View allAll Photos Tagged cygnus
Ooh! Hit the left arrow because this one is even better!
My first astro stack with the Canon 60Da. 11 images stacked in Photoshop, showing a wide view of the summer sky overhead, centered on the North American Nebula (NGC 7000) in Cygnus.
The Cygnus wall cropped from the North America (NGC7000) in a HOO palette from a dual bandpass narrowband filte from Joppa, Texas, taken 2021-09-05 06:30 UT.
WO RedCat 250/51mm telescope, Optolong L-eNhance NB Filter, ZWO ASI533 MC Pro cooled camera at -5C, SW AZ-EQ5 Pro mount, ZWO ASIAIR controller. About 2 hours of exposure with 42 3min images stacked . Processed in a HOO palate in PixInsight with RC-Astro Noise/Blur/StarXTerminator plugins. Final exposure and crop in PS.
ISS047e021586 03/26/2016) --- Cygnus capture March 26, 2016. Expedition 47 robotic arm operator NASA astronaut Tim Kopra commanded the International Space Station's Canadarm2 robotic arm to capture the Cygnus spacecraft .
Ha:310min
O3:270min
S2:210min
telescope
FSQ85 Refractor *2set
mount
EQ8
camera
FLI:ML16200 (-25℃)
process
Si(dark ,composit)
Pix,Ps(combine etc)
location
Tarobo,Mt Fuji SHizuokai Pref Japan on 21,28thMay2016
Fujifilm X-T10, Samyang 135mm f/2.0 @ f2.0, ISO 1600, 40 x 60 sec, tracking with iOptron SkyTracker Pro, stacking with DeepSkyStacker, editing in Astro Pixel Processor and GIMP, taken July 4 under Bortle 3/4 skies.
Aug 2. reprocess: Stretched lighter reds more to increase red and decrease pink color of emission nebulae.
Sept reprocess: Another re-edit, this time increasing red even more.
This image shows one of my favourite regions in the Northern skies. It's the region surrounding the star Sadr in the constellation of Cygnus. This image was made using astrodon narrowband filters for Ha (5nm), OIII (3nm) and SII (5nm).
Equipment used was a TMB92 with a QSI583ws ccd camera cooled to -20C.
Processing done with Astropixelprocessor and photoshop.
Exposures used:
42 x 900s Ha
20 x 900s OIII
15 x 900s SII
Total: 19,25 hours
Cygnus, the Cygnus rift and the rich star fields of the Milky Way.
Stack of 17 45 second exposures.
Canon EOS Rebel T3i
lens at 45mm f2.8 ISO1600
Processed in Photoshop CS6 and DSS
Lasserre-de-Prouille August 2015
It´s a warship, dangerous to it´s enemies and rivals, seen here attacing full ahead
Mute Swan
Male
Displaying
Kyhmyjoutsen
Espoo
Tänään tehtiin pieni retki Ilmajoen alajoelle. Laulujoutsenten lisäksi näin töyhtöhyyppiä, sinisuohaukan ja mustavariksen.
Another short test of the new OTA.
Imaged December 11th 2017, near Cambridge UK.
Image Details:
75 mins exposure.
2x1200s Ha 1x1
3x600s Ha 1x1
1x300s Ha 1x1
Scope - Altair Astro Wave Series 115mm Refractor, Planostar 0.79x reduced to 642mm/F5.54.
Sensor - Atik 383l+ Mono CCD + Baader Ha filter. -20degC.
Scale - 1.73 arcsec/pixel.
Mount - Altair Astro Pier mounted iOptron CEM60.
Guiding - Lodestar X2 and SX OAG with PHD2.
Sequence Generator Pro and PixInsight.
Thanks for looking.
Samyang 135 F/2 @ F/2.8
Moravian G3 11002 + Astrodon LRGB E series gen 2 + Astrodon Ha 5nm
Astro Physics 1200
Ha: 77x300s bin 1x1
L: 10x300s bin 1x1
R: 10x300s bin 1x1
G: 10x300s bin 1x1
B: 10x300s bin 1x1
Total exposure: 10h
Captured with Sequence Generator Pro
Processed with Pixinsight
All of these Tundra Swans sport the yellow lore spot at the base of the bill which is the most characteristic field mark that helps to distinguish them from the larger Trumpeter Swan. Trumpeter Swans never have this yellow lore spot.
As you can see from this image, the amount of yellow on the bills of these seven individuals varies a lot.
Beaver County, Alberta.
My first narrowband image and a test image really, but excited about these results. The Cygnus Wall, a portion of the North American Nebula (NGC 7000) in the constellation Cygnus. The nebula is approximately 1,500 light years from Earth, and the Cygnus Wall spans about 20 light years. The Wall exhibits the most concentrated star formations in the nebula.
Cygnus wall. Very soft, super disappointing as I thought focus was perfect. Oh well.
37 @ 300 seconds Gain 111 HA filter
Color is combined with last summer's dslr data
Scope: AT65EDQ
Mount: iOptron iEQ45
Camera: ZWO ASI183M non cooled
Guide camera: QHY5Lii
Guide Scope: Meade 60mm achro fl 300
Orion 5 position manual filter wheel
ZWO LRGB
Schuler HA 9nm, Schuler 9nm Sii
MyFocuer Pro v2 (Robert Brown)
Software: APT, PHD2, Sharpcap, CdC, Pixinsight, Photoshop, Nic Dfine 2, Astronomy Tools plug in, Google Chrome Remote Desktop
Canon 40Da, ef 50mm f/1.8, Sky-Watcher Star Adventure
128 x 30 seconden, f/2.8, iso 1600
20 flats, iso 100
20 darks, iso 1600
2 x 20 bias, iso 100/1600
Pixinsight 1.8, Elements 13
Making astrophotography under Milky Way, Cygnus region, from Àger, Lleida, very darkness sky. 6,6h total exposure with Canon eos 600D modified and cooled + canon 18-55 at 50mm.
Stacked 20x900s + 10x600s + darks + bias
The Cygnus wall, a highly energised shock front, filled with complex dark gas and dust lanes. The light from young energetic stars is slowly transforming cold gas to hot gas, with the advancing boundary between the two known as an ionization front. Particularly dense and intricate filaments of cold gas are visible along the front. Estimated distance at 1600 light years.
Sept 12 2022 21:00 -00:00
Celestron RASA 8"
ZWO183mc pro
ZWO EAF
IDAS NBZ filter
ZWO air pro
Sky-Watcher HEQ5 Pro
180x 60s Lights. Flats , Darks and Bias.
Gain 122 at -10C
Processed in APP and Pixinsight
Hofstade
Thanks for visit and comments
Please no links, group badges within comments, they will be deleted.
I was shooting the area around Cygnus over the 12/13 August using a star tracker in the hope of catching a few Persieds. I did manage to image a few, but what to do with the shots with no meteors?
Rather than waste them I stacked them into this image. Shot from my home in London - 9 miles from Trafalgar Square.
Don't let living in a city put you off astrophotography!
Cygnus atratus,
Rotorua, New Zealand
This species was introduced from Australia in the 1860's and now seems to have proliferated, especially on larger bodies of water.
The Cygnus Wall, a portion of the North American Nebula (NGC 7000) in the constellation Cygnus. The nebula is approximately 1,500 light years from Earth, and the Cygnus Wall spans about 20 light years. The Wall exhibits the most concentrated star formations in the nebula.
I have a photo of this region that I took from Death Valley back in 2015. Now that I have the Nikond D5100 that was modified for astrophotography, I figured I'd give it another go from dark skies. With the greater sensitivity at 656 nm, you can see where the Veil Nebula is in this pic -- I couldn't really get it in the previous one.
This is a stack of 16 exposures with the details listed in the EXIF data. Dark frames were subtracted from each of those images. There were clouds rolling through, but using PixInsight to register and stack images helped remove their contribution. Most of the rest of the processing was in PixInsight, with a few touches in Photoshop.