View allAll Photos Tagged Virgo

Kodak disposable 800

Calopteryx femelle, peut-être virgo car un mâle (bleu) volant à proximité semblait correspondre à l'espèce virgo.

Female Calpoteryx, probably virgo, since a (blue) male flying nearby seamed to match the virgo species.

On My Birthday. (Virgo Baby)

Nikkor-S 55mm F1.2 @ f/1.2

3.2 s, ISO 400 (Auto -1), WB=tungsten

virgo's merlot at the social in orlando

Dias Caetano, artiste Brésilien

expo "Bidibibobidiboo!", Le Port, Reunion Island

stencil study for the zodiac

making wishes for each other

Sunsplash 2010, 22/08/2010 - Musica - Mainstage -Romain Virgo - Foto Elia Falaschi_Rototom Sunsplash © 2010

Virgo cluster

SW 72ED

2x Reducer

Fuji ES-2

85 x 30 s

Well over a thousand galaxies are known members of the Virgo Cluster, the closest large cluster of galaxies to our own local group. In fact, the galaxy cluster is difficult to appreciate all at once because it covers such a large area on the sky. This careful wide-field mosaic of telescopic images clearly records the central region of the Virgo Cluster through faint foreground dust clouds lingering above the plane of our own Milky Way galaxy. The cluster's dominant giant elliptical galaxy M87, is just below and to the left of the frame center. To the right of M87 is a string of galaxies known as Markarian's Chain. A closer examination of the image will reveal many Virgo cluster member galaxies as small fuzzy patches. Sliding your cursor over the image will label the larger galaxies using NGC catalog designations. Galaxies are also shown with Messier catalog numbers, including M84, M86, and prominent colorful spirals M88, M90, and M91. On average, Virgo Cluster galaxies are measured to be about 48 million light-years away. The Virgo Cluster distance has been used to give an important determination of the Hubble Constant and the scale of the Universe. via NASA ift.tt/1g355DJ

Cung XỬ NỮ (sinh từ 23/8 đến 22/9)

#M89, #M90, Galaxias en Virgo

 

Montura: Skywatcher AZEQ6

Telescopio: TS 76EDPH con reductor 0.82x

Cámara: ASI 294MM Pro

Filtros: ZWO L,R,G,B 36mm

 

Guiado con Skywatcher 50ED y cámara ASI120 monocroma

 

Tomas:

40 x lights en L de 60 segs Bin 2, 1 de mayo de 2022

20 x lights en R de 60 segs Bin 2, 1 de mayo de 2022

20 x lights en G de 60 segs Bin 2, 1 de mayo de 2022

20 x lights en B de 60 segs Bin 2, 1 de mayo de 2022

 

Software:

Captura con NINA

Guiado con PHD2

Procesado con PixInsight

 

Jerez, 1 de mayo de 2.022

Heart of the VIRGO, suspended laser and mirror-assembly.

Louise Virgo was a correspondent for the Atwater Signal newspaper for many years, recording the events in the early years of Winton. Married to Alfred Virgo in 1908, they lived on Lupin Avenue in rural Winton the rest of their lives.

www.findagrave.com/memorial/125713343/louise-virgo

Virgo Cluster with M 86 - annotations by SiriL

 

Hazy sky conditions

 

Skywatcher Newton 200/1000

AZ EQ 5

ZWO ASI294 MC Pro @ -20°C

 

49 x 240 s @ gain 121

 

Autoguider with ZWO ASI120 MS-C

PPEC trained

 

Software:

EQMOD/ASCOM

Stellarium

Astro Photography Tool (APT)

PlateSolve 2

Guiding with PHD2

Stacked with ASTAP

Postprocessing with SiriL

11 july 2008

 

Record:

 

Calopteryx virgo

Calopteryx splendens

Lestes dryas

Lestes sponsa

Coenagrion puella

Coenagrion pulchellum

Enallagma cyathigerum

Erythromma najas

Erythromma viridulum

Ischnura elegans

Platycnemis pennipes

Aeshna grandis

Anax imperator

Gomphus flavipes

Gomphus vulgatissimus

Cordulia aenea

Somatochlora flavomaculata

Somatochlora metallica

Libellula depressa

Libellula fulva

Orthetrum cancellatum

Sympetrum sanguineum

Sympetrum vulgatum

(菲律賓)-玉女芋螺

Conus virgo Linnaeus, 1758-(Philippines)

 

Well over a thousand galaxies are known members of the Virgo Cluster, the closest large cluster of galaxies to our own local group. In fact, the galaxy cluster is difficult to appreciate all at once because it covers such a large area on the sky. This careful wide-field mosaic of telescopic images clearly records the central region of the Virgo Cluster through faint foreground dust clouds lingering above the plane of our own Milky Way galaxy. The cluster's dominant giant elliptical galaxy M87, is just below and to the left of the frame center. To the right of M87 is a string of galaxies known as Markarian's Chain. A closer examination of the image will reveal many Virgo cluster member galaxies as small fuzzy patches. Sliding your cursor over the image will label the larger galaxies using NGC catalog designations. Galaxies are also shown with Messier catalog numbers, including M84, M86, and prominent colorful spirals M88, M90, and M91. On average, Virgo Cluster galaxies are measured to be about 48 million light-years away. The Virgo Cluster distance has been used to give an important determination of the Hubble Constant and the scale of the Universe. via NASA ift.tt/1g355DJ

la primera salida, december 2010

The northern arm of the VIRGO

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