View allAll Photos Tagged astromaster
Slightly blurry... this was taken using an Astromaster 130eq with a Canon 1000D and a 2x Barlow for enough outward focus though. JUST A BIT OF A ZOOM LENS !
The Moon on 26th July 2010
Using: Celestron Astromaster 130EQ with my Sony Ericsson K800i Camera Phone!!
Taken with a Canon Powershot through a Celestron Astromaster telescope in April 2021 in Northamptonshire, England
"Clock On" is the magic setting, but where is it in SkySafari ?
With clock off, the telescope cursor in program doesn't track the sky, emulating my result when using SkySafari. = not good, but the problem went away, why, I don't know.
Needed for: LIST OF DSS
# Celestron Advanced AstroMaster
# David Chandler Co. Deep Space Navigator
# Discovery Digital Setting Circles
# JMI NGC-MAX
# Lumicon Sky Vector
# Mountain Instruments Star Pilot
# Nova Astro Micro-Guider III
# Nova Astro Micro-Guider 5
# Orion Sky Wizard 2
# Orion Sky Wizard 3
# Orion Intelliscope
# Ouranos
# Software Bisque BBox
# Tele Vue Sky Tour
# Related systems made by Tangent Instruments
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IMG_0656 ECU setting for MCG-Max56crops
2009-02-13-223316
Primeras pruebas de la cámara celestrón NexImage en un telescopio Astromaster 76
Recién cambiamos el ocular de 10mm por la cámara.
Very first tests of the NexImage camera in telescope Celestron Astromaster 76.
We just changed the 10 mm eyepiece for the camera.
This was taken near the end of the eclipse. By this point, it was barely visible if you were only using eclipse goggles.
Taken through a Celestron Astromaster 130.
first try at photographing the moon with Nikon D90 and celastron astromaster 130 telescope and barlow x2 for increasing magnification,Nikon will not focus without it.
Sketch of the Jupiter triple shadow transit on 24 January 2015. The shadows of Europa, Callisto and Io were seen to cross Jupiter's disc around 06.40 UT. I viewed the event with a 130mm reflector at 100x magnification and managed to see all three shadows and moons in moments of good seeing.
Foto por: Efraín Guataquira
Celular Xiaomi redmi note 4. Telescopio Celestron astromaster 130. Ocular 25 mm wide field.
N.B.This is a snapshot of a video: as Flickr doesn't support videos very well the full length sequence can be found only on youtube: youtu.be/Fcwv85l20Xo.
I shot this with my 130mm F/5 telescope, to be sure to have a field wide enough to not miss the space station.
It was still daylight, with the moon very low in altitude.
Also, I had to track the moon manually, since this telescope has a dobsonian mount.
Shot Data:
Subject: Moon, International Space Station (ISS)
Shot date: 25/08/2015
Telescope: Celestron Astromaster 130 (on a self built dobsonian mount)
Focal Length: 650mm
Aperture: 130mm (f/5)
Camera: QHY5L-IIm
Shooting Software: GuLinux Planetary Imager
Processing Software: ImageMagick, ffmpeg (video editing)
Credits: Marco Gulino
Hipparchus y alrededores. Apilado de 950 frames, 1/8s, ISO 100. Canon 450D + Celestron Astromaster 114 (114/1000mm) + Barlow Xcel X2, montura CG-4. 17-02-2012
Moon, 01/05/2012.
Sony Alpha 230 DSLR
Celestron AstroMaster D130
T-Adaptor with 2x Barlow
1/200 shutter.
800 ISO (I think)
Celestron AstroMaster 70 EQ (900mm f/11) Foco primario
Captura desde O.I.Share, sin recortar ni retocar
My first observation and sketch. I've overlaid my sketch on a screenshot from Stellarium software which I generated afterwards to check against - not bad results considering it was my first effort and was done through a low end telescope (Celestron Astromaster 70). Now ... how much will I have to spend to get the telescope that'll let me see it like the screenshot - rather than the tiny little blurry blob I actually saw through the borrowed 80 quid telescope I used tonight? =)
And before anybody asks ... no, I didn't know which moon was which when I was making the sketch - I labelled them after I'd seen what was where on Stellarium ;)
Jupiter and the Galilean Moons, taken through a Celestron AstroMaster 90 and cropped from 18MP to 1MP.
The moons are a bit faint, indeed one of them isn't really visible at all, but all four were there on the night. This is one of my first through-telescope planet shots, so I'm still learning the right techniques.
Inset is 1000mm Telescope and 20mm eyepiece means 50x magnification. Taken afocally with my Blackberry Bold and Celestron Astromaster 114 Newtonian reflector.
This photo of 23. Aug. 2013, taken at 23:49 o’clock shows my Celestron AstroMaster 90 AZ refractor telescope at our observation point in the fields west of Rösberg. Anke is sleeping in our camping chairs. The stars in the centre of the picture belong to Boötes (the “herdsman”). It contains the fourth brightest star in the night sky, Arcturus, which however is concealed by the chair. On the right of Boötes the tail-stars of the Ursa Major (the “Larger Bear”) reach into the pictures. On the left one can see some stars of the Corona Borealis and of Herkules. I suppose that the lonesome star on the lower right belongs to the hunting dogs (“Canes Venatici”). (© Nicolas von Kospoth)