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ASI 294 MC PRO.
SV503, 80 ED Svbony con
aplanador x1 (560mm).
HEQ5 PRO.
Guiado Asi 120mm Mini.
Ganancia 123/ Offset 30 -10ºc.
L-Extreme 23x300s.
Bortle 7.
PixInsight.
TS 115/800
ZWO ASI 1600 MONO COOLED
LRGB OPTOLONG 31mm Unmounted
L: 200 minutes (subs 5 minutes)
RGB: 40 / 30 / 30 (subs 2 minutes)
DSS + PixInsight + PS6
Taken with my Nikon d7100, Nikkor 35mm f/1.4 @ f/5.6, iso 560, 8 sec.
Image was cropped then resampled (enlarged) 2.5x original size using PixInsight (astronomy software) with no destruction to original content.
Near full moon illuminates the sky.
Storm was about 35 miles away.
An experimentation with binning colour data 2x2 to add to luminance data captured at full resolution.
5 hours of luminance with 1 hour of each red, green and blue.
Altair Astro 6" RC, Atik 460ex, processed in Pixinsight and CS5.
The Cygnus Wall, a portion of the North American Nebula (NGC 7000) in the constellation Cygnus. The nebula is approximately 1,500 light years from Earth, and the Cygnus Wall spans about 20 light years. The Wall exhibits the most concentrated star formations in the nebula.
Explore Scientific ED80, ZWO ASI2600MM, Antlia 3nm SHO, ZWO ASIAIR, ZWO AM5, PixInsight, Photoshop. SHO 600s subs 6hrs integration.
Re-processsing of earlier data. Taken with iTelescope T14 (Takahashi FSQ 106, SBIG STL-11000M CCD, Paramount GT-1100S mount and Astrodon narrow band filters). 6 by 5 minute exposures were taken with Ha, SII and OIII. Processing was done with PixInsight, Adobe Lightroom and Adobe Photoshop. Instead of using the Hubble color palette, Ha was mapped to red, SII mapped to green and OIII mapped to blue.
The 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 Grand Mesa Observatory 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.Captured over 4 nights in February 2022 for a total acquisition time of 14.6 hours.
This setup is available immediately for people wanting to subscribe to Grand Mesa Observatory's system 1.
grandmesaobservatory.com/equipment-rentals.
Technical Details
Captured and processed by: Terry Hancock
Location: GrandMesaObservatory.com Purdy Mesa, Colorado
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
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 CC
Distance: ca.30 Mio. Lj
Equipment:
TS 10" f/4 ONTC Newton
1000mm f4
ZWO ASI 1600mmc
Astrodon LRGB
Skywatcher EQ8
Guding:
Lodestar on TS Optics - ultra short 9mm Off Axis Guider
PHD2
total exposure time: 8 hours
121x180 luminanz
19x180 red
11x180 green
12x180 blue
14/22/23.03.2020
Processing: PixInsight/Capture One
The image shows IC 1871, a part of the soul nebula.
First image after telescope cleaning and assembly. There is still a little coma in the corners, but It is not that bad.
IMAGE ACQUISITION DETAILS
Location: My backyard
Date: 21.11.17
Exposures:
-Ha: 8 x 600s
Binning: 1x1
CCD Temp: -20°C
Total integration time: 1.3 hours
EQUIPMENT
Camera: SBIG STF-8300
Filter: Astronomik H-Alpha 6nm
Telescope: TS ONTC 10" f4.7
Corrector: TS Wynne 2.5" Coma Corrector
Mount: Astro-Physics 1100 GTO CP4
Guiding: Starlite Xpress Lodestar X2, Skywatcher 80/400, 2x barlow
SOFTWARE
Acquisition: Sequence Generator Pro
Guiding: PHD2
Processing: Pixinsight, Fitswork
Neptune was very difficult to capture. It is so small and dim. Don't get me talking about the focus! Not sure I had it right really. Spent some time cleaning up the large amounts of noise caused by having the gain up to much to get anything at all.
At least it's one for the collection.
250pds Scope
DMK21M camera
Pixinsight and Photoshop
The Lagoon Nebula (catalogued as Messier 8 or M8, NGC 6523, Sharpless 25, RCW 146, and Gum 72) is a giant interstellar cloud in the constellation Sagittarius. It is classified as an emission nebula and as an H II region. The Lagoon Nebula is estimated to be between 4,000–6,000 light-years away from the Earth. In the sky of Earth, it spans 90' by 40', which translates to an actual dimension of 110 by 50 light years. Like many nebulae, it appears pink in time-exposure color photos but is gray to the eye peering through binoculars or a telescope, human vision having poor color sensitivity at low light levels. The nebula contains a number of Bok globules (dark, collapsing clouds of protostellar material), the most prominent of which have been catalogued by E. E. Barnard as B88, B89 and B296. It also includes a funnel-like or tornado-like structure caused by a hot O-type star that emanates ultraviolet light, heating and ionizing gases on the surface of the nebula. The Lagoon Nebula also contains at its centre a structure known as the Hourglass Nebula (so named by John Herschel), which should not be confused with the better known Engraved Hourglass Nebula in the constellation of Musca. In 2006, four Herbig–Haro objects were detected within the Hourglass, providing direct evidence of active star formation by accretion within it. (Explore Scientific ED80, Skywatcher HEQ5, Antlia SHO 3nm, ZWO ASI2600MM-Pro, ASIAIR, Pixinsight, Photoshop).
The Elephant's Trunk Nebula is an emission nebula associated with IC 1396, a star cluster in the constellation Cepheus. This 6-panel mosaic spans approximately 4 degrees , about 8x the apparent width of the Moon. Image data was captured under dark skies near Goldendale, WA.
Telescope: Tele Vue 76mm
Mount: iOptron iEQ45 Pro
Camera: QSI 683wsg
Filter: Astrodon H-a CCD 5nm
Mosaic: 6 panels
Integration: 65 min (13 x 5 min) per panel.
Processing Software: PixInsight 1.8.8
NGC7635
Telescope: Planewave CDK20 20" f/6.8
Mount: Planewave L-500
Camera(s): Moravian C3-61000
Observatory: Remote Skygems Observatories - Nerpio, Spain
Starbase
Blue: 10x300 sec
Green:10x300 sec
Ha:22x600 sec
Luminance16x600 sec
O3:22x600 sec
Red:10x300 sec
S2:22x600 sec
Sh2-112 is a visibly emitting nebula in the constellation of Cygnus.
It is located in the northern part of the constellation, about 1.5 ° to WNW of the brilliant star Deneb.
It is a circular H II region of apparent size of about 15', crossed by a dark band on its western side oriented in a north-south direction. It is believed that the star responsible for its excitation is BD+45 3216; estimates of the distance of this star provide a value of 1740 parsec (about 5670 light years), which would place so Sh2-112 in a region of the Orion Arm particularly rich and physically very close to the great nebulous system of Cygnus X.
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator
(credits Italina wiki: it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sh2-112 )
Technical card
Imaging telescope or lens:Altair Astro RC250-TT 10" RC Truss Tube
Imaging camera:ZWO ASI1600MM-Cool
Mounts:Mesu 200 Mk2, Astro-Physics Mach-1 GTO CP4
Guiding telescope or lens:Celestron OAG Deluxe
Guiding camera:ZWO ASI174 Mini
Focal reducer:Riccardi Reducer/Flattener 0.75x
Software:Main Sequence Software Seqence Generator Pro, Pleiades Astrophoto PixInsight
Filters:Astrodon L Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon HA 36mm - 5nm, Astrodon B Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon G Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon R Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon S-II 36mm - 5nm, Astrodon O-III 36mm - 5nm
Accessories:ZWO EFW, MoonLite NiteCrawler WR30
Resolution: 2328x1760
Dates:July 7, 2019, July 21, 2019, Aug. 30, 2019, Aug. 31, 2019
Frames:
Astrodon B Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 35x30" (gain: 75.00) bin 1x1
Astrodon G Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 35x30" (gain: 75.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon HA 36mm - 5nm: 148x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon O-III 36mm - 5nm: 30x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon R Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 35x30" (gain: 75.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon S-II 36mm - 5nm: 42x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Integration: 37.5 hours
Avg. Moon age: 6.39 days
Avg. Moon phase: 27.92%
Astrometry.net job: 2916861
RA center: 308.507 degrees
DEC center: 45.642 degrees
Pixel scale: 1.007 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: 90.074 degrees
Field radius: 0.408 degrees
Locations: AAS Montsec, Àger, Lleida, Spain
Data source: Own remote observatory
Remote source: Non-commercial independent facility
CTB-1 aka The Garlic Nebula
IG: www.instagram.com/p/CTp1xyVhXIN/
AB: www.astrobin.com/nbsqqv/B/
This image was captured from my backyard observatory (total integration time: 25 hours)
CTB 1 is a supernova remnant (SNR) in the constellation Cassiopeia. This particular SNR was catalogued by George Abell as a planetary nebula in his now well-known catalogue as Abel 85 but it was suggested by van den Bergh in 1960 and confirmed by Willis & Dickel in 1971 to be, in fact, not a planetary nebula but rather a galactic SNR. CTB 1 is approximately 9784 light years away and physically spans another 98 light years in diameter while it is dated to be approximately 10,000 years old.
A recent study by Schinzel et al. reports that a pulsar was running away from CTB-1. The pulsar was likely born from the very same supernova explosion that produced the remnant. Supernova explosions don’t have a perfect symmetry, and the pulsar likely received a natal kick that sent it tearing away from its birthplace at speeds exceeding 1000 km/s, causing it to eventually overtake the expanding shell of gas and dust.
(link to the study: iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2041-8213/ab18f7)
The area top left of CTB1 has been confirmed as a shell rupture. This is likely to be the result of the supernova remnant's interaction with a nearby cavity of neutral hydrogen gas.
Equipment:
Telescope: Takahashi FSQ106EDXII
Mount: ASA DDM60 Pro
Camera: ZWO ASI1600MM Pro
Guiding: Unguided
Filters: Astrodon 5nm Ha, 3nm OIII, 3nm SII
Acquisition:
• 100 X 300s Ha at Gain 200 Offset 50
• 100 X 300s OIII at Gain 200 Offset 50
• 98 X 300s SII at Gain 200 Offset 50
OGS/RCOS 10", Atik 11000M, 16ic, EFW2, Astrodon E-Series Gen 2 HaLRGB, MMOAG, Paramount ME, PixInsight 1.8
Object description at www.billionsandbillions.com
Telescopio: Tecnosky Apo 80/344 mm f 4,3 FlatField
QHY10 CCD Montatura: iOptron CEM60
Telescopio guida: APM 60 mm f 4
Camera di guida: Starlight Xpress Lodestar X2
Software: EzCap 3.3.6, PHD Guiding 2.6.3 , Stark Labs Nebulosity 4.2, Pleiades Astrophoto PixInsight 1.8
Pose: IDAS LPS D1: 27x480" -15C bin 1x1
Integrazione: 3.6 ore Dark: 4 Bias: 28
Valore max SQM misurato: 18.50
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 59x300s
Bortle 8.
PixInsight.
IC 4633 & MW9 - LRGB
Optics
Takahashi FSQ106 ED f/5
Camera
Moravian C3-61000
Observatories - Hakos, Namibia
-23.235, 16.363
Blue 62x300 sec
Green 66x300 sec
Luminance 147x300 sec
Red 80x300 sec
Helix nebula
Quattro 200P, ASI2600MC Pro, ZWO ASI air plus
Light frame 300sec, Gain 100
Dark frame, Flat frame, Flat dark frame, Bias frame
PixInsight, Photoshop
A HaOIII narrowband image of the Eagle Nebula (catalogued as Messier 16, M16, or NGC 6611).
The Eagle Nebula is part of a diffuse emission nebula, or H II region, which is catalogued as IC 4703. This region of active current star formation is about 7,000 light-years from Earth.
A spire of gas that can be seen coming off the nebula in the north-eastern part is approximately 9.5 light-years or about 90 trillion kilometers long. The nebula contains several active star-forming gas and dust regions, including the "Pillars of Creation".
About this image:
This image consists of old narrowband Hα and OIII data, that I reprocessed after combining it with more data that I recently imaged.
The Hydrogen dust and gas (the most basic and abundant element in the Universe), emits in the Red part of the spectrum, and the doubly ionized Oxygen emits in the Blue part of the spectrum.
Wavelengths of light in this image:
Hydrogen Alpha line 656nm (7nm bandwidth).
OIII line 500.7nm (6.5nm bandwidth).
Processing:
Pre-Processing and Linear workflow in PixInsight,
and finished in Photoshop.
Plate Solving:
Platesolve 2 via Sequence Generator Pro.
Astrometry Info:
Center RA, Dec: 274.716, -13.820
Center RA, hms: 18h 18m 51.796s
Center Dec, dms: -13° 49' 11.111"
Size: 60.8 x 40 arcmin
Radius: 0.606 deg
Pixel scale: 2.21 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: Up is 9.62 degrees E of N
nova.astrometry.net/user_images/2794874#annotated
Martin
-
[Home Page] [Photography Showcase] [eBook] [Twitter]
A more subtle Hubble Palette channel mix ratio of the spectral wavelengths of light, to highlight the different elements in this interesting Deep Sky Object.
Also see the previous version, which was proceeded to more clearly highlight the elements of Hydrogen and Sulfur at the red end of the Spectrum, and the doubly ionized Oxygen at the blue end of the Electromagnetic Spectrum of Light. Rosette Nebula in Narrowband.
About this image:
A Hydrogen-Alpha + Sulfur-II + Oxygen-III Narrowband image of the Rosette Nebula (also known as NGC 2237 or Caldwell 49).
The Rosette Nebula is a large, spherical H II region located near one end of a giant molecular cloud in the Monoceros region of the Milky Way Galaxy. The open cluster NGC 2244 (Caldwell 50) is closely associated with the nebulosity, as the stars formed from the nebula's matter.
The cluster and nebula are at a distance of 5,000 light-years from Earth and measure roughly 50 light-years in diameter. The radiation from the young stars excite the atoms in the nebula, causing it to emit radiation (producing the emission of the nebula at specific spectral lines that we can image).
Narrowband wavelengths of the light spectra in this image:
The Hubble Palette (HST)
Hydrogen-Alpha - 656.3nm
Oxygen-III - 500.7nm
Sulfur-II - 672.4nm
Gear:
GSO 6" f/4 Imaging Newtonian Reflector Telescope.
Baader Mark-III MPCC Coma Corrector.
Celestron SkySync GPS Accessory.
Orion Mini 50mm Guide Scope.
Orion StarShoot Autoguider.
Celestron AVX Mount.
QHYCCD PoleMaster.
Celestron StarSense.
Canon 60Da DSLR.
Aurora Flatfield Panel.
Baader Planetarium 7nm Ha Narrowband filter.
Baader Planetarium 8nm SII Narrowband filter.
Baader Planetarium 8.5nm OIII Narrowband filter.
Tech:
Guiding in Open PHD 2.6.2.
Image acquisition in Sequence Generator Pro.
Pre-Processing and Linear workflow in PixInsight.
PixelMath RGB channel mixing and combinations.
Finished in Photoshop.
Astrometry Info:
View an Annotated Sky Chart of this image.
Center RA, Dec: 97.959, 4.991
Center RA, hms: 06h 31m 50.111s
Center Dec, dms: +04° 59' 26.502"
Size: 1.44 x 1.13 deg
Radius: 0.917 deg
Pixel scale: 3.24 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: Up is -180 degrees E of N
View this image in the World Wide Telescope.
Flickr Explore:
Photo usage and Copyright:
Medium-resolution photograph licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Terms (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). For High-resolution Royalty Free (RF) licensing, contact me via my site: Contact.
Martin
-
[Home Page] [Photography Showcase] [eBook] [Twitter]
Sadr area narrowband SHO mapping
canon 200L @ f/2.8
STT-8300M with astrodon 5nm filters
mach1GTO
60x600' SII
15x600' Ha
37x600' OIII
processed in pixinsight with the help of RickS's colormask script.
First attempt at doing a mosaic. Used NINA to capture 2 panels roughly covering nebula, processed and merged in PixInsight.
ZWO ASI2600MC Pro
Skywatcher Esprit 100ED
Each of 2 panels 20x240s
The Veil Nebula is a cloud of heated and ionized gas and dust in the constellation Cygnus. 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. The source supernova was a star 20 times more massive than the Sun which exploded between 10,000 and 20,000 years ago.
Data from March 2019.
Meade R8 203/1000. Canon EOS 550D. NEQ5 Pro II.
Lights 15x600"
Darks: 15x600"
No Flats. No Bias.
Reprocessed with Pixinsight 1.8
IC 443 is a galactic supernova remnant in the constellation Gemini.
Details:
RGB: 62 x 480s, ISO 800
H-Alpha: 20 x 720s, ISO 800
12.6 hours total
Equipment:
Canon 450D (full spectrum modified), Explore Scientific 80mm APO Triplet @ 384mm, f /4.8, Televue 0.8x Reducer/Flattener, Orion Atlas EQ-G, Orion Starshoot Autoguider (using 50mm guide scope), Astronomik 12nm HA, Astronomik UV/IR
Calibration and Post-Processing performed in Pixinsight
2024-10-27
Harney, MD
This is my first attempt to use two panels to capture a celestial object. I used Photometric Mosaic to merge the panels in Pixinsight.
Camera: ZWO ASI2600MC
Guide Camera: QHY5III462
Telescope: Vixen ED80SF f/7.5
Mount: Losmandy G11
Integration:
107x120s (3.56 hrs) Panel 1
92x120s (3.06 hrs) Panel 2
No filters
Capture: NINA
Processing: Pixinsight, Affinity
NGC 4631 (also known as the Whale Galaxy or Caldwell 32) is a barred spiral galaxy located at 30 millions light year away in the constellation Canes Venatici.
More than 17 hours of integration on a new try to show all possible details with my equipment.
It's the last target before the COVID situation and before to stop all remote activities on the observatory, because just in case...
Technical card
Imaging telescopes or lenses:Teleskop Service TS Photoline 107mm f/6.5 Super-Apo , Altair Astro RC250-TT 10" RC Truss Tube
Imaging cameras:ZWO ASI183MM-Cool , ZWO ASI1600MM-Cool
Mounts:Skywatcher EQ6R Pro , Mesu 200 Mk2
Guiding telescopes or lenses:Celestron OAG Deluxe , Teleskop Service TSOAG9 Off-Axis Guider
Guiding cameras:ZWO ASI290 Mini , ZWO ASI174 Mini
Focal reducers:Riccardi Reducer/Flattener 0.75x , Telescope-Service TS 2" Flattener
Software:Pleiades Astrophoto PixInsight , Seqence Generator Pro
Filters:Astrodon R Gen.2 E-series 36mm , Astrodon G Gen.2 E-series 36mm , Astrodon B Gen.2 E-series 36mm , Astrodon L Gen.2 E-series 36mm
Accessories:MoonLite NiteCrawler WR30 , ZWO EFW , MoonLite CSL 2.5" Focuser with High Res Stepper Motor
Dates:Feb. 23, 2020 , Feb. 24, 2020 , Feb. 25, 2020 , Feb. 26, 2020
Frames:
Astrodon B Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 85x120" (gain: 183.00) -15C bin 1x1
Astrodon G Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 85x120" (gain: 183.00) -15C bin 1x1
Astrodon L Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 186x180" (gain: 75.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon R Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 85x120" (gain: 183.00) -15C bin 1x1
Integration: 17.8 hours
Avg. Moon age: 8.61 days
Avg. Moon phase: 2.77%
Astrometry.net job: 3501139
RA center: 12h 42' 7"
DEC center: +32° 33' 16"
Pixel scale: 1.007 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: -179.913 degrees
Field radius: 0.336 degrees
Resolution: 1728x1667
Locations: AAS Montsec, Àger, Lleida, Spain
Data source: Own remote observatory
Remote source: Non-commercial independent facility
NGC6334
Optics: Takahashi FSQ-106EDX III
Camera: Moravian Instruments G4-16000 MK I
Filters:
Blue: Astrodon (Gen2 E-Series Tru-Balance)
Green: Astrodon (Gen2 E-Series Tru-Balance)
Ha: Astrodon (5nm)
OIII: Astrodon (5nm)
Red: Astrodon (Gen2 E-Series Tru-Balance)
SII: Astrodon (5nm)
Mount: Planewave L-500
Integration Time13h 20m
As I enter my 4th year of being an astrophotographer, I can finally tick this target off my list.
Barnard's Loop is a Hydrogen Alpha (the red stuff) rich emission nebula in the constellation of Orion. It's difficult to capture since it's a faint nebula. I've imaged it before but wasn't satisfied with the result.
And so, it became the 1st target of #EveryNewMoon, an imaging project Cory and I started for 2016.
I'll write more about the project in the next few weeks.
For now: The Nerdy Stuff:
RGB - Canon 60Da
52 x 180 seconds
30 Darks
100 Bias
Integration time: 156 Min. 2h 36m
HA: 12 x 600 Seconds.
No darks or bias
Integration time: 120 min. 2h
Calibrated and Integrated in PixInsight
Total Integration time: 4h 36m
It was very difficult to work with such a rich star field. Shooting at 24mm meant millions of little pin-point stars. 2 Iterations of star reduction, and I'm scared that now the sky appears noisy. But in fact, it's just the ridiculous amount of stars in the image!
Equipment:
Celestron Advance VX
Imaging Cameras:
Canon 60Da
Shot at 24mm, ISO800
QSI 683
Imaging Lens:
Canon 24-70 Lii F/2.8
PixInsight Processing and final finishing off in PhotoShop
Skywatcher Esprit 80/400, ASI2600MM-Pro, Astronomik CLS et RVB (6h et 3x2h)
NINA, Pixinsight, GraXpert
ASI 294 MC PRO.
72 ED Skywatcher con reductor/aplanador 0.85.
Star Adventurer 2i.
Guiado Asi 120mm Mini.
Ganancia 123 & 200/ Offset 30 -10ºc
230x120s
60X60s
L-Pro
Bortle 8.
PixInsight.
Seestar S50, Eqmode, 239 minuti di posa con subframes da 10, 20 e 30 secondi. Elaborazione con PixInsight e Photoshop.
Image Details:
Red 10x120s
Green 8x120s
Blue 5x120s
Binned 1x1, -20degC, darks, flats and bias applied.
Total exposure of 46 mins.
Altair Astro 8" RC (CF) with AP CCDT67 reducer.
Atik 383l+ Mono CCD + Baader 36mm LRGB filters.
HEQ5 PRO Synscan with Rowan Belt Drive mod.
TSOAG9 OAG with ASI120MM guide camera.
Sequence Generator Pro and PixInsight.
Thanks for looking.
GUM 16 Grayscale
Planewave 17” CDK
Camera: FLI ML16803
Filter: Chroma R,G,B,Ha, OIII, SII
Focuser: IRF90
Focal Length: 2939mm
Focal Ratio: f/6.8
Mount: 10 Micron GM3000
Location: Deep Sky West, Chile
30h of data, combination in PixInsight done:
R: 11 x 600sec
G: 12 x 600sec
B: 12 x 600sec
Ha: 15 x 1800sec
OIII: 12 x 1800sec
SII: 4 x 1800sec
Skywatcher 250pds on Pier mounted HEQ6pro mount
SW80 with Synguider
Camera was DSLR Canon 1100D Astro mod
x19exposures at 200 seconds Lights CLS Clip filter
ISO 800 Total 1hr 3min
RAW files gathered in Backyard EOS
Stacked in DSS
Processed in Pixinsight.
Will add H-Alpha at the next opportunity
A blend of dual band and broadband capture. ~10h of dual band and ~9 hours of rgb.
USA
StellarVue 90mm Raptor
ASI 30mm guide, FMA 180Pro guid
ASIAir+
ASI 2600mcp, ASI 290mm
AM5
Processed in PixInsight
M42
Televue NP-101IS
Takahashi EM-200 w/ SBIG ST-I OAG
SBIG STF-8300
Baader HaSiiOiii Filters
Ha 50x180s
Sii 21x300s
Oii 31x150s
Total Integration = 5.54hrs
Processed in PixInsight
IC 2944I
Running Chicken Nebula
TS 115/800
ZWO ASI 1600 mono cooled
H-ALPHA 12nm
52 frames de 300 segundos
RGB: 60/40/40
Total: 400 minutos
PixInsight + PS6
Nebulosa da Lagoa
Messier 8
Na constelação de Sagitário, se encontra um dos mais belos objetos do céu noturno. Essa gigante nuvem interestelar foi descoberta por Giovanni Battista Hodierna aproximadamente no ano de 1654. Situada a aproximadamente 5200 anos-luz da terra, a vista desta nebulosa através de um binóculo, apresenta apenas uma mancha clara e oval, destacando-se apenas o aglomerado aberto, sobreposto a nebulosidade.
Embora pareça cinza ao olho humano, em fotografias de grande exposição, a característica cor Rosácea, nos apresenta esse majestoso objeto. A região mais Brilhante da nebulosa foi descoberta por John Herschel, e ficou conhecida como a Nebulosa da Ampulheta, região com intensa formação estelar. Grande parte do brilho da nebulosa é devido a estrela 9Sagittarii, que fica próxima a região brilhante. É classificada como uma nebulosa de emissão, onde os gases ionizados, em especial o hidrogênio, emite radiação principalmente no comprimento de onda na faixa da luz visível vermelha.
Texto adaptado da Wikipédia
Telescope: Triplet 115/800
Camera: ZWO ASI 183MMPRO
Filters: #OPTOLONG
Flattener/Reducer: 0.79
OAG
L: 8 hours
RGB: 3 hours(1 hour each channel)
H: 4 hours
S: 2 Hours
O: 2 Hours
todos os frames de 300 segundos em Bin1X1
Composição: Através da técnica de SuperLuminance, descrita no livro Inside PixInsight de #WarrenKeller , criei o Luminance
combinando minhas capturas em Hubble Pallette e LRGB, o que criou, sem nenhuma dúvida, a minha melhor imagem de Céu Profundo. Esse projeto me custou cerca de 12 horas de processamento além de Aproximadamente 20 horas de dados capturados.
Melotte 15 ist ein offenen Sternhaufen im Inneren des Herznebel welcher sich im Sternbild Kassiopeia befindet.
Aufgenommen in bicolor Ha und OIII
distance 7500 Lj
bicolor
Equipment:
TS 10" f/4 ONTC Newton
1000mm f4
GPU Aplanatic Koma Korrector
Moravian CCD G2-8300FW
Astronomik Ha Filter
Astronomik OIII Filter
Losmandy G11/LFE Photo
Guding:
Lodestar on TS Optics - ultra short 9mm Off Axis Guider
PHD2
13x1200s Ha
13x900s OIII
total exposure time: 7:30 hour
Processing: PixInsight/Photoshop/Lightroom
Equipment:
10" f/4 ONTC Newtonian Teleskope
ASI294mmPro
Astronomik L-2
Skywatcher EQ-8 Pro
Mai 2022
Processing: PixInsight/affinity photo
A bi-color Narrowband image of NGC 6188, an emission nebula located about 4,000 light-years away in the Southern Constellation of Ara.
About this image:
This image is the result of photographing at several occasions and different locations during the past year (from proper Dark Sky Sites to my Pier at home). Deep Sky Objects like this is a nice challenge, as it pushes the limits of my modest Telescope gear (especially my mount). It is very rewarding when you have to work hard for an image, and it turned into an ongoing project.
Technical Info:
64 x 600 sec. 7nm Hydrogen-Alpha (Ha).
64 x 600 sec. 6.5nm Doubly Ionized Oxygen (OIII).
William Optics APO Refractor Telescope.
Sensor cooled to -25°C on my QHY163M.
Integration time just under 22 hours.
Calibration frames: Bias, Darks and Flats.
Astrometry.net ANSVR Solver via SGP.
Pre-Processing and Linear workflow in PixInsight,
and finished in Photoshop.
Astrometry info:
Center RA, Dec: 249.643, -48.270
Center RA, hms: 16h 38m 34.224s
Center Dec, dms: -48° 16' 12.036"
Size: 1.59 x 1.22 deg
Radius: 1.003 deg
Pixel scale: 3.57 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: Up is 262 degrees E of N
View an Annotated Sky Chart for this image.
View this image in the WorldWideTelescope.
This image is part of the Legacy Series.
Flickr Explore:
APOD GrAG:
apod.grag.org/2019/06/03/fighting-dragons-nebula
Photo usage and Copyright:
Medium-resolution photograph licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Terms (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). For High-resolution Royalty Free (RF) licensing, contact me via my site: Contact.
Martin
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Decided to re-process a little bit better these images taken with a Planewave CDK 431mm F6.8, and FLI Proline 16803 CCD camera.
5 x 600s in H-alpha
6 x 600s in OIII
3 x 600s in SII
All bin1x1, processing and editing done in PixInsight and DxO PhotoLab 2.
Back in late September and early October 2018, I booked T32 in Siding Spring Observatory (Australia, part of iTelescope.net) over 3 nights to image a small part of the Large Magellanic Cloud through narrowband filters.
The telescope performed moderately well with some images slightly out of focus, but the most difficult part for me was dealing with column defects on the CCD sensor. I tediously listed 73 by hand, and some of them still show up after processing ...