F, RH 78%

Nikon d7100, Nikkor 180mm f/2.8 @ f/5

212x90s, iso 3200, Raw

Orion Sirius EQ mount, PixInsight

The Cave Nebula or Sh2-155 is a diffuse emission nebula within a larger nebula complex that includes a reflection nebula, and dark nebula. It is located in the constellation of Cepheus and lies around 2,400 light-years distant.

Imaged back in March 2022 but was never quite happy with the data. Have finally got round to processing it and this is the result.

HEQ5 PRO

WO7IGT with dedicated reducer/corrector

QHY183M Gain16 Offset 30 -20C

Baader narrowband filter set

900secX12 Ha

900sec X20 OIII

900secX26 SII subs

Total acquisition time 14hrs30min

Processed using Straton Star Removal, Pixinsight and Photoshop.

This is a reprocess of an earlier version.

 

100 x 5 minutes

100 x 10 seconds

50 darks, 100 flats, 100 bias

 

Equipment: Canon 450D (self-modded), Orion 8" f/3.9 Newtonian Astrograph, Atlas EQ-G, Orion SSAG+50mm guidescope

 

Calibration and post-processing in Pixinsight

------------------------------------------------------

 

• Sky-Watcher Quattro 250P

• Sky-Watcher EQ8-R Pro

• ZWO ASI294MM-Pro

 

• Astronomik L: 55x300s bin1 gain 0

• Astronomik RGB: 26x300s bin2 gain 125

• ZWO Hα 7nm: 12x300s bin1 gain 200

(total integration 7.7h)

 

• ZWO OAG & ASI290Mini guide cam

• TS GPU coma corrector

• ZWO EFW, ZWO EAF & Pegasus Astro Ultimate Powerbox 2

 

Trevinca, Valding, Spain

Bortle 3, SQM 21.8

 

processed with Pixinsight

This was taken with a telescope and an astronomical camera. Twelve 90 second shots stacked and processed with the PixInsight software and a little additional tweeking in Photoshop. More shots taken for a longer time would yield much more detail.

 

Some facts about M51:

 

1. Discovered by the French astronomer Charles Messier in October of 1773. Hence the 'M' designation. There are 110 objects in the Messier catalogue.

 

2. Its companion galaxy, NGC 5195, or M51 b as some call it was not discovered until 1781 by another French astronomer, Pierre Méchain.

 

3. These objects are about 26 million light-years from earth.

 

4. The diameter of M51 is approximately 76,000 light-years.

 

5. M51 is visible through binoculars ... but don't expect to see any color. In fact, you won't see any color using a telescope either. These objects are too far away ... too faint ... and the eye is just not able to gather enough photons. It will appear as a faint greenish-yellow object ... faint fuzzies some call them ... in binoculars. With a 100mm or 150mm scope and a good eyepiece some of the spiral structure will become visible.

 

6. If you want to try to find it in binoculars here's where to look: Find Alkaid, the last star in the handle of the Big Dipper, and then look just below and to the right of it ( actually 3.5° to the southeast of it).

  

Part of the Veil supernova complex.

 

Image Details:

Scope: A-P 130mm EDFS @ f/4.9 (reduced with 27TVPH)

Camera: QSI 6120

Mount: Takahashi EM-200

Guiding: QHY 5LII-M & Mini Guidescope (PHD2)

Image Capture: Sequence Generator Pro

 

Processing:

PixInsight

AstroPixelProcessor - Palette Blending - HSOO

 

Location: Central District, Seattle, WA

 

Ha: 30x10min

OIII: 30x10min

SII: 31x10min

Total integration time = ~ 15 hours

C9XLT + Starizona x0.63 + Player One Poseidon-C + AntliaTriBand

428 x 60" (7h08)

Pixinsight + Affinity Photo 2

Astro-Physics Riccardi-Honders 305mm @ F/3.65

Moravian C3 61000 + Chroma L

Astro Physics 1200

Astro-Physics 130 GTX + QUADTCC @ F/4.5

Moravian G3 11002 + Astrodon RGB

Astro Physics 1200

 

L: 102x300s bin 1x1

RGB: 25x300s bin 1x1

 

Total exposure: 15h

  

Captured with Sequence Generator Pro

Processed with Pixinsight

Tech Specs:

 

Taken 21 Dec 22, Oracle, Arizona, Bortle 4,

Transparency 9/10, calm, temperature 44F, RH 63%

Nikon d7100, Nikkor 180mm f/2.8 @ f/5

103x90s, iso 3200, Raw

Orion Sirius EQ mount, PixInsight, Photoshop

   

Running Man Nebula on the left, Orion Nebula on the right.

 

Always have to try for this every winter as it's such a gorgeous part of the night sky. This year I used the new BlurXTerminator module for PixInsight. It does a great job of reducing star size while enhancing DSO details. Still fighting star halos but it's improving my images nicely.

 

Image Details:

- Imaging Scope: William Optics 61mm ZenithStar APO

- Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI183MC Color with IR Cut filter

- Guiding Scope: William Optics 31mm Uniguide

- Guiding Camera: Orion Starshoot Auto Guider

- Acquisition Software: Sharpcap

- Guiding Software: PHD2

- Light Frames: 25*4 mins @ 50 Gain, Temp -10C

- Dark Frames: 25*4 mins

- Stacked in Deep Sky Stacker

- Processed in PixInsight, Adobe Lightroom and Topaz Denoise

The **Eagle Nebula**, also known as **Messier 16 (M16)** or **NGC 6611**, is a stunning region of active star formation located about **7,000 light-years** from Earth in the **constellation Serpens**. It is best known for containing the **Pillars of Creation**, towering columns of gas and dust famously photographed by the **Hubble Space Telescope** in 1995.

 

This vast nebula spans about **70 by 55 light-years** and consists of **interstellar gas, dust, and young, hot stars** that illuminate and shape the surrounding material. The Eagle Nebula is a **stellar nursery**, where massive new stars are born from collapsing clouds of gas. These young stars emit intense ultraviolet light and powerful winds that sculpt the nebula’s features and erode the dense pillars from which they formed.

 

The "eagle" shape that gives the nebula its name is created by dark, silhouetted dust lanes against the bright background of glowing hydrogen gas. The Eagle Nebula is both a scientifically important object and a visually iconic one, offering astronomers insight into how stars and planetary systems form and evolve over time.

 

Shot in New Orleans, LA

Bortle 8 Skies

 

TEC140

AP900

 

SHO: 21 / 20 / 24 x15m

Total Integration = 16.25h

 

SXT/LF/SHO/NBNorm/NXT/NBStars/HT/Conv/Recreen

ColorEfex/Curves/Sat

Hello folks here M45

Telescope: SharpStar 150 f2,8

Guide Scope:Evoguide

Mount : Skywatcher HEQ5

Imaging camera: ZWO 2600MC

Guiding camera: ZWO 290 MC

Filters: Lpro

Plate solving: SGpro

Imaging software: Sgpro

Guiding software: PHD2

Processing software: Pixinsight

Lpro180X60s exposure@100Gain

Integration: 3 hrs

Messier 101 ,a very large Galaxy located in Ursa Major

It has a diameter of 170 million light years in comparison to our milky way 's diameter of 100 million LYs

It is distance of 21 million light years from earth.

80x300L

40x300 RGB

QSI 583 Astronomik LRGB

SG pro

Stellarvue SVX102T-R with flattener

Losmandy G11T

Lodestar x2

PixInsight

 

Henize 70 Superbubble in SHO

 

nova.astrometry.net/user_images/13024992#annotated

6h of HSO data from Telescope Live. Processed with PixInsight.

 

app.telescope.live/en

 

NGC1747 SHO

 

Planewave 17” CDK

Camera: FLI ML16803

Filter: Chroma Ha,OIII,SII

Focuser: IRF90

Focal Length: 2939mm

Focal Ratio: f/6.8

Mount: 10 Micron GM3000

Location: Deep Sky West, Chile

31h of data, SHO combination in PixInsight done:

 

Ha: 20 x 1800sec

OIII: 24 x 1800sec

SII: 18 x 1800sec

 

www.deepskywest.com/

planewave.com/product/cdk17-ota/

Datos técnicos:

Telescopio: Takahashi FSQ106EDX (f/5)

Montura: Takahashi EM-400 Temma2

Cámara: Atik 16200 (KAF-16200)

Guiado: Lunático EZG-60 + SXLodestar

Filtros: Astrodon Gen2 LRGB I-Series 50,8mm

Enfocador: RoboFocus Rev3.1

Fecha: Julio del 2021

Lugar: Guadalajara, España

Programas de captura: MaxIm DL + AstroMatic

Procesado: PixInsight Core + Photoshop CC 2019

Exposición: L: 15x600s bin1, RGB: 12x300s bin2.

Total: 5h 30m

 

www.aipastroimaging.com

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