View allAll Photos Tagged PixInsight

ASI 294 MC PRO.

SV503, 80 ED Svbony con

aplanador x1 (560mm).

Star Adventurer 2i.

Guiado Asi 120mm Mini.

Ganancia 123/ Offset 30 -10ºc.

L-Extreme 54x300s.

Bortle 7.

PixInsight.

Part of the Large Magellanic Cloud area but a part I have not taken before. N70 is the unmistakable Circular nebula top right. this was taken over two night to test out the New power supply box and how stable it is. The other effect of the power box was to reduce the number of cords that have to go from the top to the bottom to lessen the weight on guiding. the number of cord has reduced to two a far cry from the heavy load of the original 9. Now its fine tuning PHD2 to get the very small movement of guiding and better round stars.

 

ZWOASI071MC Pro -10c 90 shot 10 min

MeLE Mini PC

Pegasus Astro Pocket Mini power box

Prima Luce Essato Focus

Optolong LeNhance filter,

Skywatcher Black DiamondED80 OTA

Skywatcher NEQ 6 Pro

SVbony 50MM Guide scope

QHY QHY5L-II-M Guide camera

Guided PHD2, Nina

Pixinsight, Ps PTGui.

M51 shot in LRGB.

 

Data subs courtesy of Telescope Live.

 

Subs stacked in Astro Pixel Processor, then into PixInsight with the finishing touches in Affinity Photo.

 

What a great target!

ASI 294 MC PRO.

72 ED Skywatcher con reductor/aplanador 0.85.

Star Adventurer.

Guiado Asi 120mm Mini.

Ganancia 123/ Offset 30 -10ºc

L-Extreme 51x300s

Bortle 8.

PixInsight, Topaz Denoise AI.

3 hours of data in really bad seeing and transparency. I might end of throwing away the data in the long run.

First crack at drizzling in PixInsight. Sure slows down the processing!

- Asi 1600mm sur Newton SW 200/800

- L : 60 × 180s (3h)

- R : 25 × 180s (1h15)

- G : 25 × 180s (1h15)

- B : 25 × 180s (1h15)

Prétraitement Sirilic et traitement Pixinsight

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 50x300s

Bortle 8.

PixInsight,

Bill Blanshan's Color Palette.

Nebulosa California - Hubble HOO Palette

Nebulosa a emissione situata nella costellazione di Perseo, distanza stimata dalla terra 1000 A.L.

 

telescopius.com/pictures/view/241802/deep_sky/ngc-1499/ng...

 

Acquisizione: 42 light da 300sec. + (15 Dark - 15 Flat - 15 Bias) - Dithering

Integrazione complessiva: 3h e 30 min

Guadagno: 100

Temp. Camera: 0°C

Temp. Ambiente: 15°C

Bortle: 8

 

- Camera: ZWO ASI2600MC Air

- Tubo: Askar FRA400

- Filtro SVBony SV220 (7nm - H-Alpha/O-III)

- Montatura: ZWO AM3

 

- ASIAIR: Gestione/Acquisizione

 

- PIXINSIGHT + GRAXPERT + BlurXTerminator + Starnet: Allineamento, Somma, Correzione Gradienti , Deconvoluzione, Separazione Stelle e Riduzione Rumore

 

- PHOTOSHOP: Sviluppo finale

RC8 @ 1092 mm, Player One Poseidon-C (first light), Player One IR/UV Cut, 315 x 60" (5h55)

NINA, Pixinsight, Affinity Photo 2

NGC 7023 located in the constellation Cepheus. Six images of 5 min's each taken at ISO 800 were stacked to give a total exposure time of 30 min's.

Using my SW 250pds, filter wheel, LRGB filters and Atik 490ex. Guiding was 90x50 finder with QHY5IIL. Software used was Artemis capture, PHD guiding, Pixinsight and Photoshop.

 

Not pleased with this one. Lost a lot of data as guiding was poor. This seemed very difficult to image.

38x HA at 300 seconds 1x1

8x RGB at 300 seconds 2x2

 

C9XLT + Player One Neptune-M (IMX178) + Astronomik LRVB type 2c - AS4/RS6/Pixinsight

Messier 78 in the constellation of Orion

Approximately 1350 light years from earth

Sky quality seeing below average

Stellarvue SVX130T Raptor

MallinCam DS26m TEK

Chroma 36mm LRGB

SG-Pro

Paramount MYT

PixInsight

 

Equipment:

Epsilon 130ED dual rig

QHY268m + CFW3M

Touptek IMX571 + ZWO EFW

Astronomik MaxFR

Skywatcher EQ8

 

September 2022

Processing: PixInsight/affinity photo

The God Of Thunder

NGC 2359 otherwise known as Thor’s Helmet and Sharpless 2-298 in the constellation of Canis Major at a distance of 15,000 light years from earth and spanning 30 light years, The central star is the Wolf-Rayet star WR7, a very hot star thought to be in a pre-supernova stage of it's life.

Photographed using broadband filters in channels RGB together with narrowband filters H-Alpha mapped to the red channel and OIII mapped to the blue channel using the Sky-Watcher Esprit 150ED Triplet Super APO Refractor (which we have on loan for testing thanks to Sky-Watcher USA) together with the QHY163M Monochrome CMOS

This setup is available immediately for people wanting to subscribe to Grand Mesa Observatory's system 2B grandmesaobservatory.com/equipment

 

Total acquisition time 21.13 hours.

 

View in High Resolution

Astrobin : www.astrobin.com/naqfkx/

 

Technical Details

Captured and Processed by Kim Quick and Terry Hancock

Location: GrandMesaObservatory.com Purdy Mesa, Colorado

 

HA 280 mins 40 x 420

OIII 280 mins 40 x 420

RED min 192 mins 32x360

GREEN 258 min 43x360

BLUE 258 min 43x360

Filters by Optolong

Camera: QHY163 Monochrome CMOS

Calibrated with Dark, Dark Flat and Flat Frames

Optics: Sky-Watcher 150 Esprit (courtesy of Sky-Watcher USA)

Image Scale: 0.75 arcsec/pix

Field of View: 1.37 degrees

EQ Mount: Paramount MEII

Image Acquisition NINA, Pre Processing in Pixinsight Post Processed in Photoshop CC

 

Thor (from Old Norse: Þórr) is a prominent god in Germanic paganism. In Norse mythology, he is a hammer-wielding god associated with lightning, thunder, storms, sacred groves and trees, strength, the protection of humankind, hallowing, and fertility. Besides Old Norse Þórr, the deity occurs in Old English as Þunor, in Old Frisian as Thuner, in Old Saxon as Thunar, and in Old High German as Donar, all ultimately stemming from the Proto-Germanic theonym *Þun(a)raz, meaning 'Thunder'.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thor

  

SW Esprit 80/400, Player One Poseidon-C, Player One Anti-Halo PRO Dual-Band Ha+OIII (40x180") & UV/IR Cut (270x60") pour 6h30 au total

Pixinsight + Affinity Photo 2

4 panel mosaic.

F=1800mm

img132e

Autostakkert

Microsoft ICE

PixInsight

An SHO image of Barnard's Loop North.

 

Data subs courtesy of Telescope Live.

 

Subs stacked in Astro Pixel Processor, then into PixInsight with the finishing touches in Affinity Photo.

 

Captured at PixelSkies, Castillejar, Spain

 

www.pixelskiesastro.com

 

Red x 50 300 secs

 

Green x 43 300 secs

 

Blue x 32 300 secs

 

10 hrs 25 mins 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 Red, Green, Blue

 

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, BlurXTerminator

NGC4753

 

Planewave 17” CDK

Camera: FLI ML16803

Filter: Chroma L,R,G,B

Focuser: IRF90

Focal Length: 2939mm

Focal Ratio: f/6.8

Mount: 10 Micron GM3000

Location: Deep Sky West, Chile

16h of LRGB data, combination in PixInsight done:

L: 33 x 600sec

R: 18 x 600sec

G: 16 x 600sec

B: 29 x 600sec

  

www.deepskywest.com/

planewave.com/product/cdk17-ota/

LRGB Version of B33 Horsehead Nebula with stars

Winter wouldn’t be complete without capturing an object within the glorious constellation of Orion, and fortunately we have a huge legacy archive at Grand Mesa Observatory and this time around I decided to process The Horsehead and Flame Nebula captured using our system 1 from broadband data (LRGB) collected in November 2020.

 

As I have done this so many times before I decided to process and present both a regular LRGB and starless versions which in my opinion provides a very surrealistic rendering of the nebulous regions full of detail that are otherwise hidden by the many visible stars.

As B33 has been selected as one of the GMO targets for January I am also hoping to add more data in narrowband soon “and when the snow clears”

Starless Version

Astrobin: www.astrobin.com/5k8k7b/

Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/terryhancock/52603009902/in/datepos...

 

This setup is available immediately for people wanting to subscribe to Grand Mesa Observatory's system 1 grandmesaobservatory.com/equipment-rentals

 

Total acquisition time 5.5 hours.

 

Technical Details

Captured and processed by: Terry Hancock

Location: GrandMesaObservatory.com Purdy Mesa, Colorado

 

LUM 86 min 43x120

RED 90 min 45x120

GREEN 80 min 40x120

BLUE 76 min 38x120

Filters by Chroma

Camera: QHY600 Monochrome CMOS Photographic version

Gain 60, Offset 76 in Read Mode Photographic 16 bit

Calibrated with Dark, Bias and Flat Frames

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

Image Scale: 1.19 arcsec/pix

Field of View: 3d 7' 41.0" x 2d 3' 5.3 (127.3 x 190.1 arcmin)

EQ Mount: Paramount ME

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

  

Less than one hundred light years from the Orion Nebula lies the aptly named Horsehead Nebula, another outcropping of the Orion Molecular Cloud and one of the most recognizable assemblies in the heavens. Whereas the Orion Nebula generates enough light to be visible to the unaided eye, the Horsehead has a far lower surface brightness and presents a challenge to visual observers even with large telescopes. But it’s a delight for astrophotographers and arm chair stargazers.

The Horsehead complex lies just south of the brilliant blue supergiant star Alnitak, the easternmost star in Orion’s Belt and just north of the Orion Nebula. The glowing reddish-pink region in the background is cataloged by astronomers as IC 434. Like the Orion Nebula, IC 434 is an emission nebula. It’s powered by the blazing-hot star Sigma Orionis, just south of Alnitak. Much of the nebula is permeated by tenuous streaks caused by magnetic fields in the region. This extract from The Armchair Astronomer by Brian Ventrudo and Terry Hancock

The book is available in multi-media format from Apple’s iBooks store, in high-resolution PDF format, and in standard e-book format from Amazon’s Kindle store. cosmicpursuits.com/astronomy-courses-and-e-books/armchair...

 

#IC434 #astro #astrophotographer #NASA #universetoday #APOD #deepspacephotography #photography #astrophoto #deepskyphotography #astrohobby #longexposure #photoshop #pixinsight #QHY600 #Space #Sky #deepspaceobject #deepsky #grandmesaobservatory #colorado #Milkyway #milkywaychasers #Astronomy #Astrophotography #Astroimaging #Universe #awesome #nightimages #Orion

Hello folks here Omega Centauri

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 45X120s exposure@0Gain

Integration: 1.5 hrs

Sh2-162 with a Rokinon 135

Camera: QSI 583 WSG5

Filter: Astrodon RGBH

Focuser: Robofocus

Focal Length: 135mm

Focal Ratio: f/2.0

Pixel Size: 5.4μm

Image Scale: 8”

Mount: Astro-Physics Mach1 GTO

Location: Deep Sky West, New Mexico

10,16h of RGBH data, integration in PixInsight done:

R: 26 x 300sec

G: 27 x 300sec

B: 29 x 300sec

Ha: 40 x 300sec

www.deepskywest.com/

nova.astrometry.net/user_images/4208322#annotated

November 20th starting 17:40

Edinburgh Bortle 8 zone

Celestron RASA 8"

ZWO 183mc pro

ZWO EAF

IDAS NBZ filter

ZWO air pro

Sky-Watcher HEQ5 Pro

4 panel mosaic -- each panel 45 x 60s lights, with flats, darks and bias

Gain 122 at -10C

Processed in APP , Pixinsight and Photoshop

An LRGB image of NGC2403

  

The image comprises of:

 

Luminance - 10 hours.

Red - 4 hours.

Green- 4 hours.

Blue - 4 hours.

  

Total - 22 hours

10 and 15 minute subs.

 

Acquisition - Planewave 12.5" CDK, PME, QSI 583 8WSG CCD, Lodestar auto guider, TSX, Maxim DL. Astrodon LRGB filters.

  

Processing Pixinsight 1.8 - I have had this data set around for a while and have never been happy with my processing results.

The Andromeda Galaxy shot in Arnaia, Greece (from bortle 4).

 

Equipment:

Canon rebel T6i

Skywatcher Black Diamond 80ED

Skywatcher EQ5 Pro SynScan mount.

 

Stacking and post-processing:

10 x 300sec light frames at ISO800

8 darks & 15 flats.

 

Preprocessed in APP, post-processed in Pixinsight and Lightroom.

 

Image Details:

Total exposure 9 hours 20 mins, 11:20 if you count the stars.

17x1200s Ha 1x1 (5hrs 40mins)

11x600s SII 2x2 (3hrs 40mins)

Darks, flats and bias. -20c.

2 Hour DSLR RGB stars.

Optic - SW Evostar ED80 DS-PRO with SW 0.85 reducer @ 526mm focal length.

Mount - HEQ5 PRO Synscan with Rowan Belt Drive mod.

Sensor - Atik 383l+ Mono CCD + Baader 36mm 7nm Ha and 8nm SII..

Guiding - ZWO ASI120MM + Orion 162mm/F3.2 guidescope with PHD2.

Sequence Generator Pro and PixInsight.

 

Thanks for looking.

Astro-Physics 130 GTX + QUADTCC @ F/4.5

Moravian G3 11002 + Astrodon RGB

Astro Physics 1200

 

RGB: 120x300s bin 1x1

 

Total exposure: 31h

  

Captured with Sequence Generator Pro

Processed with Pixinsight

LBN 458, LBN 462, LBN 460 and more

 

Equipment:

Epsilon 130D dual rig

QHY268m + CFW3M

TS2600MP (Touptek IMX571) + ZWO EFW

Astronomik DeepSky RGB

Astronomik MaxFR

Pegasus NYX-101

 

June/July 2024

Location: french alp

  

412x180s Luminanz

34x180s red

46x180s green

43x180s blue

 

26,75 total

Edinburgh Bortle 7/8 zone

3 sessions in August 2021

Celestron RASA 8"

ZWO 183mc pro

IDAS NBZ filter

ZWO ZWO ASI Air Pro

Sky-Watcher HEQ5 Pro

140 X 60s lights; with flats, darks and bias

Gain 122 at -10C

Processed in APP and Pixinsight

Hello folks,NGC6726.

 

Telescope: SharpStar 150 f2,8

Guide Scope:Zwo Mini Guidescope

Mount : Skywatcher HEQ5

Imaging camera: ZWO 2600MC

Guiding camera: ZWO 290MC

Filters: None

Plate solving: SGpro

Imaging software: Sgpro

Guiding software: PHD2

Processing software: Pixinsight

Frames:108 X 300s exposure @ 0Gain.

Integration:9 hrs

Close up of the Center of the Very large Nebula. Still not Drunk enough to see a chicken any where in this nebula but I can see a Lioness in profile. A lot of learning editing between these two photos some two years worth and it getting a little easier.

 

QHY 183C -10c 45 shots 10 min each over three nights.

MeLE Mini PC

Pegasus Astro Pocket Mini power box

Prima Luce Essato Focus

Optolong LeNhance filter,

Skywatcher Black DiamondED80 OTA

Skywatcher NEQ 6 Pro Hypertuned

SVbony 50MM Guide scope

QHY5L-II-M Guide camera

Guided PHD2, Nina

Pixinsight, Ps .

Taken just as it was getting dark. Camera was ZWO ASI120MC-S on my 250pds telescope. This was around 3800 frames of avi video processed in Registax and Pixinsight.

Another collaboration by Tom Masterson and Terry Hancock

Captured on the 21st July at Grand Mesa Observatory using System 4a with the QHY367 Pro C full frame One Shot Color CMOS and the Takahashi E-180 (available on our subscriptions)

 

As Comet NEOWISE pulls away from the sun it's now possible to see the green coma. The grey/yellow dust tail and blue ion tail are also easily seen in this image.

Here's a handy guide on how to spot Comet NEOWISE: www.nasa.gov/feature/how-to-see-comet-neowise

Total Integration time: 10 minutes

Image details

 

Location: GrandMesaObservatory.com Purdy Mesa, Colo.

38.963365, -108.237225

 

View in Astrobin High Resolution

www.astrobin.com/ahjtjo/

 

Date of capture: July 21st 2020

Color RGGB 10 min, 10 x 60 sec

Camera: QHY367 Pro C Color CMOS

Gain 2850, Offset 76

Calibrated with Dark & Bias

Optics: Takahashi E-180 Astrograph

Image Acquisition software Maxim DL6

Pre Processed in Pixinsight and Deep Sky Stacker

Post Processed in Photoshop

 

  

The Elephant's Trunk nebula is a region of ionized gasses located in the constellation Cepheus at a distance of 2,400 light-years from Earth. Of interest in this area is the population of very young newborn stars, whose intense stellar winds are excavating the interior of the nebula. Dark wisps of dust hide the cocoon of forming stars, called "globules", which will be blown away when the star ignites.

 

Captured recently in Narrowband and Broadband using a QHY600 60 Megapixel Full Frame Monochrome CMOS camera mounted on a Takahashi 130 FSQ, courtesy of QHYCCD.

This setup is available immediately for people wanting to subscribe to Grand Mesa Observatory's system 1.

grandmesaobservatory.com/equipment-rentals.

In this cropped version of the original 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 using a tool called "Starnet" and the stars were later replaced during Post Processing in Photoshop CC with the more naturally colored stars from the RGB data.

I was so delighted with the result of the starless image I decided to post a starless image as well as the image with the RGB stars.

Captured bin 2x2 over 5 nights between March and July 2021 for a total acquisition time of 13.1 hours.

Technical Details

Captured and processed by: Terry Hancock

Location: GrandMesaObservatory.com Purdy Mesa, Colorado

Dates of Capture April 18th, July 1st, 4th, 7th and 8th 2021

HA 140 min, 28 x 300 sec

OIII 145 min, 29 x 300 sec

SII 135 min, 27 x 300 sec

LUM 94 min, 47 x 120 sec

RED 96 min, 48 x 120 sec

GREEN 92 min, 46 x 120 sec

BLUE 84 min, 42 x 120 sec

Narrowband Filters by Chroma

Camera: QHY600 Monochrome CMOS Photographic version

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 and Starnet in Pixinsight Post Processed in Photoshop CC

 

IC63 & IC 59 are faint emission and reflection nebulae in the Cassiopeia constellation.

Shot outside Arnaia, Greece (bortle 4) in November 2022.

 

Equipment used:

Skywatcher Black Diamond 80ED with an .85x Reducer/Flattener

EQ5 SynScan equatorial mount

Nikon D300 modified

Orion Starshoot autoguider

Orion Mini 50mm guide scope

 

Frames and Processing Software:

170 minutes total integration

34 lights

50 darks

50 flats

48 bias

 

Preprocessing: APP & Pixinsight

Post-processing: Pixinsight & Adobe Lightroom

Mas imágenes en:

www.aipastroimaging.com

 

Twitter: twitter.com/kokehtz

 

Telescopio: Takahashi FSQ106EDX (f/5)

Montura: Takahashi EM400 Temma2

Cámara: CCD Atik 16200 mono

Filtros: Baader LRGB + IDAS LPS P2

Rueda: SX USB Filter Wheel 5x2"

Guiado: Lunático EZG-60 + SXLodestar

Enfoque: RoboFocus + AstroMatic (ftorrev)

Adquisición: AstroMatic (ftorrev)

Procesado y apilado: PixInsight Core + PS

 

L: 40x600 bin1, RGB: 12x300s bin2

 

Pioz, Guadalajara, España

Reprocess of my data from September 2019. Very few data, especially of SII.

Taken with my 10" Newton and SBIG STF-8300 with 6nm Astronomik filters. Fully processed in Pixinsight.

 

Ha: 9 x 1200 sec

OIII: 4 x 1200 sec

SII: 3 x 1200 sec

 

Total integration time: 5.3 hours

  

Comet Leonard: This post-processing image was taken with a Fujifilm X-T3, Nikkor 180mm f/2.8 @ f/5.6, iso 1600, exp 149x30s, in PixInsight and Photoshop on Dec8 between 4:17AM and 5:55AM.

 

During this period Comet Leonard was moving very quickly. The movement was evident in 1 minute exposures.

Quattro 200P + ASI294MM Pro LRGB

PixInsight, Photoshop

distance: 6,000 ly

 

HaRGB

 

Equipment:

TS 10" f/4 ONTC Newton

1000mm f4

GPU Aplanatic Koma Korrector

Moravian CCD G2-8300FW

Astrodon LRGB Filter

Astronomik H-Alpha Filter

Losmandy G11/LFE Photo

 

Guding:

Lodestar on TS Optics - ultra short 9mm Off Axis Guider

PHD2

 

21x600 H-Alpha

4x900 RGB

total exposure time: 7hour

 

Processing: PixInsight/Lightroom

 

15.September 2014

Canon 400 2.8 III + x1.4 + x2 (FL 1120mm)

Camera RGB ASI2600MMC

150x300s

Traitement Pixinsight + LightRoom

Newton 200x1000 - HEQ5.

Guidage chercheur + ASI120mc.

123x2min - ISO400.

CANON 1000Dd - Filtre Idas LPS D1 - Correcteur de coma Baader MPCC Mark III.

PixInSight - PS.

Ciel Bortle 8.

What started off as a 3 panel mosaic covering The Great Nebula in Orion, The Horsehead, Barnards Loop and M78 soon became a much larger project including over 20 deep space objects and the majority of the Orion Molecular Cloud. The final mosaic image covers 13.5 x 6.8 degrees of our night's sky.

 

The detail captured in this image is best seen by looking at the 1.99 arcsecond per pixel full resolution 1.8 gigabyte mosaic which can be viewed in full resolution here: tinyurl.com/2mzfvybs

Or View on Astrobin: www.astrobin.com/1f5i46/

Dominating the night sky from December through March, the ancient constellation Orion is one of the most famous and most photographed star groups in the heavens. The ancient Greeks associated these stars with a mighty hunter adorned with a belt and sword, holding a westward facing shield in his left hand and an upraised club in his right. These stars were even included in the fictional world of J.R.R. Tolkien where they were called Menelva-gor, the “Swordsman of the Sky”

 

Captured over 14 nights from Grand Mesa Observatory. Total integration time of 33 hours.

Here are the details:

Captured and processed by Nicolas Rolland, Tom Masterson and Terry Hancock

Location: GrandMesaObservatory.com Purdy Mesa, Colorado www.grandmesaobservatory.com

Camera: QHY367 Pro C Full Frame One Shot Color CMOS

Optics: Takahashi E-180 Astrograph

Image Acquisition software Maxim DL6

Pre-Processed in Pixinsight, PTGui

Post Processed in Photoshop, Pixinsight, Registar

 

Stack of 30 photos of 5' exposition from bortle 7.

Dark, flat and bias correction. Process with pixinsight.

Telescope Williams optics ZIII 73

Skywatcher Star Adventurer GTi

Camara Sony Alpha 6400

Filter L-eNhance Optolong

M42 Orion and Running Man Nebula

30x120 RGB

ZWO ASI2600MM

Skywatcher Esprit 100ed

Lights: 31x180" (1h30)

DOF: 30

Iso: 1600

 

Traitement: PixInsight / PS / DxO PhotoLab / Topaz Denoise

 

Canon 450D Défiltré

Skywatcher 80ED Equinox (80x500)

Télévue TV85 Field Flatteneur 0.8x

Skywatcher Neq6 Pro

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 88x300s

Bortle 7.

PixInsight,

IC2177 / Sh2-292 / Seagull Nebula

Takahashi TOA-150

Camera: FLI ML16200

Filter: Chroma Ha

Focuser: FLI Atlas

Focal Length: 1100mm

Focal Ratio: f/5.0

Mount: A-P 1600GTO-AE

Location: Deep Sky West, Chile

7,5h of Ha data, processing in PixInsight done:

Ha: 15 x 1800sec

www.deepskywest.com/

 

nova.astrometry.net/user_images/4355460#annotated

Bi color process Ha, O3.

42 x 300s - O3 (3 nm) subs

170 x 300s - Ha (5 nm) subs

Processed in PixInsight and PS.

ES ED80mm CF 0.8x FF FR

Losmandy GM811G

ASI1600 MM

1 2 ••• 16 17 19 21 22 ••• 79 80