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Celestron NexStar 6SE, ZWO asi224mc with IR cut filter, 2.5x TeleVue Powermate and ZWO ADC. 2 minute video Captured in SharpCap, processed in PIPP, AutoStakkert, RegiStax Wavelets then Lightroom.

IC405 Flaming Star. Framing could be better. Needs more data. Scope: TSAPO65Q. Mount: SkyWatcher EQ6-R Pro. Camera: ZWO ASI294MC Pro. Guiding: Altair GPCAMv2 130M with Orion 50mm. 9x3 Mins Captured in SharpCap Pro. Processed in APP. Finished in Adobe CC.

Riprese effettuate il 5/7/12/13 Giugno 2024 da Ariccia Provincia di Roma

Zenith sky brightness info (2015)

SQM 19.20 mag./arc sec2

Brightness 2.25 mcd/m2

Artif. bright. 2080 μcd/m2

Ratio 12.2

Bortle class 6

Elevation 302 meters

 

Luna : da Mezzaluna calante a Primo quarto

Magnitudine visuale: da -5.6 a -11.2

Dimensione: da 0° 32' 35.0" a 0° 29' 54.8"

Illuminazione: da 1.7% a 55.2%

Età: da 28.4 giorni a 7.8 giorni

 

Dati di scatto, Strumentazione e Software:

 

Telescopio : Tecnosky LUX60 60mm 360mm F/6 APO FPL53 doppietto

Fotocamera : ZWO ASI 2600MC

Montatura : Skywatcher EQ6-R Pro

Autoguida : ASI 120MMini & Svbony SV165 30mm 120mm F/4

Luci : 148x600s @100 Guadagno, -5°C, 40 Dark, 40 Flat

Acquisizione : SharpCap

Guida : PHD2

Filtri : IDAS NGS1

Elaborazione : SharpCap, Siril, GraXpert, Starnet++, Photoshop CC, NoiseXterminator

 

Autore: Carlo Mollicone

 

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NGC7023 / LBN487 (talvolta nota come Nebulosa Iris o con la sigla C4 "Caldwell 4") è una nebulosa diffusa visibile nella costellazione boreale di Cefeo a 1300 anni luce dalla Terra.

All'interno vediamo una calda stella neonata, HD2000775, di 10 masse solari che emerge da un'enorme nube di polvere.

I suoi venti solari hanno ripulito una zona bilobata circostante che misura 5x2,5 anni luce.

La polvere circostante disperde la luce visibile della stella, proprio come la nostra atmosfera disperde la luce solare nel cielo, rendendo la nebulosa blu.

Nei filamenti sopra la stella, la polvere converte la luce ultravioletta invisibile in luce rossa visibile mediante la fotoluminescenza.

La nebulosa blu è circondata da scure nubi di polvere che la oscurano.

Anche se la nebulosa Iris viene spesso chiamata NGC7023, questo non è del tutto corretto.

NGC 7023 si riferisce all'ammasso stellare aperto associato a ovest.

La designazione corretta per la nebulosa stessa è LBN487.

La nube di polvere che circonda la nebulosa è LDN1174.

 

Storia delle osservazioni

Storicamente c'è stata una certa confusione sulla natura dell'oggetto; William Herschel, il suo scopritore, affermò correttamente che si trattava di un oggetto nebuloso che circondava una stella di settima grandezza, come pure la prima edizione del New General Catalogue che lo catalogò appunto col numero 7023.

La confusione probabilmente iniziò quando Per Collinder, famoso per aver compilato il suo catalogo di ammassi aperti, lo scambiò con uno di questi, inserendolo nel suo catalogo con la sigla Cr 429.

L'errore fu poi ripreso in seguito, al punto che persino il database SIMBAD lo riporta solo come un ammasso aperto.

In realtà l'ammasso si trova all'interno della nebulosa.

 

Altri oggetti:

The Ghost Nebula vdB141 (nota anche come Sh2-136) è una nebulosa a riflessione nella costellazione di Cefeo.

 

Si individua nella parte occidentale della costellazione, circa un grado a est della celebre nebulosa NGC7023.

Il periodo più indicato per la sua osservazione nel cielo serale ricade fra i mesi di luglio e dicembre ed è notevolmente facilitata per osservatori posti nelle regioni dell'emisfero boreale terrestre, dove si presenta circumpolare fino alle regioni temperate calde.

 

Si tratta di un globulo di Bok isolato, situato nel grande sistema nebuloso oscuro che maschera la luce della Via Lattea in direzione della costellazione di Cefeo.

La sua distanza è pari a circa 450parsec (circa 1470anni luce).

Il globulo centrale è noto con la sigla CB230, esso ospita la sorgente di radiazione infrarossa IRAS 21169+6804, associata a un oggetto stellare giovane posto al centro di un getto bipolare.

Assieme a una vicina sorgente visibile nel vicino infrarosso formano una coppia di protostelle che potrebbero costituire un sistema binario. Il getto è orientato in senso nord-sud e ha una lunghezza complessiva di circa 0,06anni luce.

 

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Approfondimento: Le nebulose oscure

Le nebulose oscure sono nubi interstellari che contengono un'alta concentrazione di polvere.

Hanno masse che arrivano anche al milione di masse solari, e si estendono per centinaia di anni luce.

Se il Sistema Solare fosse all’interno di una nebulosa oscura, occuperebbe meno di un centesimo delle sue dimensioni.

Le nebulose oscure sono per lo più composte da carbonio e idrogeno molecolare, cioè una particolare molecola costituita da 2 atomi di idrogeno che condividono gli elettroni.

In quantità minori contengono anche molecole di acqua, ammoniaca, alcool etilico, e persino zucchero e aminoacidi.

La densità di queste molecole è molto alta rispetto allo spazio interstellare vuoto: si va dalle 100 alle 300 molecole per centimetro cubo.

Le nebulose oscure sono anche ambienti gelidi, in cui la temperatura va dai -170°C ai -260°C, temperature prossime allo 0 assoluto che è di -273°C.

 

Ma come facciamo a vederle? e perché sono così scure e così fredde?

Le nebulose oscure si presentano a noi grazie a tre scenari.

1 - Il più frequente, e forse meno spettacolare, è quello in cui la nebulosa oscura si staglia tra noi e un campo stellare di fondo.

2 - Un altro scenario è quello in cui la nebulosa oscura si trova tra noi e una luminosa nebulosa ad emissione, filtrando quindi una parte della luce proveniente dalla nebulosa retrostante.

3 - L'ultimo scenario è quello in cui la nebulosa oscura si trova all'interno di una nebulosa ad emissione. Spesso in questi casi parte della nebulosa luminosa ha iniziato ad addensarsi più delle zone circostanti filtrando la luce. La fase successiva a questo fenomeno è l'inizio della formazione stellare.

 

Le nebulose oscure appaiono così nere a causa delle particelle di polvere che le compongono.

Queste particelle hanno all’incirca le dimensioni di un micrometro: un millesimo di millimetro.

Sono grandi come le polveri sottili che costituiscono il temuto PM10 nei centri cittadini. Un capello umano è largo circa 70 volte una di queste particelle.

Ma soprattutto queste particelle sono ricoperte da monossido di carbonio congelato: lo stesso gas che esce dalle nostre autovetture, e che quando è particolarmente denso rilascia una maleodorante nuvola scura.

 

Queste condizioni, protratte per anni luce, filtrano la luce delle stelle che hanno intorno.

 

E ora veniamo alla temperatura.

Abbiamo detto poco fa che le particelle che popolano le nebulose oscure bloccano la luce delle stelle che ci sono intorno.

In realtà non bloccano solo la luce visibile ma tutte le radiazioni dello spettro elettromagnetico, eccetto una parte degli infrarossi.

All'interno di una nebulosa oscura penetra meno di un millesimo della radiazione stellare rispetto allo spazio interstellare, e l'unica forma di riscaldamento è fornita dai raggi cosmici.

Ecco quindi che ai margini più esterni delle nebulose la temperatura resiste ancora intorno ai -170°, ma spingendosi più verso il centro, dove le radiazioni sono sempre più minime, la temperatura arriva quasi allo zero assoluto.

  

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#astrofotografia #astrophotography #zwo #deepsky #deepspace #universetoday #nebulae #nightsky #astronomy #astrophoto #nightphotography #longexposure #cosmos #space #universe #sky #dark #stars #stargazing

 

astrofotografia astrophotography zwo deepsky deepspace universetoday nebulae nightsky astronomy astrophoto nightphotography longexposure cosmos space universe sky dark stars stargazing

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Better seeing than my effort from the day before so this shows some hints of cloud detail. Celestron NexStar 6SE, ZWO asi224mc, Zwo ADC and Tele Vue 2.5x Powermate. Captured in SharpCap.

Taken on 25 July 2017 at 22.51 BST, on a rare clear night, with NexImage 5MP Camera, connected to Celestron NexStar 6 SE Telescope, using SharpCap. I think this is my best Saturn picture so far! :)

Transparency (4/5)

Seeing (3/5)

  

Exposure 40 X 1.5 sec-ish

 

C9.25 EDGEHD (F=2350mm)

ZWO120MC

SharpCap

Winjupos

AutoStakkert

PixInsight

Veil Nebula

Eastern Vail (NGC6992)

Pickering Triangle

Witches Broom (NGC6960)

 

ISO1600

31x245 sec (2h06'35")

16 light

32 bias

12 dark

33 flat

 

GT81

CEM25P

Nikon Z6

L-Enhance

asi224mc guide

 

PHD2 2.6.9

Sharpcap polar alignment 3.2

Digicamcontrol 2.1.2.0

 

DSS 4.2.5

GIMP 2.10.20

2021-08-25-1212_8__pipp_lapl4_ap58_Drizzle15_convRS3 PS3

 

12" skywatcher dob, 5x Tele Vue Powermate, ZWO224mc, SharpCap, Pipp, AS3

Telescopi o obiettivi di acquisizione: Orion Mini Guidescope

 

Camere di acquisizione: SVBONY SV305

 

Montature: Celestron SLT

 

Software: SharpCap Pro 3.2 Sharcap · PixInsight 1.8 Ripley Pisinsight 1.8 · photoshop

 

Date:19 Gennaio 2021

 

Pose: 84x15"

 

Integrazione: 0.3 ore

 

Giorno lunare medio: 6.15 giorni

 

Fase lunare media: 36.99%

Very ordinary seeing conditions (2/5) and gusty winds meant I should have stayed inside instead of trying to image this. Still, not a bad effort.

 

ZWO ASI120MC camera, Celestron C8, 2x barlow, Celestron CGEM mount.

 

41 frames per second and about 1400 frames captured in SharpCap. STacked in AutoStakkert with mild tweaks in Lightroom.

Lunt 60, QHYIII174,Televue 2.5x Barlow, AM3 mount, SharpCap acquisition. Northern Arizona

At 15:32 GMT on 10th December, the International Space Station transited the 46% Waxing Crescent Moon. Most of the transit was across the shadow side of the Moon so it can't really be distinguished from the background sky! Given the windy conditions. lots of cloud, the Moon was still quite low above the houses and the fact it was a daytime event I'm pleased to have caught anything at all!

 

Taken with a William Optics 70mm refractor and ASI120MC. Video was captured in SharpCap. The video was debayered using PIPP then I used Movie Maker to show the real-time speed twice, then at half speed, then at a quarter speed.

 

There is a VLOG all about this event over on my You Tube channel which you can view here:

youtu.be/VsIuZ5ZTuJE

Taken on 26 February 2019 at 18.22 ut, with Celestron NexStar 6SE SCT with ZWO ASI224mc camera, using 1 micron passfilter. AVI video captured in SharpCap, processed in Autostakkert and touched-up inc desaturation in PS.

Messier 57, the Ring Nebula, is a planetary nebula formed by a exploded shell of gas from a dying star before the star begins its turning into a white dwarf star. An average star is roughly the size of our sun. Our sun is roughly one million times the size of the earth. When a star runs out of the hydrogen gas fuel that powers its nuclear reactions, its matter compresses toward its center driven by its intense gravity. It compresses down to a size about one millionth of its previous dimensions, or about the size of our earth. As it does so, its matter loses their electrons and greatly increases in density. Matter that would normally fit into a teaspoon, and weigh an ounce or two, would then weigh as much as several tons. In this image, the tiny star at the center of the Ring Nebula is the white dwarf remnant core of the explosion.

 

This image was taken on the Ritchey-Chretien 6 inch telescope with a Canon T7i DSLR attached at the prime focus. Guiding was through a SkyWatcher 50ED Evoguide refractor (Aperture: 50mm) with an ASI183MC camera and PHD2 auto-guiding software. The mount was a SkyWatcher EQ6-R Pro. Exposures were 6 x 240s at ISO 800. Polar alignment was with SharpCap Pro.

The Crab Nebula has an interesting history. Key astronomers in the 18th century spotted it and Messier listed it first in his catalog of objects which should not be confused with comets. But it took until 1928 for Edwin Hubble to make the connection between this nebula and the supernova which formed it, recorded by Chinese astronomers in 1054!

 

It is not a particularly bright or prominent object -- Messier only spotted it when actively searching the constellation Taurus for Halley's Comet. Invisible to the naked eye, it can be seen as a grey blob from a small telescope or binoculars, while astrophotography reveals a fascinating and colorful inner structure. This Narrowband image features more of the lacy inner structure than my previous attempts.

 

Tech stuff: Borg 71FL with 2X TV Powermate for 800mm fl (f/11)

iOptron CubePro 8200 EQ mode guided with PHD2

QHY 163 mono bin 2; 8 and 15 second exposures livestacked with SharpCap 3.2 using dark and flat subtraction, -30° C

Astronomik Ha filter 90 minutes;

Astronomk O3 filter 50 minutes;

processed with PixInsight, GIMP, and ACDSee18

 

Imaged over 5 nights between Feb 11 and March 8, 2019 from my yard 10 miles north of New York City as part of my ongoing exploration of ultraportable urban/suburban imaging techniques

During the total phase of the lunar eclipse on May 15-16, 2022, part of the Moon's Northern Hemisphere intersected the ecliptic, therefore falling very close to the center of the shadow cast by the Earth.

 

In the above images, the darkest part of our planet's shadow is seen moving from the northwest to the northeast regions of the lunar disk, as the Moon crossed the the path of totality, where no direct sunlight can reach it.

 

Each image is the result of the stacking of video segments of about 100 frames, comprising 80-120 seconds each, representing different moments of the past lunar eclipse, highlighting the dynamic nature of that particular stage.

 

The field of view provided by the combination of the camera and the telescope with the attached accessory enabled an optimal use of the sensor dimensions and resolution.

 

The recordings were made possible due to the collaboration of my friend Romualdo Caldas.

 

Equipment:

Telescope: Skywatcher 80ED Apochromatic Refractor

Accessory: Televue Powermate 2x

Mount: Skywatcher HEQ5 Pro

Camera: QHY183C

 

Software:

Capture: SharpCap

Trimming: PIPP

Stacking: Autostakkert!

Processing: Photoshop

Video editing: VSDC

Aquí os comparto mi segundo intento con Saturno.

 

Me gustaría decir que es la 6ª roca desde el Sol, pero Saturno es un planeta gaseoso...

 

Hace unas noches intenté captar este precioso planeta con mi telescopio Bresser Maksutov 150, pero me fue imposible encontrarlo, a pesar de los 1900mm de focal del telescopio, y de que es el segundo planeta en tamaño del sistema solar (obviamente el tamaño aparente es minúsculo y a simple vista parece una estrella más del firmamento estas noches de verano).

 

El 25 de agosto volví a intentarlo, porque la astrofotografía es un poco para cabezotas, hay muchas noches de errores, pero hay que perseverar...

 

En esta seguna ocasión pude centrar mi telescopio, no sin esfuerzo, en este planeta.

 

Para obtener esta foto usé una cámara planetaria, la QHY5 462C, con un filtro UV/IR Cut, y tomé varios vídeos.

 

Tras ello, los procesé con varios programas específicos para planetaria: PIPP, Autostakkert, Registax, y Winjupos (en ese orden(, para obtener la imagen final que se ve aquí.

 

Como siempre usé mi montura Explore Scientific EXOS2 PMC8 wifi, y el soft de captura Sharpcap, para tomar los vídeos.

 

Espero que os guste.

 

Saludos.

 

P.D. La próxima vez intentaré usar una lente Barlow para captar más detalle, aunque el cielo contaminado de El Altet es un obstáculo.

Genova, Italy (12 Aug 2021 - 02:03 GMT+2)

 

Orange vintage C8 (203 F10 SC Telescope) on EQ5 Mount

 

QHY5L-II Color Camera @ F25 (Barlow APO 2.5x)

 

Recording: SharpCap 4.0 (640x480 @ 38fps - 2min)

 

Best 3686 frames of 4607 (80%)

Stacking+Wavelets: AstroSurface REDSHIFT-1

 

Final: GIMP 2.10.8

The Crescent Nebula is one of the great features to be found in the constellation Cygnus this time of year. Here I have used my Borg 71FL lens and an IDAS light pollution filter designed to emphasize the H-alpha and O3 wavelengths in one go-round.

 

Tech Stuff: Borg 71FL at native 400mm focal length; IDAS LPS-V4 filter; Baader MPCC; ZWO ASI1600MC; 97 minutes of 12 second exposures stacked live in SharpCap Pro; iOptron CubePro 8200 mount guided with PHD; Processed with PixInsight. Imaged from my yard 10 miles north of New York City.

Nébuleuse du sorcier NGC 7380.

Zwo ASI224 MC + Leica-R Apo-Telyt 180mm f3.4 (@f4) adapted through DIY 3D printed adapter.

Dual narrowband with Optolong l-Enhance filter in bortle 7 area.

Post-processed with Gimp and Lightroom.

140 x 15 sec light pictures (total time 2100 sec) stacked wth Sharpcap.

The Moon, about 3 days before full moon (Colongitude 61°).

 

Object: Moon

Colongitude: ~61°

Optics: Celestron 9.25 F10

Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ6-R

Camera: ZWO ASI 183MM Pro @-20°C

Filter: ZWO EFW 7x36mm, ZWO 36mm Filters

Panels: 7

Exposure: R 10% of 400 Frames

Date: 2018-10-21 21:50:00Z

Location: Schwaig

Capture: SharpCap 3.1

Image Acquisition: Stephan Schurig

Image Processing: Stephan Schurig

AutoStakkert 3.0.14: Analysis, Stack

Photoshop 20.0.0: Unsharp Masking, Smart Sharpen w. Denoise, HighPass Sharpening, Color Balance

First attempt at this object. Several hours of data here taken during a very cold, clear evening. I guess the monkey is looking up to the upper right here. Okay then...

 

NGC 2174 is an H II emission nebula located in the constellation Orion and is associated with the open star cluster NGC 2175. It is thought to be located about 6,400 light-years away from Earth.

 

Image Details:

- Imaging Scope: William Optics 61mm Zenithstar II Doublet

- Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI183MC Color with UV/IR Blocking filter

- Guiding Scope: William Optics 66mm Petzval

- Guiding Camera: Orion Starshoot Auto Guider

- Filter: ZWO Duo Band (HA & OIII)

- Acquisition Software: Sharpcap

- Guiding Software: PHD2

- Capture Software: SharpCap Pro (LiveStack mode with dithering)

- Light Frames: Set One: 10x5 mins @ 250 Gain, Temp -30C. Set Two: 40x2 mins @ 250 Gain, Temp -30C

- Dark Frames: 10*5 mins, 40x2 mins

- Stacked in Deep Sky Stacker

- Processed in PixInsight, Adobe Lightroom and Topaz Denoise AI

 

Taken with 400mm Canon lens, ASI2600MC camera. Consist of 83 x 3 minutes exposures (4hrs 9m total) live stacked in SharpCap Pro.

Technical data:

Celestron 114/900 Newton

camera QHY5L-II-C

filter Uv -Ir cut

Sharpcap, Autostakkert 3, Registax 5.1

Autostitch, Camera raw, Adobe

Photoshop

Date: 2021 December 16

Location: Cabras, Italy

Taken from Oxfordshire, UK with a William Optics 70mm refractor, Celestron 3x Barlow and ASI120MC camera, when the Moon was a 40% illuminated Waxing Crescent. A 2,000 frame video shot with SharpCap Pro, the best 25% were stacked with Autostakkert! 3 then processed in Lightroom and Fast Stone Image Viewer

 

Only 1.8% of the named lunar craters are named after women, but this segment of the Moon shows two of them.

Hypatia was born sometime around 350 - 370 BC, and she was a very well respected mathematician and astronomer from Egypt who taught philosophy and astronomy at her father's school. She became a martyr for philosophy following her murder.

St. Catharina was a Christian martyr. However, what's interesting is that Catharina was a legendary figure who is thought to have been based on Hypatia, so technically Hypatia has two craters named after her. I find it funny that the mythical figure got the larger of the two craters!

The western edge of the Veil Nebula supernova remnant in Cygnus is known as the Witch's Broom. Its Hydrogen and Oxygen regions are entwined in a lacy red, white and blue structure which flies high in the summer night sky.

 

Tech Stuff: Borg 71FL at native 400mm focal length; IDAS LPS-V4 filter; Baader MPCC; ZWO ASI1600MC; 99 minutes of 12 second exposures stacked live in SharpCap Pro; iOptron CubePro 8200 mount guided with PHD; Processed with PixInsight. Imaged from my yard 10 miles north of New York City.

Skywatcher 200p on NEQ6 mount. ASI294MC Pro camera. Optolong CLS-CCD filter.

 

Approximately 2000 0.75ms images at gain 121 and sensor temperature -20C. Recorded as a .ser video and the best 50% of the images used by Registax to align and stack.

 

30th October 2020

Test image using the new ZWO Duo Band Filter of the Sword of Orion Region. this is in HA and OIII. Getting decent data. There's a lot of "stuff" in this image, so it's hard to tell if the filter is picking up extra dust and gas or if I have some sort of issue. Now I need to learn how to process these (splitting channels etc.) and merge with RGB...

 

Image Details:

- Imaging Scope: William Optics 61mm Zenithstar II Doublet

- Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI183MC Color with UV/IR Blocking filter

- Guiding Scope: William Optics 66mm Petzval

- Guiding Camera: Orion Starshoot Auto Guider

- Filter: ZWO Duo Band (HA & OIII)

- Acquisition Software: Sharpcap

- Guiding Software: PHD2

- Capture Software: SharpCap Pro (LiveStack mode with dithering)

- Light Frames: 12*5 mins @ 100 Gain, Temp -20C

- Dark Frames: 12*5 mins

- Stacked in Deep Sky Stacker

- Processed in PixInsight, Adobe Lightroom, Photmatix Pro HDR and Topaz Denoise AI

m31_core-252x8-g2098-imx224-85f5_6

 

I was playing around here and wanted to see how much of M31 I could pick up in under 35 minutes.

 

Technical:

252x8 sec @ 2098 Gain (100-5000 range.)

Televue TV-85 at F/5.6

Rising Tech Sony IMX224 Eyepiece/Guider Cam

Atlas EQ-G w/EQMOD

Orion 30mm Ultra-Mini/Orion Starshoot, PHD Guiding2

Sharpcap 2.9

Bortle Red zone conditions.

 

Leo Triplet (M65, M66, NGC 3628) - A cosmic sad face!

 

5/4/21 and 6/4/21

 

A triplet of gravitationally bound galaxies approximately 35 million light-years away in the constellation of Leo

 

Equipment:

- Skywatcher HEQ5-pro (Rowan Belt Mod)

- Canon 800d (modded)

- Explore Scientific ED APO 102mm F7 FCD-100 Triplet Carbon Fibre

- Hotech SCA 1x field flattener

- ZWO ASI-120MM-mini guide camera

- Skywatcher Evoguide 50ED guidescope

- 2 inch mounted Optolong L-Pro

 

Acquisition:

- Sharpcap polar alignment, ASCOM guiding/dithering with PHD2

- APT image acquisition

- Lights - 67 x 300s ISO400 (5 hours 35 minutes)

- Darks – 25 + 25

- Bias - 30 + 30

- Flats - 30 + 30

 

Instagram @paradoxctor and @inourcosmos

I have previously imaged this emission/reflection nebula, which like the Rosette shows a circular red region around a cluster of young, hot stars. I had doubts however regarding capturing the dark nebula (Barnard 168) that forms a tail leading off to the west. I generally prefer using a color camera for simplicity but in this case tried a mono astrocam with LRGB filters, which successfully revealed the tail. Conditions in my yard were as good as they get, with my SQM-L meter reading 18.6 to 19.1 during the course of the evening -- still Red Zone (or typical light polluted suburb).

 

Tech Stuff: Borg 71FL at native 400mm focal length; IDAS LPS-D2 filter; Baader MPCC; QHY163M; 80 minutes of 8 second exposures (20 min each of L, R, G, B) stacked live in SharpCap Pro; iOptron CubePro 8200 mount guided with PHD2; Processed with PixInsight. Imaged from my yard 10 miles north of New York City.

Feb 2, 2020. 21x30 sec, Gain 42, Offset 15, -20C, QHY183c, UHC-S filter, Televue TV-85 at F/5.6. Bortle Red zone. SharpCap 3.2 livestack w/dither.

I tracked the comet for 2 hours on Feb 1. I could not see it visually, but the camera revealed the comet moving swiftly against the background stars and clouds. Here I have assembled the 90 frames as a 5 second timelapse.

 

Borg 55FL/ZWOASI1600MC/IDAS LPS-V4/ 90 X 1 minute stacks of 4 second exposures using SharpCap. Processed with PixInsight, PIPP, and ACDSee Luxea. From my yard in Yonkers, NY.

Third attempt at this. Better than the last, but a long way to go. I couldn't tell if there was some high-level cloud in the area, which would have affected quality.

 

NGC 7635, also known as the Bubble Nebula, Sharpless 162, or Caldwell 11, is an H II region emission nebula in the constellation Cassiopeia. It lies close to the direction of the open cluster Messier 52. The "bubble" is created by the stellar wind from a massive hot, 8.7 magnitude young central star, SAO 20575.

 

Image Details:

- Imaging Scope: William Optics 61mm ZenithStar APO

- Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI183MC Color with ZWO Duo band filter

- Guiding Scope: William Optics 31mm Uniguide

- Guiding Camera: Orion Starshoot Auto Guider

- Acquisition Software: Sharpcap

- Guiding Software: PHD2

- Light Frames: 20*5 mins @ 100 Gain, Temp -10C

- Dark Frames: 20*3 mins

- Stacked in Deep Sky Stacker

- Processed in PixInsight, Adobe Lightroom and Topaz Denoise

M13 is one of the brighter and more prominent Messier objects, found in the constellation Hercules. The cluster includes hundreds of thousands of stars about 22,000 ly from earth. It's a good target for trying new equipment combinations. Here I've tried guided imaging again with my Questar and a mono astrocam. I usually recommend that people try imaging with a color camera because the improvement in image quality that can be achieved with mono imaging comes at the expense of greater capture and processing complexity. Indeed, in this case the target dropped into the trees before I could capture any data with the blue filter, so the colors here may be a bit off from a fully successful imaging session.

 

Tech Stuff: Questar 3.5" telescope at native 1400mm focal length (f/16)/QHY 163 mono/guided/8 second exposures captured in SharpCap live stacks/ L 14 min; R 14 min; G 7 min/G used in both green and blue channels/Processed with PixInsight and GIMP. From my yard in Westchester County, NY.

Strong winds and way too much cloud made imaging a rare transit of Mercury a challenge but then this is November so we were lucky to capture anything at all. I hadn’t fully appreciated until now just how low the Sun is in the sky at this latitude in early November. The window of opportunity to get a shot was short as the transit started around 12:35 and the Sun set behind houses at around 15:30 after ducking behind chimney pots and trees. After constant, cloud-induced pauses we managed only to get about 3 minutes of video but that was enough to capture Mercury crossing the photosphere of the Sun. We measured Mercury's diameter to be 4802.06 km from a distance of 101.096 million km which is not far off the 4880 km stated in Wikipedia.

 

377 x frames of video

Exposure - 0.012499 secs

Sensor temperature - 9.5 °C (uncooled)

Gain - 50%

No calibration frames

 

Captured with SharpCap Pro

Processed in PIPP, Registax and Photoshop

 

Equipment:

Telescope: Celestron NexStar 127 SLT

Mount: Skywatcher EQ5

Camera: ZWO ASI 120MC

Filters: Baader Solar Filter,

Orange filter (for purely aesthetical reasons)

Celestron NexStar 6SE, ZWO asi224mc with IR cut filter, 2.5x TeleVue Powermate and ZWO ADC. 3 minute video Captured in SharpCap, processed in PIPP, AutoStakkert, RegiStax Wavelets then Lightroom.

NGC 7822

 

Canon 200mm f/2.8 @ f/2.8

ASI 1600MM-C -20C gain 139

ZWO filters

 

4 minutes

 

51x Ha

 

Sharpcap

Sequence Generator Pro

Cartes Du Ciel

Pixinsight 1.8

Horsehead and Flame Nebulae in HOO

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Gear:

Imaging Camera: ASI294MM-Pro

Filters: Astrodon 1.25" 3nm Ha

Main Scope: Orion 8" f4 Newt

Guidescope: Williams Optics 50mm Uniguide

Guidecam: ASI120MM mini

Mount: SW EQ6R-Pro

ZWO EAF, EFW

-

Image Details:

HA-140x180s, gain 120, bin 2x2, -10c

OIII-130x180s, gain 120, bin 2x2, -10c

13.5 hrs total integration

-

Location: Parker, CO, USA

Bortle 5/6 sky

-

Acquisition/Edits:

SharpCap, NINA, PHD2, Stellarium, Pixinsight, Photoshop CC

Saturn about 3 weeks after reaching opposition (August 1-2). We were hoping to catch it closer to opposition but August 24th was the best we could manage. However, it still appears big and bright in our skies at the moment. Because of Saturn's fast rotation (10.6 hrs), there is a limit of about 2 minutes to get a shot without risking a blurring of details. I exceeded this limit by some margin, trading slight smearing of barely perceptible detail for increased exposure and signal strength. 7,098 frames from 4 videos taken in close succession were stacked to make this image. This was in order to get as much exposure and signal strength as possible in the stack and was worth doing as any blurring seemed negligible.

 

Captured with SharpCap

Processed in PIPP and AutoStakkert

Post-processed in Photoshop

 

Image made from 7,098 stacked video frames (75% quality and above)

Average Gain - 67.5%

Average Exposure - 0.067015 seconds

Total integration - 7 minutes 51 seconds

 

Equipment:

Telescope: Sky-Watcher Explorer-150PDS

Mount: Skywatcher EQ5

Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI120 MC

x2 Barlow with extension tube (equivalent to x3.3)

Celestron NexStar 6SE, ZWO asi224mc with IR cut filter, 2.5x TeleVue Powermate and ZWO ADC. 2 minute video Captured in SharpCap, processed in PIPP, AutoStakkert, RegiStax Wavelets then Lightroom.

Nébuleuse du voile (NGC6960 et NGC6992).

Zwo ASI224 MC + Leica-R Apo-Telyt 180mm f3.4 (@f4) adapted through DIY 3D printed adapter.

Dual narrowband with Optolong l-Enhance filter in bortle 7 area.

Post-processed with Gimp and Lightroom.

180 x 15 sec light pictures (total

time 2700 sec) stacked wth Sharpcap.

Updated Nov. 24, 2021 - Images of Saturn taken the same night as those of Jupiter shown here can be found at the following link - www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51702432756/

 

Object Details: The attached shows Jupiter as it appeared during one evening in September through one of our longer focal-length scopes. Oriented with north up, at the time the Great Red Spot was in the process of crossing the central meridian (i.e. an imaginary line drawn from pole to pole bisecting the planet), while the Jovian moon Europa's orbit brings it closer to the planet, and as can be seen in the last frame, begins a transit of Jupiter. The Jovian moon Callisto can be seen at far left of each frame.

 

In addition, several large 'white ovals' are visible at lower left, culminating with five in a row as shown in the last luminance frame. Along with a variety of festoons and smaller storms, two giant 'brown barges' can be seen just above center as they rotate on from the left hand limb in the first image and lie on either side of the central meridian in the final image.

 

Taken in succession using luminance, infrared & methane filters, given it's ability to somewhat counteract the detrimental effects of seeing, an incredible amount of detail can be seen in the infrared images; while the Great Red Spot shows as the extremely prominent, bright white oval in the methane shots and Europa stands out clearly against the planets limb as it begins it's transit in the final luminance image.

 

Since humans tend to see detail in an image via it's brightest and contrast (as opposed to it's color), I have extracted the lightness channel from each individual image and appended them below the one-shot-color frames. As would be expected, the extracts from the infrared shots are the most detailed (and in this case, when viewed at full resolution, may be some of the most detailed Jupiter images I have ever captured using this setup, even showing a bit of detail within the Great Red Spot itself).

 

Image Details: Taken by Jay Edwards during the early UT hours of September 20, 2021 at the HomCav Observatory using a 3X Televue barlow with set of specialized planetary filters on a vintage 1970, 8-inch, f/7 Criterion newtonian reflector with an ASI290MC' planetary camera / autoguider'. Like other planetary images posted previously, the scope was mounted on and tracked with a Losmandy G-11 running a Gemini 2 control system.

 

Taken using SharpCap Pro and processed using a combination of Registax & PaintShopPro, as presented here the individual shots have been resized down to approximately 50% of their original size and the entire composite has then been resized down to 2X HD resolution. With Jupiter reaching only 32 degrees above our southern horizon, I was pleasantly surprised at the results.

 

Similar planetary & solar composites can be found at the attached links:

 

Jupiter:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51489515877/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51307264271/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50303645602/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50052655691/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50123276377/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50185470067/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50993968018/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51090643939/

 

Saturn:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51489515877/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51417055085

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51345118465/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51007634042/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51316298333/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50347485511/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50088602376/

 

Mars:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50425593297/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50594729106/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50069773341/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50223682613/

 

Solar:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50815383151/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/50657578913/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51027134346/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/homcavobservatory/51295865404/

Telescopio: Refractor Bresser Messier Acro 102/460 f4.5

Cámara: ZWO ASI178MM

Montura: EQ5 Bresser EXOS2 motorizada sin goto

Filtros: Baader Green CCD Filter

Software: SharpCap, AutoStakkert, Registax y Photoshop

Fecha: 2019-04-10

Hora: 20:59 T.U.

Fase lunar: 28.5% 5.2 días Creciente

Lugar: 42.615 N -6.417 W (Bembibre Spain)

Vídeo: 2 minutos

Resolución: 3096 x 2080

Gain: 90

Exposure: 0,005052

Frames: 1679

Frames apilados: 20%

FPS: 13.98

 

Capture of Melotte 15 using Sequence Generator Pro, Sharpcap with electronic finder, Cartes du Ciel planetarium software and PHD2 guiding.

Hurried shot of partial solar eclipse 25th October 2022. Taken through the back bedroom window. Complete with wispy clouds ! Sharpcap and Autostakkert Starwave 102ED and Altair 294C

My first narrowband image! I lost track of exactly how I did the integration, but it is about 10hours of Hydrogen alpha and 5 hours of Oxygen III.

 

Equipment:

TS 130 Photoline APO

Starlight Xpress H9

Baader OIII filter 8.5nm, 15min SFs

Astronomik Ha filter 12nm, 10min SFs

Altair 0.6x focal reducer

Imaged at f4.2

Guiding: SSAG on finderscope

Mount: EQ6R

 

I used PixInsight, Sharpcap, PHD2 and fitsworks to create this image.

IC 2169 is a large reflection nebula in the constellation Unicornus. It forms one of the central regions of the association of massive stars known as Monoceros R1. It is located in the northern part of the constellation, on the border with Orion and west of the Cone Nebula and the "Christmas Tree" cluster

 

Image Details:

- Imaging Scope: William Optics 61mm Zenithstar II Doublet

- Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI183MC Color with IR Cut filter

- Guiding Systeme: Celestron StarSense Autoguider

- Guiding Camera: Orion Starshoot Auutoguider

- Acquisition Software: Sharpcap

- Capture Software: SharpCap Pro

- Light Frames: 20*4 mins @ 100 Gain, Temp -20C

- Dark Frames: 10*4 mins

- Stacked in Deep Sky Stacker

- Processed in PixInsight, Adobe Lightroom and Topaz Denoise AI

AUTORE: Aldo Rocco Vitale (Gruppo Astrofili Catanesi “Guido Ruggieri”)

DATA: 31 dicembre 2017

ORA: 20:15

LOCALITA’: S. Agata Li Battiati (CT) 250 m. s.l.m.

TEMPERATURA: 14°

UMIDITA’: 80%

SEEING: 3

TRASPARENZA: 3

FASE: 98%

DISTANZA: 358.592,438 Km

OBIETTIVO: Celestron Nexstar C11; D=280 mm; F=1764 mm; f/6.3

CAMERA DI RIPRESA: ZWO ASI 120MC

SOFTWARE DI ELABORAZIONE: Sharpcap + Avistack2 + Pixinsight + Astroart

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