View allAll Photos Tagged deepskyobjects

Soul Nebula (IC 1848)

 

The Soul Nebula in the constellation Cassiopeia.

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Location: Montclair, California, USA (Bortle 8)

Date: January 4-5, 2022

Moon: Waxing Crescent (8-14%)

Camera: ZWO ASI6200MC Pro

Telescope: William Optics ZenithStar 61II APO f/5.9

Flattener/Reducer: William Optics FLAT61A Field Flattener

Filter: Optolong L-eXtreme 2”

Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ6-R Pro

Guide Camera: ZWO ASI120MM Mini

Guide Scope: William Optics UniGuide 32 f/3.75

Camera Settings: Gain 100 | f/5.9 | 5 min

Acquisition: 53 x 5 min Lights | 50 Darks | 100 Bias | 20 Flats

Integration Time: 4 hrs 25 min

Software: ZWO ASIAIR PRO, PixInsight, Adobe Lightroom Classic

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Copyright © 2022 Steven K. Wu Photography. All Rights Reserved.

The Sombrero Galaxy (M104), 04/18/2021

Like I said in my last photo, its galaxy season, lol. A few weeks ago, I took my gear up into the woods and was able to capture lots of images while in the dark skis. I have always wanted to photography this galaxy, but it is really small and far away (31 million light-year), but I did it anyways. This picture is cropped in a lot. The Sombrero Galaxy is almost perfectly edge on to our field of view, so the dust lanes really pop. It also contains one of the biggest super-massive black holes ever discovered.

 

Equipment:

RASA 8

iOptron GEM45

ZWO ASI294MC-Pro

ZWO Asiair

Optolong L-Pro filter

 

Details:

Location – Long Mire Campground

Bortle Class 2

167 30-second Lights (1.4 hrs.)

60 Darks

60 Dark flats

60 Flats

Astro Pixel Processor

Lightroom

Photoshop

 

#astrophotography #astronomy #comos #nightphotography #space #telescope #deepsky #asi294mcpro #amateurastronomy #backyardastronomy #asiair #asiairpro #celestronrasa #celestron #ioptron #ioptrongem45 #astropixelprocessor #optolong #telescope #astronomyphotography #deepskyobject #zwo #longexposurephotography #M104 #sombrerogalaxy

Canon 60D

6" Newton

ISO 800

13 x 7min

20 x 2min

15 x 20s

  

This is my first Orion Nebula of the season. I used my smaller 6" Newton to capture it. In the next weeks i try to use the 10" to get a detailed picture of the center of the nebula.

Bode's Galaxy (M81), Cigar Galaxy (M82), NGC 3077

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Location: Whittier, California, USA (Bortle 8)

Date: March 2, 2021

Moon: Waning Gibbous (80%)

Camera: ZWO ASI533MC Pro

Telescope: William Optics ZenithStar 61II APO f/5.9

Flattener/Reducer: William Optics FLAT61A Field Flattener

Adapter: None

Filter: Optolong L-Pro

Mount: iOptron SkyGuider Pro

Guide Camera: ZWO ASI120MM Mini

Guide Scope: William Optics UniGuide 32 f/3.75

Imaging Controller: ZWO ASIAIR PRO

Camera Settings: Gain 100 | f/5.9 | 4 min

Acquisition: 44 x 4 min Lights | 100 Darks | 100 Bias

Integration Time: 2 hour 56 min

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Copyright © 2021 Steven K. Wu Photography. All Rights Reserved.

Canon 60Da

10" Newton

ISO 800

80 x 2min

  

This is my first time using the H-Alpha Version of my Canon 60Da. Great to see it captures the H-Alpha lines so well. Barnard 33 is one of the most amazing objects is captured so far, I hope you enjoy the picture !

Sky-Watcher 80/400 (Achromatic Refractor)

Sky-Watcher HEQ5

Canon 350Dm

45x60s @ ISO1600 (45min)

 

Calibrated, registered, stacked in PixInsight.

Postprocessing in PS5.

Star forming region Milky Way Galaxy

Leo Triplet (M65, M66, NGC3628), 03/17/2021

Galaxy season is here. In Spring most of the nebulas set too early to photograph so attention turns to distant and dim galaxies. For my current setup this is unfortunate because I have wrong field of view for tiny galaxies. But a YouTube channel I watch (Chuck’s Astrophotography) did this group using the same telescope I have so I gave it a go. Thanks Chuck! I did spend a lot of time on this so I would have enough detail to crop it in a bit. So, I give you the Leo Triplet, unsurprisingly found in the constellation Leo. These gravitationally bound galaxies are approximately 35 million lights years from you.

 

Equipment:

RASA 8

iOptron GEM45

ZWO ASI294MC-Pro

ZWO Asiair

Optolong L-Pro filter

 

Details:

Location – My Backyard

Bortle Class 7

109 120-second Lights (3.6 hrs.)

60 Darks

60 Dark flats

60 Flats

Astro Pixel Processor

Lightroom

Photoshop

 

#astrophotography #astronomy #comos #nightphotography #space #telescope #deepsky #asi294mcpro #amateurastronomy #backyardastronomy #asiair #asiairpro #celestronrasa #celestron #ioptron #ioptrongem45 #astropixelprocessor #optolong #telescope #astronomyphotography #deepskyobject #zwo #longexposurephotography #M65 #M66 #NGC3628 #leotriplet

The Rosette Nebula is a large spherical H II region around open cluster NGC 2244. The stars of the cluster having been formed from the nebula's matter. The cluster and nebula lie at a distance of some 5,000 light years from Earth and measure roughly 130 light years in diameter.

 

Sky-Watcher 80ED 600mm

Sky-Watcher 0.85x Reducer/Flattener

Sky-Watcher HEQ5

Canon 450Dm

 

73x600s (12h 10min)

Constellation Cygnus - Sadr (star) (Narrowband image)

Starting to pull out detail from the galaxy. Need to start generating flats. Start Data collection over on these images. Make sure that certain temp is attained before taking lights. Prevents noise.

Crescent Nebula, also known as NGC6888

15 MARZO 2021

3671 sec - Frames da 1 minuto

 

TS OPTICS 80/540

ASI 290 COLOR

FOCAL REDUCER 0,5

 

SHARPCAP

PHOTOSHOP

I created this mosaic with a ZenithStar 61ii throughout August, September, and October 2021. Each panel integrated a minimum of 7 hours of 6 minute exposures at dual narrowband. The mosaic shown here integrates 107.5 hours of photons.

 

Take a look for the Heart Nebula, Soul Nebula, Fish Head Nebula, quite a few planetary nebulas, and quite a few more hydrogen-rich formations.

 

For each panel, I extracted and stacked Ha and [OIII] separately, then processed to remove light pollution.

 

I then stitched separate mosaics for Ha and [OIII] and combined them with an HOO2 palette.

 

I found that taking adding 3-6 panels at a time and carefully matching across boundaries was helpful in building a consistent mosaic. I also found that the LNC typically suggested for mosaics (LNC degree 4, 3 iterations) introduced wavy artifacts across the mosaic, but blending with simple MBB (20% overlap) gave a much better result since I had already reduced light pollution from the individual panels.

 

See more views and acquisition details at astrobin: www.astrobin.com/ar32lb

 

A comet streaks across a dark night sky, dotted with distant stars. No specific person is identifiable in the image, but the image shows a celestial event, likely captured by an amateur astronomer or astrophotographer. The comet's tail is visible, indicating its movement through space. The image's purpose is likely to document and share the observation of this astronomical phenomenon.

The North America Nebula. 25x5 minutes with a Nikon D600 and an 80mm Refractor

My very first experience in AP without any cropping. Still learning the craft and post processing (if you're in AP this is very obvious just by looking at the picture).

 

This is the Rosette Nebula (NGC 2237). This nebula is 5,219 light years away from earth with an approximate radius of 65 light years. Image is comprised of approximately 18 images at 4 minute exposure with a combination of 20 dark frames, 20 bias frames, 20 flat frames, and 20 dark bias frames.

COMMON NAME:

NAME:

PN G#:

CLASS:

TYPE:

MAGNITUDE:

CENTRAL STAR MAG.:

CONSTELLATION:

POSITION (2000.0):

URANOMETRIA 2000.0 MAP:

SIZE:

DISTANCE (parsecs):

REFERANCE:

 

DATE:

TIME:

PLACE: Sossusvlei Desert Lodge, Namibia, Africa

INSTRUMENT: 12 Inch (30 cm) Meade LX200 SCT

FOCAL RATIO: f/6.3

ACCESSORIES: Meade 0.63x reducer

MOUNT: Meade Altazimut

CAMERA: Canon 60Da

EXPOSURE:

SUBS:

ISO:

 

Elephant's Trunk Nebula is a nebula, a structure of gas and dust, located in the constellation Cepheus. It belongs to a lot larger emission nebula IC 1396 (the entire red object in the image). The elephant's trunk itself is only a small part (in the middle of the crop in the second image), which really looks like a curled elephant's trunk. The whole nebula is ionized by a massive star in the center and is home to very young stars. It lies at a distance of 2400 light years and has a size of 6 full moons in the night sky!

 

The obviously red star at the edge of the nebula is called Herschel's Garnet Star or Erakis. It was noted by William Heschel, who described it as "a very fine deep garnet colour, such as the periodical star Omicron Ceti (variable star in Cetus)". It is one of the largest known stars with a radius of around 1.2 billion km and is expected to explode "soon" like a supernova and become a black hole.

 

There is also a part of Sh2-129 (the Squid Nebula) in the lower right corner.

 

I took this image in August with my modified Canon EOS 1300D and CLS filter. It was made from only less than two hours because of a short night and clouds, but it still looks pretty good.

 

Canon EOS 1300D (modified), SVBony CLS filter

Sigma 135mm f/2.8

iOptron SkyGuider Pro

 

EXIF: 104x60sec (1 hour 44 minutes in total), ISO 6400, f/5.6

Darks, flats, dark flats, biases

 

Processed in DSS, Siril, StarNet++ and Photoshop

14/08/2023, Mašov, Czech Republic (Bortle 5)

Orion, Running Man, Flame, and Horsehead nebulae under Bortle 4 skies

 

Details:

-Stock Canon Rebel T7 on Star Adventurer

-135mm Rokinon lens at f/2, ISO 800 and 45 minute-long exposures stacked in Deep Sky Stacker along with calibration frames (50 bias, 20 dark, and 30 flat frames)

-Total integration time of 45 minutes

-Final stacked image histogram stretched and color-corrected in Photoshop

-Starnet++ used to separate and color-enhance surrounding nebulosity in photoshop, final result was merged with stars and cropped

Originally captured on 03.06.2020, I thought I had significant light pollution and lost the image. Having more experience doing post processing, I was able to pull this out. Very proud of it considering I am still new to the hobby

Night Owl Star Party 2025

Spruce Knob Mountain Center

Rho Ophiuchi

Owens Valley Radio Observatory, Big Pine, California, USA

Two known nearby Deep Sky Objects (DSOs). "Eagle" representing the dark region of M16 near the center. Another nickname for the "Swan", "Omega", was given due to the early discovery sketches resembling the last alphabet of the Greek letter.

 

This is a SHO (Hubble Palette combination). The red uses the Ionized Sulfur (SII) filter, the green uses the Hydrogen Alpha (Ha) filter, and the blue uses the Doubly Ionized Oxygen (OIII) filter. Stack of 13 x 600 seconds for SII and OIII, and 12 x 600 seconds for Ha. Total integration of 6 hours and 20 minutes.

 

Data credit: Telescope Live

Processing Credit: Addy

The Andromeda Galaxy under Bortle 2 skies!

 

Details:

-Stock Canon Rebel T7 on Star Adventurer

-135mm Rokinon lens @f/2, ISO 800 and 53 minute-long exposures stacked in Deep Sky Stacker along with calibration frames (30 bias, 20 flats and 20 dark frames)

-Total integration time of 53 minutes

-Final stacked image histogram stretched and color-corrected in Photoshop

-Starnet++ used to separate and color-enhance galaxy in photoshop, final result was merged with stars

The Cygnus constellation is full of various hydrogen nebulae, but they are very faint in visible wavelengths, so it's very difficult to see them with your eyes in a telescope. However, when you use a modified camera, which lets the infrared wavelengths go through, and you take a long exposure, the complicated nebulae will appear.

 

One of the brightest nebulae in Cygnus (which is even visible in big telescopes) is called the Crescent Nebula and lies roughly in the center of my image. In the upper right corner, there you can also see Tulipan nebula (or Sh2-101), which is fainter than Crescent and lies at a distance of 6000 light years, which is about 1300 ly further than Crescent. Another interesting region lies in the bottom left corner. It's a Sadr region, which is named after a Sadr star, which is the brightest star in the picture and lies 1800 light years from Earth.

 

This image was taken on the 7th of July with my modified camera Canon EOS 1300D and CLS filter, which lets only H-alpha and OIII parts of the spectrum pass through and that's why, it can capture such beautiful details in the nebulae. The result amazed me. It is created only from 3 hours of data, which isn't pretty much for this region. Truly happy with this progress and looking forward to the next tries.

 

Canon EOS 1300D (modified), SVBony CLS filter

Sigma 135mm f/2.8

iOptron SkyGuider Pro

 

EXIF: 120x90sec (3 hours in total), ISO 3200, f/5.6

Darks, flats, dark flats, biases

 

Processed in DSS, Siril, StarNet++, and Photoshop

07/07/2023, Mašov, Czech Republic (Bortle 5)

Les dejo un segundo procesado de esta nebulosa que fotografié hace unas semanas y luego de aprender nuevas técnicas creo que quedó mucho mejor de lo que pude hacer la primera vez sin tanto conocimiento. Sigo practicando para llegar a aprovechar cada sesión al máximo.

 

Esta es NGC 5189, una hermosa nebulosa planetaria espiral que se encuentra a 3000 años luz de la tierra.

 

Equipo:

Skywatcher 200p - NEQ6 Pro

Guia 50/182mm - QHY 5L IIc

QHY 163m + QHYCFW3

QHY QFocus

Pc Notebook Vivabook

 

Software:

Apilado WBP

Procesado Pixinsight -Photoshop

The Pleiades star cluster under Bortle 4 skies.

 

Details:

-Stock Canon Rebel T7 on Star Adventurer Pro

-135mm Rokinon lens at f/2, ISO 800 and 60 minute-long exposures stacked in Deep Sky Stacker along with calibration frames (50bias, 20 flats and 20 dark frames)

-Total integration time of 60 minutes

-Final stacked image histogram stretched and color-corrected in Photoshop

-Starnet++ used to separate and color-enhance surrounding nebulosity in photoshop, final result was merged with stars and cropped

NGC 7000 - Caldwell 20

Near Deneb in the Constellation Cygnus

narrowband filter Rokinon 135mm

The Cygnus Loop under Bortle 3 skies

 

Details:

-Stock Canon Rebel T7 on Star Adventurer

-135mm Rokinon lens at f/2, ISO 800 and 480 thirty second-long exposures stacked in Deep Sky Stacker along with calibration frames (50 bias, 20 dark, and 20 flat frames)

-Total integration time of 4 hours

-Linear image autostretched in Graxpert

-Starnet++ used to separate and color-enhance surrounding nebulosity in photoshop

-Dust and scratches filter to remove background gradient

-saturation, vibration adjustments, star defringing in Adobe Camera raw

Bright nebula in Cygnus.

Optical: TEC 140 FL with Astro Physics Quad TCC 0.72

Camera: ZWO ASI2600MC-Pro

Filter: Optolong L-Ultimate

Mount: iOptron CEM70G

60 x 300 second subframes

Processed with PixInsight 1.8, Capture One 23

Diffuse nebula - Star forming region of Milky Way closest to Earth - approximately 1350 light-years away.

total exposure time - approximately 5 hrs

This is a crop and reprocess of the Heart Nebula, roughly 6 panels of my 15-panel mosaic.

 

I reprocessed to better balance the ionized hydrogen (shades of gold) and oxygen (shades of blue) and used a lighter touch in Topaz denoising.

 

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