View allAll Photos Tagged astromaster
The waning moon as viewed through a Celestron Astromaster 130EQ telescope (20mm eyepiece)
32.5X magnification (650mm/20mm)
Fuji Finepix S1500 held up to eyepiece
Exposure: 0.026 sec (1/38)
Aperture: f/2.8
Focal Length: 5.9 mm
ISO Speed: 100
Taken with Canon T3i/600D + Celestron Astromaster 130Eq using Celestron 2X barlow and T adapter. Single exposure.
Another photo of Saturn, this time using stacking technique.
Equipment: Astromaster 130 EQ ( small telescope ) and Canon 550D
The sky was very turbulent and there was considerable cloud cover but the stacking brought out the details.
A single frame of the sun through a neutral-density filtered Celestron AstroMaster 130EQ. Mercury is at the bottom, and sunspots can be seen in the centre-top and at the top left corner. At the time of the picture Mercury is 12.09 arcseconds across, about 1/160th of the sun's diameter!
My first shot using the Astromaster 130EQ telescope from Celestron. Its from a town with the typical street light issue so the quality isn't great, but a reasonable start!
Taken through my iPhone 5s
Telescope: Celestron Astromaster 130EQ
Eyepiece: Plossl 15mm
Magnification: 46x + software zoom
Processed at Lightroom, Paint.NET, Registax 6
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Pulsa "L" para verla mejor, con el fondo oscuro.
Olympus E-510 + Telescopio Astromaster EQ70 (900mm, f/13) en foco primario
ISO 400, 1/25 sg
Sin recortar.
The "Supermoon" of June 23rd 2013, as seen from Tasmania, Australia. Stitched together in Hugin from 24 separate exposures - Canon 600D mounted on a Celestron Astromaster 130EQ with a 2x barlow lens, at 1/125 ISO 400.
Celestron AstroMaster 130EQ 130/650 Specifications
Anti-glare treatment: Multi Coated
Exit pupil: 1.33mm
Eye distance (between eye and lens): Contribute
Focus system: Contribute
Prism/Mirror binoculars: Contribute
Type: Telescope
Focal Length: 650
Brightness: 1.77
Field of view (m @ 1000m):...
www.userremarks.com/celestron-astromaster-130eq-130-650-c...
Júpiter. Apilado de 2000 frames, 1/5s, ISO 100. Canon 450D + Celestron Astromaster 114 (114/1000mm) + barlow X-Cel x2, montura CG-4. 17-02-2013 (7:16pm)
This is a lot less than I'd been hoping to achieve by this point in the year, but it's progress I guess!
Taken with my iPhone 4S through the eyepiece (6mm) of my Celestron AstroMaster 130EQ.
a comparison of my efs55-250 (top) with my telescope (bottom)
taken at the same time from the same location with the same body with the same settings. just switched out the lens for the scope.
no cropping, though I did try to set the WB and exposure correctly and so they appeared the same.
I think this is a flycatcher, and it's a smallish bird from about 100 feet away. about the closest I can get with the scope.
I think the scope is rated at 1000mm focal length, but: to get it to focus on the DSLR, the length has been extended through various means. -- I'm not sure if that changes the actual focal length or not, but the camera sensor is about 1250mm from the objective lens.
soon, I'll post a cropped version of each to show the quality at subject.
It has been said "you can put lipstick on a pig, but it's still a pig". Well how about putting a $610 TeleVue Ethos eyepiece on a $159 Celestron Astromaster telescope? I'm happy to report that the Ethos brings out the full potential of the little 5" Newtonian. Got a nice clear view of the two dark equatorial bands on Jupiter, something that I've never seen with this scope. M46 resolved into hundreds of stars and nearly filled the 100 degree field of view at 50x.
Alas, the Ethos is only a temporary fixture on my travel scope while I await deliver on my new 15" dobsonian.
The nebula surrounding the star Alnitak. Note the Horsehead Nebula to the bottom right of the main star in the image.
Equinox ED80 Pro, Canon 500D, guided by Astromaster 130EQ OTA and QHY5 camera, ISO 1600, 25 x 150s subs, stacked in DSS, processed in Photoshop.
Orion Nebula 20 10 second and 20 15 second exposures stacked and masked. Taken with point and shoot camera and Astromaster 114EQ telescope with 32mm eyepiece.
13th January 2013 in Wolverhampton. 61 frames stacked. Nikon D40 attached to a Celestron Astromaster 130eq and 2x Barlow. Showing from left to right Callisto, Ganymede, Jupiter, Europa, Io.
Telescopio: Celestron Astromaster 102 f/6.5
Montura: Celestron CG5
Cámara: Nikon D3100, modificada, enfriada
Guiado: 50mm, Orion SSG3, PHD2dev7
Apilado y procesado: DeepSkyStaker3.3.4, Fitswork4, PS6
ISO1600 UHC/IR: 4x300s + 4x180s + 4x120s
Chanchol, Chiantla, Huehuetenango, Guatemala, 2017/07/01 03:47 UTC
Single Lunar image taken on 24th January in Wolverhampton showing the Apollo11 landing site. Nikon D40 attached to a Celestron Astromaster 130eq and 2x Barlow. ISO 800, 1/1000.
here's my best so far of jupiter. still awful, but I'm improving.
this was through the 90mm x 1000mm telescope with a 20mm eyepiece. I think the main limitation at this point is the atmosphere. it's very hazy here during the summer. --also: I think the eyepiece is junk.
this was taken at about 1:00 am, when jupiter was about 20° up in the sky. so in this case: still looking through the light pollution of Kansas CIty.
Moon on the 2nd of January 2012.
Astromaster 130eq
Philips SPC 880 webcam
IR/UV filter
Registax and Microsoft ICE