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ZWO ASI290MM/EFW 8 x 1.25"

Meade LX850 (12" f/8)/TV 2.5x PowerMate

Losmandy G11

 

10 RGB Runs (6.5ms, gain 385, 3800 frames/filter) captured in FireCapture

Preprocessed in PIPP

Best 50% of frames stacked in Autostakkert

Wavelet Sharpened in Registax

De-rotated in WINJUPOS

Finished in Photoshop

Aberkenfig, South Wales

Lat +51.542 Long -3.593

 

Skywatcher 254mm Newtonian Reflector, Tal 2x Barlow Lens, ZWO ASI 120MC Imager. Captured using Firecapture.

 

Processed with Registax 6 & G.I.M.P.

 

Seeing Conditions Good to Very Good.

 

A reasonable outcome considering the planet's low elevation from the horizon at the time of capture.

 

I was unable to capture Europa's impending shadow transit as the Earth's rotation obscured the target with some trees.

Mars images from October 2020 to March 2021. I had to go about three months between the last two images due to poor weather and when clear poor seeing at my location. Image show size, distance and dates for each image. Size is measures in arcsecond. Data captures with a Meade 12" LX200, ZWO ASI174MM camera.

Aberkenfig, South Wales

Lat +51.542 Long -3.593

 

Skywatcher 254mm Newtonian Reflector, Tal 2x Barlow Lens, ZWO ASI 120MC Imager. Captured using Firecapture

 

Processed with Registax 6 & G.I.M.P.

 

Another page from my observations log book

Jupiter is the largest planet in our solar system. It can fit 1200 Earth inside it. Jupiter is gaseous giant planet composed of Hydrogen, Helium, Methane & Ammonia. Its day is 10 hours and its distance from the Sun is 780 million Km. One of the most prominent surface features is the two dark brown bands around its equator and the Great Red Spot which is a giant Hurricane. Its size is double size of the Earth. Gear setup: Celestron Mak 127/1500, Televue 2.5x, UV/IR cut filter, ZWO 294 MC, iOptron iEQ 30 pro. Captured by Sharp pro. Stacked by Autostakkart!, wavelets by Registax, processed by PS.

Due to driver glitch, the filter wheel did not change fillters during the capture.. Since the three color channel images were identical (and probably captured through the blue filter, the result was a monochrome image.

 

ZWO ASI290MM/EFW 8 x 1.25"

TeleVue NP101is/2.5x PowerMate

Losmandy G11

 

ZWO ASI290MM/EFW 8 x 1.25" (RGB)

Meade LX850 (12" f/8)/2.5x PowerMate

Losmandy G11

 

5 RGB runs captured in Firecapture

Preprocessed in PIPP

Stacked in Autostakkert

Wavelet sharpened in Registax

Finished in PhotoShop

Voyage to an Unexplored Planet and a New Realm

The New Horizons mission will help us understand worlds at the edge of our solar system by making the first reconnaissance of the dwarf planet Pluto and by venturing deeper into the distant, mysterious Kuiper Belt – a relic of solar system formation.

 

The Journey

New Horizons launched on Jan. 19, 2006; it swung past Jupiter for a gravity boost and scientific studies in February 2007, and will conduct a five-month-long reconnaissance flyby study of Pluto and its moons in summer 2015. Pluto closest approach is scheduled for July 14, 2015. As part of an extended mission, the spacecraft is expected to head farther into the Kuiper Belt to examine one or two of the ancient, icy mini-worlds in that vast region, at least a billion miles beyond Neptune’s orbit.

 

Sending a spacecraft on this long journey will help us answer basic questions about the surface properties, geology, interior makeup and atmospheres on these bodies.

 

A portrait from the final approach. Pluto and Charon display striking color and brightness contrast in this composite image from July 11, showing high-resolution black-and-white LORRI images.

This is an image I found while cleaning my computer. Taken Feb 18th 2014 with the C11. LRGB image. I captured 20.000 frames for the LUM and 5000 on each of the color filters R,G and B. Focal length aprox. 7200 mm. Processing done using Autostakkert, Registax for wavelets and Phtoshop Elements. De rotation of the LRGB images with Winjupos

Solar active region AR3998 as it reached the solar edge.

Beyond the edge of the sun activity from AR3996 can still be seen.

 

Feb 27 2025

Askar 185, Dayatar Quark Chromoshere ds Lunt40, Baader DERF & Player One Apollo-M Max

 

** Earth was added for scale purposes only **

ASI224mc 5x barlow C8N reflector

Captured with a Mewlon 210 and QHY5lll 290C camera. Registax for stacking and processing.

Canon T6i with 28mm lens. Just before and just after totality.

Aberkenfig, South Wales

Lat +51·542 Long -3·593

 

Skywatcher 254mm Newtonian Reflector, Tal 2x Barlow Lens, ZWO ASI 120MC Imager.

 

Captured using Firecapture

FPS (avg.)=48

Shutter=0.145ms

Gain=63 (63%)

 

Apparent diameter at time of capture 15.76"

 

Processed with Registax 6 & G.I.M.P.

 

Seeing Conditions: Reasonably good.

 

Out of 7000 frames captured, about 1950 used for processing. Final image enlarged to 150%

This IR image was captured just before the Mars image immediately preceeding this one. Mars is within a WINJUPOS measurement wire frame.

 

ZWO ASI290MM/EFW 8 x 1.25" (IR)

Tele Vue 2.5x PowerMate

Meade LX850 (12" f/8)

Losmandy G11

Saturn is the most beautiful planet in the sky with its dazzling rings. Saturn is a gas giant planet composed of hydrogen & Helium gases with a rocky core. The Saturnian day is 10 hours only due to rapid rotation of the planet. Its distance from the Sun is around 1.4 billion Km. In opposition when Earth, Saturn & Sun become in one line. Saturn appears larger due to close approach. In this image Saturn, apparent size is 19 Arc-second. Gear setup: Celestron Mak 127/1500, Televue 2.5x, UV/IR cut filter, ZWO 294 MC, iOptron iEQ 30 pro. Captured by Sharp pro. Stacked by Autostakkart!, wavelets by Registax, processed by PS and Sharpen AI, Gigapixel AI.

The Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) caught this dramatic image of sunspot 1302 on September 28, 2011 with the Advanced Imaging Assembly (AIA). This sunspot has produced an x-class flare, two m-class flares and several CMEs since September 24. AIA takes images in 10 different light wavelengths. This one is shown in 171 Angstroms, typically colorized in yellow on SDO images. The thin, whispy lines are called coronal loops and they are made of hot solar material – charged particles called plasma – that collect around invisible magnetic fields looping up from the sun. The 171 Angstrom wavelength is one of the best for looking at these coronal loops.

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

 

Credit: NASA/SDO

Image Number:

Date: September 28, 2011

Mars conjunction with the Moon on September 5-6 2020

A collection of images obtained with my 254mm Newtonian reflector and 150mm refractor. Cameras used include Modified Philips SPC900NC Webcam, ZWO ASI 120MC & Canon SX 160 IS

ZWO ASI290MM/EFW 8 x 1.25 (RGB)

Meade LX850 (12" f/8)/2.5x PowerMate

Losmandy G11

 

Five 60s RGB runs captured in Firecapture.

Preprocessing in PIPP

Best 50% of frames stacked in Autostakkert.

Wavelet sharpened in Registax

Frame and R/G/B derotation in WINJUPOS.

Finished in Photoshop.

Solar Prominence - inverted image

Lunt LS60 ASI120MM camera

Aberkenfig, South Wales

Lat +51.542 Long -3.593

 

Image captured using a Skywatcher 254mm Newtonian, Tal 3x Barlow Lens & ZWO ASI 120MC Astronomical Imaging Camera.

 

Processed with Registax 6 & G.I.M.P.

40 images stacked Canon EOS 450D

Astronomical seeing was pretty decent when I captured the Jupiter data for the image immediately proceeding this one. My optics were starting to dew over, to I replaced the front cover, waited for an hour and found that the dew heater had completely dried the front glass on my SCT. I slewed to Mars and found that astronomical seeing had dramatically worsened. Being at the telescope and ready for another capture, I did 10 iRGB runs of 45s per filter at gain 400. In processing I found the B channel completely unuseable and the G channel not much better. I tried combining the colors anyway, and the image barely looked like Mars. The R channel, captured in IR, looked pretty decent, so I salvaged what I could.

 

ZWO ASI290MM/EFW 8 x 1.25"

TeleVue NP101is/2.5x PowerMate

Losmandy G11

 

About 20,000 frames per filter x 10 RGB runs captured with FireCapture

Best 60% stacked in Autostakkert

Wavelet sharpened in Registax

Finished in Photoshop

Skywatcher 200/800

TeleVue 3x Barlow

AZ-EQ6 GT

ZWO Asi 178MC-s camera

2022 10 16

Probably my last view of comet C/2021A1 (Leonard). Schlepped out to Goose Pond Fish & Wildlife area in Greene County, Ind., a dark site with low horizons on a cold but crystal evening. The comet was very low by the time it got dark enough to emerge from the twilight so it appears redder than when higher in the sky. But I got enough exposures, to show some detail in the tail and coma. This is a composite, processed twice: registered on the comet and separately registered on the stars, combined in Photoshop.

30 15 sec. exposures, Explore Scientific 102mm f/7 refractor, ZWO ASI294MC camera, UV/IR cut filter, iOptron CEM25P mount, ASIAir Pro controller, processed in Astro Pixel Processor, Lightroom and Photoshop.

#cometleonard, #astrophotography

Three panel mosaic using LS35T and ASI290MM camera

Mars is shrinking fast as the separation in orbit between Mars and Earth grows. Now down to 9.9 arsec compared to 11.9 arsec just over 2 weeks ago.

ZWO ASI290MM/EFW 8 x 1.25" (IR: 1 x 90s)

Meade LX850 (12" f/8)/TeleVue 2.5x PowerMate

Losmandy G11

 

One 90s IR run (1.1ms, gain 400, histogram 74%, 502 fps, 45,244 frames) captured in Firecapture.

Best 60% of frames stacked in Autostakkert

Wavelet sharpened in Registax

Finished in Photoshop

 

#TeleVue #PowerMate

#Meade

#Losmandy

#ZWO

#Mars

#Syrtis Major

#Planet

#Solar System

#Hellas

#Lucky Imaging

His birthday party theme was our solar system.

Cake decorations included the sun, jupiter, saturn, mars, and earth.

 

Sydney, Australia (Sunday 23 Sep 2018)

Sunlight filtering through the branches and leaves of a tree form eclipse images on the wall. No camera? No problem.

Moon taken by a remote telescope.

Process/crop

Capture date : 2025

Shooting parameters : I telescope

Processing: Thomas Thomopoulos

Image credit : I Telescope / Thomas Thomopoulos

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