View allAll Photos Tagged deepskystacker
I caught a news story a few days ago about a supernova in galaxy NGC 3184 and decided to try and image it on March 29, 2016. Problem was the high winds here in Pennsylvania. The magnitude was listed in the 15 range, but decided to try imaging it using my Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L USM lens.
The wide field image (see my other Flickr post or my blog) is a clip from a full frame, stacked 14-minute total exposure using a Canon 6D and Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L USM lens mounted on an iOptron ZEQ25 mount. 14 x 60 seconds at ISO 3200, stacked in DeepSkyStacker and further processed in Adobe Lightroom and ImagesPlus.
I then clipped the galaxy from the full frame view and processed it in Lightroom. I found a great pre-supernova (baseline) image by Adam Block (who gave me permission to use his image for comparison purposes – thank you Adam). Adam’s image can be found at www.caelumobservatory.com/obs/n3184.html
I hope to do additional imaging as time permits.
10 300s ISO 1600 exposures fully calibrated.
Brent Oliver modified Canon T3
Astronomik 12nm H-alpha filter
Canon f/1.4 50mm @ f/4.0
Guided on CG-5 by an AT65EDQ with a StarShoot Autoguider.
BackyardEOS DeepSkyStacker
Fecha: 06-02-2022, de 03h55m a 05h43m U.T.
Lugar: Las Inviernas, Guadalajara
Temperatura ambiente: de -03.0ºC a -05.5ºC
Cámara: ZWO ASI071MC Pro
Óptica:
Telescopio Newtoniano TS, 200mm de diámetro f/4.
Corrector de coma Baader MPCC Mark III.
Filtro: Omegon Light Pollution Filter.
Montura: Skywatcher EQ6 Pro Synscan v.3.25
Guiado: Automático con QHY-5 mono y PHD Guiding v.1.14.0, utilizando un telescopio refractor Orion 80mm de diámetro a f/5.
Exposiciones:
21 imágenes de 300s cada una, a -05ºC y 100 de ganancia
en total, 1h45min.
30 darks de 300s, a -05ºC y 100 de ganancia
30 flats de 2s, a -05ºC y 300 de ganancia
30 bias de 0.001s, a -05ºC y 100 de ganancia
Software: DeepSkyStacker v.4.2.0
PixInsight LE 1.0
Adobe Photoshop CC 2019
Astronomy Tools v.1.6
This extent contains eleven Messier objects (M 58, 84, 86-91, 98-100) and many other galaxies. Markarian's Chain is the string of galaxies in the center. My favorite is the Coma Pinwheel Galaxy (M 99) in the center of the upper right quadrant, with its interesting coma shape.
Acquisition details: Fujifilm X-T10, Samyang 135mm f/2.0 ED UMC @ f2.0, ISO 1600, 102 x 30 sec, tracking with iOptron SkyTracker Pro, stacking with DeepSkyStacker, editing with Astro Pixel Processor and GIMP, taken on Feb. 27, 2020 under Bortle 3/4 skies.
The Crux constellation and the Coalsack Nebula (C99) captured with an old DSLR.
My Nikon D5000 have a serious issue with its sensor. On the right corner and top of the image we can see it failure. A region of the sensor which does have a lack of sensitivity.
First I though it was a "flat frame issue", but it's not. Darks and bias doesn't help.
Only after a carefully processing I'm "ok" in posting this picture. But my Nikon D5000 is old, and I'm not happy to say that it needs to retire.
A galaxy in the constellation of Draco.
A barred spiral galaxy that is quite a difficult target because of it's low surface brightness.
11.7 million light years away this galaxy was first spotted by William Herschel in April of 1793.
Boring techie bit:
Skywatcher Quattro 8" Newtonian Reflector steel tube with the f4 aplanatic coma corrector, Skywatcher EQ6 R pro mount, Altair Starwave 50mm guide scope, ZWO asi120mm guide camera mini, ZWO asi533mc pro cooled to -10c, Optolong L'enhance 2" filter, ZWO asiair plus.
300 seconds at 0 gain.
Stacked with DeepSkyStacker and processed in StarTools & Affinity Photo.
Like REALLY need a tracker. Thanks to my good friend for letting me use his.
Location: Green River State Wildlife Area
Proximal Constellation: Cygnus
Gear
Camera + Lens: Nikon D3300 + AF-S DX NIKKOR
55-200mm f/4-5.6G ED VR II + Hoya RA54 Red Enhancer (Color Intensifier Filter)
Mount: Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer
Acquisition
Focal Length Used: 55mm
78 x 60" light frames (ISO 6400 at f/4)
25 x 60" dark frames (ISO 6400 at f/4)
34 x 1/4000" bias frames (ISO 6400 at f/4)
20 flat frames (ISO 6400 at f/4 with Aperture Priority)
Processing
Stacked in DeepSkyStacker, initial heavy processing in Pixinsight, and final processing in Capture One
DSO(s)
NGC 7000/Caldwell 20: North America Nebula (bottom left)
IC 5070 and IC 5067: Pelican Nebula (across from the North American Nebula)
IC 1318: Sadr Region (near top center)
Sharpless 103/Radio Source W78: Cygnus Loop (bottom right)
M-16 Eagle Nebula
C-11 @ F/2 Hyperstar CGEM-DX on Pier
16 subs 60 sec iso1600 unguided
0 flats, 0 darks, 0 bias
Total integration 0 hours 16 minutes.
Canon 6D Baader Mod – by Hap Griffin.
Filter - LPS2
seeing - average
2nd time on target.
Stacked in Deepskystacker
Same ol' same ol' :)
I uploaded a version of this a month or so back that was supposed to be a combination of this year's data and last year's. Turned out it wasn't - what I got out of DSS was exactly last years data - it completely ignored this year's. DSS playing silly buggers.
This, on the other hand, is the combined data - 2 hours 23 minutes of 60 second subs. This is about three quarter frame, and rotated to provide a different angle - change is as good as a rest. Nice and small and cute :)
SW 200p, EQ5 unguided
Nikon D70 modded, iso1600, Baader MPCC and Neodymiun filter
142 x 60sec
darks, bias and flats.
Stacked in DSS and processed in CS5
Autosave3
El equipo empleado fue...
Telescopio: ED80 Sky Watcher
Montura: LXD75 Meade
Cámara: QHY163m
Guiado: MiniScope 50mm Orion, CámaraGuia/QHY5 L-II c
Adquisición: APT (AstroPhotographyTool)
Apilado y procesado: DeepSkyStacker, PixInsight, Photoshop
Tomas
L: 2x300s / 8x600s
Expo Total: 1h 30 min
Temperatura sensor: -10°C
Distancia Focal: 600mm
F/ 7,5
celfoscastrofotografia.blogspot.com.es/2018/05/a-la-terce...
Nikon D7100 attached to a Orion ST80 on my Star Adventurer.
Processed in DeepSkyStacker then in LR5 then PS6 back to LR5
Only slightly cropped on the bottom
30 lights
10 darks
ISO 3200
30sec exp
The ST80 is a good little scope. Not ideal for this but it will have to do till I get a bigger scope and mount $$$.
Cheers
Mike
The brightest of the "planetary nebulae", some 1,360 light years away. It's always looked more like an apple-core than a dumbbell to me.
Total exposure time: 42 mins
Telescope: Tele Vue-60 APO refractor
Mount: Vixen Super Polaris
Milky Way (stacking): 20 pictures (ISO 1600; 5sec; f2.2) stacked with DeepSkyStacker
Olympus OMD-EM10 MKII + Zuiko 17mm 1.8
Jellyfish Nebula "true color" narrowband. Stacked, assembled, and processed with the following exposure times: 20X900"Ha, and 20X900"OIII.
Equipment used:
Canon 200mm f2.8 lens at f4, Atik 428ex camera, AP900 mount, DeepSkyStacker, Photoshop levels, curves, blending, guided with ZWO174mm and Stellarvue SVR90T.
NGC 2022 is a planetary nebula in the constellation of Orion, located at a distance of 8210 light-years from the Sun.
NGC 2022 is a vast orb of gas in space, cast off by an aging star. The star is visible in the orb's center, shining through the gases it formerly held onto for most of its stellar life. When stars like the Sun grow advanced in age, they expand and glow red. These so-called red giants then begin to lose their outer layers of material into space. More than half of such a star's mass can be shed in this manner, forming a shell of surrounding gas. At the same time, the star's core shrinks and grows hotter, emitting ultraviolet light that causes the expelled gases to glow. This type of object is called, somewhat confusingly, a planetary nebula, though it has nothing to do with planets. The name derives from the rounded, planet-like appearance of these objects in early telescopes. (REF: science.nasa.gov/missions/hubble/hubbles-portrait-of-star...)
Observation data: J2000 epoch
Right ascension: 05h 42m 06.19056s
Declination: +09° 05′ 10.5843″
Distance: 8.21 kly
Apparent magnitude (V): 11.6
Apparent dimensions (V): 28″
Constellation: Orion
Tech Specs: Orion 8” RC Telescope, ZWO ASI2600MC camera running at -10F, 81 x 60 seconds, Celestron CGEM-DX pier mounted, ZWO EAF and ASIAir Pro, processed in DSS and PixInsight. Image Date: January 31, 2024. Location: The Dark Side Observatory (W59), Weatherly, PA, USA (Bortle Class 4).
A large but faint subject, also known as the Headphone Nebula or less popularly as PK164+31.1.
28 x 4-minute, manually guided exposures at f/4 and ISO 1600, taken over 5 nights. Modified EOS 600D & Revelation 12" Newtonian reflector telescope.
Frames registered and stacked using DeepSkyStacker; curves adjusted in Canon Photo Professional; noise reduction via Cyberlink PhotoDirector.
Like the Horsehead Nebula, this is my third go-around for the Orion Nebula. The first time I imaged the Orion Nebula was back in 2008 with a Rebel XT DSLR camera. For this picture, a series of short and long exposures were required to see all aspects of the nebula.
COLOR:
86X120"
81X45"
SVR90T OTA, Canon T3i DSLR, Optolong L-pro filter, AP900 mount
HYDROGEN ALPHA WAVELENGTH:
31X600"
32X300"
32X120"
81X45"(from COLOR exposures)
SVR90T OTA, ZWO ASI183MM, Baader Ha filter, AP900 mount
Guided with a Canon 200mm f2.8, and the ASI174
Stacked in DeepSkyStacker, stacks registered in PixInsight and combined in Photoshop
Telescope: Skywatcher ED 80/600
Camera: Canon 600 astro-modificated
Mount: Celestron Advanced VX Goto
Focal lenght reducer: TS 2" PHOTOLINE 0.8x reducer / flattener
Software: Fitswork, Photoshop, DeepSkyStacker
Filter: Hutech IDAS LPS-D1 EOS
Date: 5. Oktober 2015
Filter: Hutech IDAS LPS-D1 EOS
Exposure: 1.1 hours, 72x55"
ISO1600
Flats: ~15
Imaged from a local beach, which has a less obstructed and slightly less light-polluted view compared to my back garden, back in mid May.
17 x 2-minute exposures at f/4 and ISO 3200. Astro-modified Canon EOS 600D and Leica Summicron 50mm f/2 lens on a Vixen Polarie star tracker.
Frames stacked in DeepSkyStacker software; curves and colour balance adjusted in Canon Photo Professional; noise reduced using Cyberlink PhotoDirector.
There are many open clusters in Cassiopeia, but this one (also known as the "ET Cluster") is arguably the best to look at in a small telescope. The smaller cluster at lower right is NGC 436.
Total exposure time: 15 mins
Telescope: Tele Vue-60 APO refractor
Mount: Vixen Super Polaris
Telescope: Celestron 11 - CGEM
Reduc 0.6x
Camera: ASI178MM - 100 x 10s
Software: Firecapture - PIPP - DeepSkyStacker - PS6
Another test for lucky imaging with ASI178MM not cooled
No dark, no flat, etc...
Lens: Canon 70-200 4L
Canon 5D MK2 on iOptron Skytracker
10x120sec
30x60sec
30x30sec
20x15sec
Stacked with DSS
An emission nebula about 6,000 light years away in the constellation of Cygnus.
Data gathered at The Astronomy Centre, Todmorden, UK.
Boring techie bit:
Skywatcher Quattro 8" Newtonian Reflector steel tube with the f4 aplanatic coma corrector, Skywatcher EQ6 R pro mount, Altair Starwave 50mm guide scope, ZWO asi120mm guide camera mini, ZWO asi533mc pro cooled to -10c gain 101, Optolong L'enhance 2" filter, ZWO filter drawer, ZWO asiair plus.
120s exposures.
Best 75% of 60 light frames.
Darks, Flats & Bias.
Stacked with DeepSkyStacker and processed in PixInsight & Affinity Photo.
I found an empty piece of plastic the other day, on which I had no hesitation in slapping a modded Canon 500D, purchased at a very reasonable price from James Stannard here. There then followed a bit of a learning curve - having been used to a Nikon - which has taken up the best part of two weeks. But I got there in the end :)
This is another collaboration with my good friend Dave Williams from the northern wastelands, who generously donated large portions of Ha, used as luminance.
I will now spend some time trying to breathe life into my Nikon D70 so that I can inflict some considerable pain on the thing, before I eventually kill it - slowly.... :)
RGB:
SW ED80/EQ5
Canon 500D modded, Baader Neodymium filter
90 x 180 sec subs, iso 1600, total 4 hours 30 minutes
Acquisition: APT
Guiding: Quickcam Pro4000/9x50 finderscope, PHD
Stacked in DSS and processed in CS5.
Ha (Dave Williams):
Takahashi FS78 with reducer
G2 8300 camera
10 x 10 minute subs for 1 hour 40 minutes
This is the result of a more artistic approach to processing. Not technically correct but much more dramatic.
Date:14/11/2009
Location:Brisbane Australia
Imaging Camera: Canon 1000D prime focus
Imaging Scope: 200mm Newt
Focal Length: 1000mm F5
Guide Camera: SSAG
Guide Scope: Orion 80mm F5 Refractor
Guided with PHD Guiding
Mount: Celestron EQ5 GT
Exposure: 16 min (8x2min) full colour
Darks: 4x2min
ISO: 800
Processing: DeepSkyStacker, CS3, Noel Carboni's Astronomy Tools
8 x 4-minute, manually off-axis guided exposures at f/4 and ISO 1600.
Modified EOS 600D & Revelation 12" Newtonian reflector telescope.
Registered and stacked using DeepSkyStacker; curves adjusted in Canon Photo Professional; noise reduction via CyberLink PhotoDirector.
El equipo empleado fue...
Telescopio: ED80 Sky Watcher
Montura: LXD75 Meade
Cámara: QHY163m
Guiado: MiniScope 50mm Orion, CámaraGuia/QHY5 L-II c
Adquisición: APT (AstroPhotographyTool)
Apilado y procesado: DeepSkyStacker, PixInsight, Photoshop
Tomas
L: 9x600s
Expo Total: 1h 30min
Temperatura sensor: -10°C
Distancia Focal: 600mm
F/ 7,5
celfoscastrofotografia.blogspot.com/2018/08/noche-de-astr...
This is one of the most beautiful and distinctive nebulae in our galactic neighbourhood.
The eye-catching Bubble Nebula is designated as NGC 7635, Sharpless 162 and Caldwell 11 and lies close to the direction of the open cluster Messier 52.
It is 7 light-years across – about 1.5 times the distance from our Sun to its nearest star, Alpha Centauri and resides 7100 light years from Earth in north-western Cassiopeia close to the border with Cepheus.
The 8.7 magnitude seething star forming this nebula (BD+60°2522) is 45 times more massive than our Sun. Gas on the star gets so hot that it escapes away into space as a stellar wind moving at almost 7 million km/h.
As the surface of the bubble's shell expands outward, it collides with dense regions of cold gas on one side of the bubble. This asymmetry makes the star appear dramatically off-center from the bubble, with its location in the 10 o'clock position in this image.
NOTE: This is a pseudo-narrowband image. I tried with post-processing to give the impression of using Ha, OIII and SII filters. The original version shows only red nebulosity (hudrogen). It was really a persistent and painful struggle in Photoshop :)
Camera: Canon 350Da with Hutech IDAS LPS,
Telescope: Celstron C8 at f/6.3 (with focal reducer)
Guiding scope: Celestron ED80
Mount: Takahashi EM200 Temma Jr
Autoguiding: Toucam 740K, PHD Guiding
Total exposure time: 166 min (9955 sec)
Exposures in detail: 55 x 181 sec , ISO 1600 , 2009-07-25
Alignment and stacking: DeepSkyStacker
Final post-processing: Pixinsight LE, Photoshop CS3
Secondo lavoro di astrofotografia, ritratta la Nebulosa di Orione (M42)
Cielo con molto inquinamento luminoso e nebulosa lontana dallo zenit:
quindi si potrebbe fare molto meglio.
Critiche, commenti e consigli graditissimi.
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Data e luogo:
-Massa, 44° 2'31.08"N 10° 7'9.22"E
-23 Novembre 2011 ore 22 circa.
Strumentazione:
-Canon 450D
-Pentacon 4/300
-Montatura equatoriale motorizzata in A.R. Heyford EQ8
Dati di scatto:
-10 scatti
-40s, 300mm, f/5.6, iso 1600
-3 darkframes
-9 biasframes
Software Usati:
-Deepskystacker - Allineamento, combinazione degli scatti, creazione file TIFF
-Photoshop CS 2 e Lightroom 3 - Crop e variazioni al contrasto.
OTA: Celestron C8N, 8" newtonian reflector and MPCC-III
Camera: ZWO ASI1600MM
Exposure: H-alpha 25x10min, Blue 61x1min
Mount: CEM70G
Captured with SGP
Registered and stacked with DeepSkyStacker
Photographed from Round Rock TX (light pollution zone: red)
Fujifilm X-T10, Samyang 135mm f/2.0 ED UMC @ f2.0, ISO 1600, 42 x 60 sec, tracking with iOptron SkyTracker Pro, stacking with DeepSkyStacker, editing with Astro Pixel Processor and GIMP, taken just before astronomic dawn on Oct. 2, 2019 under Bortle 3/4 skies.
I gave my 500mm mirror lens a go with the Sony A7 and a nano.tracker sidereal rate tracking platform tonight.
I went for 15s exposures (at the fixed f/8 aperture) and ISO 6400. In total 37 frames were used for a total exposure time of 9m 15s, along with 19 dark frames.
Images were stacked with DeepSkyStacker and with final processing in Photoshop to remove vignetting.
The Orion nebula is often referred to as a stellar nursery, a place where new stars are being formed out of collapsing gas clouds.
OTA: Celestron C8N, 8" f/5 newtonian reflector
Camera: ZWO ASI1600MM
Exposure: H-alpha 14x10min, O3 24x10min
Mount: CEM70G
Captured with SGP
Registered and stacked with DeepSkyStacker
Photographed from Round Rock TX (light pollution zone: red)
SH2-136 / VDB141.The Ghost nebula itself consists of numerous Bok globules - areas where the dust and gas is condensing to form protostars.and over 2 light-years across. There are several stars embedded, whose emissions make the nebula shine in brownish colour. Skywatcher Esprit triplet APO f5.5 refractor and Primaluce lab Canon 700Da Cooled at -10C. Iso 800 and 1600, total integration 14hr 20 min. Stacked/calibrated with DeepSkyStacker using 70 Darkframes, 35 flatframes and 240 biasframes using 2 groups. Processed with Pixinsight.
Knight Observatory, Tomar
Total exposure time: 2 hours (40 subframes, 10 darks, 20 flats)
Telescope: Tele Vue-60 APO refractor
Mount: Vixen Super Polaris
Also known as Caldwell 49 and NGC 2237.
The Rosette is an emission nebula in the constellation Monoceros some 5,000 light years away.
It's thought to be responsible for the birth of some 2,500 stars. A group of which can be seen near the centre, this is the open star cluster NGC 2244 estimated to be about 4,000,000 years old.
Boring Techie bit:
Telescope: Askar FRA400 with .7 reducer
Mount: EQ6r pro
Camera: ZWO 533mc pro
Filter: Optolong L'eNhance.
Guided and controlled by the ZWO asiair+
Best 90% of 40 light frames 180 seconds each.
Stacked with darks, flats, dark flats & bias with DSS.
Processed using Graxpert, PixInsight & Affinity Photo.
It’s nearly four months since I captured this. Where did that time go? Imaged back on the 21st of August, this shot of the Milky Way’s galactic core region includes quite a few interesting features.
The “Dark Horse” nebula is one of the most prominent parts of the shot, although down here in the Southern Hemisphere it’s more often known as the “Galactic Kiwi” due to its resemblance to the national bird of New Zealand. Grouped down at the bottom of the frame is the bright orange supergiant star Antares, with Mars to the lower right of that and Saturn across further to the right. In the same area as Antares is the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex, a star-forming region of space. You can see some of the yellow and blue gas clouds in the photo.
Like most Milky Way fanatics I’m missing this part of the sky since it’s obscured by the sun at this time. In a few more months it will be back again and us addicts will get our longed-for fix.
This is a stacked image created from 13 “light" shots of the same region, 7 “dark" shots at the same settings as the original but with the lens cap on, plus 12 “bias” frames. Stacking reduces the digital noise of the overall image and helps to bring out a bit more detail than a single shot would. The 13 frames were captured with Canon EOS 6D, Canon 50mm @ f/2.8, 6 sec @ ISO 6400.
Telescopio o obiettivo di acquisizione: Celestron CPC-800
Camera di acquisizione: Canon EOS 600D / Rebel T3i
Montatura: Celestron HD Pro Wedge
Telescopio o obiettivio di guida: Orion Mini Guidescope
Camera di guida: ZW Optical ASI120MC
Riduttore di focale: Antares f/6.3 SCT
Software: photoshop, DeepSkyStacker, Iris, Stark Labs PHD GUIDING 1.14.2
Risoluzione: 3003x2002
Date: 19 novembre 2014
Pose: 11x180" ISO800 26C
Integrazione: 0.6 ore
Dark: ~11
Flat: ~15
Dark dei flat: ~13
Bias: ~21
Giorno lunare medio: 26.07 giorni
Fase lunare media: 12.93%
Scala del Cielo Scuro Bortle: 7.00
Astrometry.net job: 426764
Centro AR: 90,582 gradi
Centro DEC: 9,653 gradi
Orientazione: -178,689 gradi
Raggio del campo: 0,416 gradi
questa volta quasi ci siamo :D c'e' ancora un po di rumore ma ne ho approfittato per fare un po di esperienza con il layer masking. In questa versione ho trashato gli scatti con l'idas e riciclato altri scatti fatti nel 2011.
Telescopi o obiettivi di acquisizione: 102ED f/7
Camere di acquisizione: Canon / CentralDS EOS Astro 50D, Canon EOS 50D
Montature: Sky-Watcher EQ6 Pro, Sky-Watcher HEQ5
Telescopi o obiettivi di guida: 80/600
Camere di guida: LVI Smartguider 2, LVI Smartguider 1
Riduttori di focale: Flattener 2", 0.8X flattener/reducer
Software: Adobe Lightroom 3, Deepskystacker, photoshop, Noel Carboni's Astro Tools for PhotoShop
Filtri: Orion SkyGlow 2" Imaging Filter
Risoluzione: 853x1280
Date: 23 settembre 2011, 01 ottobre 2011, 05 dicembre 2012
Luoghi: Pian Munè, Fubine (AL), Saint Barthelemy (AO)
Pose:
Orion SkyGlow 2" Imaging Filter: 14x400" ISO1600 -17C bin 1x1
Orion SkyGlow 2" Imaging Filter: 13x150" ISO800 bin 1x1
Orion SkyGlow 2" Imaging Filter: 25x180" ISO800 bin 1x1
Integrazione: 3.3 ore
Dark: ~20
Flat: ~20
Giorno lunare medio: 16.39 giorni
Fase lunare media: 36.57%
Scala del Cielo Scuro Bortle: 2.00
Temperatura: -2.00
Centro AR: 05:35:23.384
Centro DEC: -05:18:10.302
Campionamento: 5.60 arcsec/pixel
Orientazione: -175.49 gradi
Larghezza del campo: 1.33 gradi
Altezza del campo: 1.99 gradi
Une galaxie satellite d'une autre
Newton Sky-Watcher 200/1000 HEQ5 Pro GOTO - Coma corrector SW0264 - Nikon D600
Map "Skychart" - EQMOD,
Processing : DeepSkyStacker
Image correction : Lightroom 5
19 x 121s = 38mn
5 darks - 5 flats - 5 offsets
Target:NGC 2264 Christmas Tree Cluster and Cone Nebula in the constellation Monoceros at about 2600 light years from Earth.
Location:24/12/2020 St.Helens, UK, Bortle 7, 78% Moon.
Aquisition:20x180s Ha, 20x180s (OIII), 20x180s(SII), Total integration 180 min.
Equipment:Imaging: Skywatcher Esprit 100ED, HEQ5, ZWO ASI1600MM Pro and EFW Mini with Baader_Planetarium narrowband filters.
Guiding: Skywatcher 9x50 Finder with ZWO ASI120MM.
Software:Capture: NINA, PHD2.
Procesing: DeepSkyStacker, Affinity Photo, Siril, StarXTerminator, Topaz DeNoise AI. Reprocessed Dec 2021.
M81 & M82 from Turin, Italy 🇮🇹
What a night for testing my new Star Adventurer! 😍
It took me a long time of waiting but finally I got my dream gear, a star tracker!
So, after years of no guided astrophotography... Let the star adventures begin!
And what a good way to start with these two sisters!
So happy for this result, can't wait for next clear sky night!
If you want to check my Instagram, instagram.com/astrotuppo?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=
This shot was taken by me with:
- Tamron 200mm f2.8
- Canon 200D
- Star Adventurer
- Stacking 120s ISO 400 f2.8 for ~ 2h
- Deepskystacker + Photoshop + DaVinciResolve
Shotdate: October 6th 2013
Camera: Nikon D3x
Optics: NIKKOR 80-400mm f4.5-5.6 @ 400mm f7.1
ISO-speed: 1600
Exposure per sub: 300 seconds
Mount: SkyWatcher NEQ6 Pro
guiding: LVI Smartguider2 on 500mm 90mm APO
Stacked in DeepSkyStacker:
Stacking mode: Standard
Alignment method: Bicubic
Stacking 41 frames - total exposure: 3 hr 25 mn 6 s
Per Channel Background Calibration: Yes
Method: Auto Adaptive Weighted Average (Iterations = 5)
Offset: 108 frames exposure: 1/8000 s
Method: Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
Dark: 28 frames exposure: 5 mn 0 s
Method: Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
Flat: 46 frames exposure: 1/2 s
Method: Median Kappa-Sigma (Kappa = 2.00, Iterations = 5)
Post-processing in PixInsight 1.7
Running man and (if you look closesely) the HorseHead Nebula !!
55*25s (+ dof) at 218mm F5.6 and 1600ISO on motorised EQ2
I should train a little more with the post processing
My Facebook Page : www.facebook.com/AlexandreDPhotographies
The North American Nebula next to the bright star Deneb in Cygnus taken with a hydrogen alpha astro modified Canon 5D MKII dslr camera using a Rokinon 135mm f/2 telephoto lens. 30 one minute images were combined to create the picture using DeepSkyStacker, Adobe Lightroom, and Gimp.
Veil nebula
The Veil Nebula complex is huge, covering about 7 moon widths on the sky, so I can’t get it all into one image. This image shows NGC6960 (sometimes called “The Witch’s Broom”), Pickering’s triangle, and NGC6979. All of these objects are part of a supernova remnant.
The supernova that created the Veil Nebula happened between 5000-8000 years ago and the nebula has been expanding ever since. The glowing gas is mostly hydrogen and sulphur (red) and oxygen (teal) whose atoms are being excited by the pressure waves created by the massive supernova explosion. The progenitor star whose explosion created this object was about 1,470 light years away.
Image details
Location: Filiates Thesprotias(Greece)
Exposure time 3:00 Hours
William Optics Star 71mm f/4.9 Astrograph
Neq6 Equatorial Mount with autoguider
Canon 60d Modified
Pre Processing Deepskystacker
Post Processing Photoshop CS6