View allAll Photos Tagged iOptron

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Beloptik Telecentric 5x

Filter H alfa : Coronado PST

Filter H alfa : Solar Spectrum S.O. 1.5 0.5A

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4900 mm.

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

 

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, ImPPG, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Beloptik Telecentric 5x

Filter H alfa : Coronado PST

Filter H alfa : Solar Spectrum S.O. 1.5 0.5A

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4900 mm.

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

 

Software : FireCapture by Torsten Edelmann, AutoStakkert3 by Emil Kraaikamp, ImPPG by Filip Szczerek,

Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

Nikon d810a

50mm

ISO 6400

f/2.8

Foreground: 12 x 10 seconds

Sky: 53 x 30 seconds

H-Alpha: 13 x 60 seconds

IOptron SkyTracker

 

This is a 78 shot panorama of the summer Milky Way arch over Lake Ninan, 2 hours north east of Perth in Western Australia. The prominent red regions in the sky are hydrogen alpha emitting nebulae captured using a screw on filter which isolates that part of the spectrum.

 

Prominent in this image are the Large & Small Magellanic Clouds in the right corner and following the 'band' of the Milky Way from the left side we have the California Nebula, the easily recognisable Orion Nebula & Barnard's Loop, the aptly named Seagull Nebula near the centre, the huge Gum Nebula and finally the pink Carina Nebula.

My goal with framing this shot was to include the Dumbbell Nebula (tiny, but bright, on the left), the asterism Brocchi's Cluster (lower right, AKA Coathanger) and some of the well-defined dark nebulae in the region (upper right). Emission nebulae are also fairly prominent near the center.

 

Acquisition details: Fujifilm X-T10, Samyang 135mm f/2.0 ED UMC @ f2.0, ISO 1600, 50 x 60 sec, tracking with iOptron SkyTracker Pro, stacking with DeepSkyStacker, editing with Astro Pixel Processor and GIMP, taken July 23, 2020 from Bortle 3/4 skies.

Rho Ophiuchi, Escorpión y Saturno.

G 27- San Francisco de Los Andes

6 de Julio 2016

 

Cámara Canon 5D Modificada

Lente 50mm 1.8 a f/5.6

ISO 800

36 tomas de 5min- (3 Hrs)

Montura SkyGuider iOptron

M45. My first attempt at M45. 20x180 seconds. Having trouble managing the Halos.

Photo by Li Fang

Post Processing By Fluorine Z.

 

Takahashi TSA120

Atik One 6.0

Astrodon LRGB

iOptron CEM60

 

Integration : 26h

47 minute exposure on the ioptron skytracker

Nikon d5500

35mm

ISO 3200

f/2.5

13 x 30 seconds

 

Our neighbouring dwarf galaxies, the Large & Small Magellanic Clouds are ever-present in Southern skies, easily visible to the naked eye. Here they are not far from the Perth metropolitan area, a city of 2 million.

facebook | flickr | 500px | instagram | dcfever

 

Chatroom (We Speak Chinese)

星空攝影研習社 (Facebook) | 星空攝影谷 (Telegram)

 

早兩天難得半晚天清,來試試每年秋季也要拍一下的M31。 M31(仙女座星系 Andromeda Galaxy) 是我們的一個鄰居星系,距離我們約250萬光年,大小約是銀河系的兩倍。因相信跟我們銀河系很相似,而常常被作為研究比較之用。

 

曝光訊號不太夠細節有點粗,留待日後好天再增加一點曝光時間吧!

 

Photo by Michael Leung

 

日期:5/9/2015 @ 北潭涌

相機:CentralDS 600D @ -1c

鏡頭:Borg 90FL w/0.72x reducer 360mm f/4

追星儀:iOptron ZEQ25

導星:Guided QHY5LII Mono

其他:IDAS LPS-D1 Filter

設定:ISO 1600, 240sec x 23 (Darkframe / Bias)

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Beloptik Telecentric 5x

Filter H alfa : Coronado PST

Filter H alfa : SolarSpectrum S.O. 1.5 0.5A

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4900 mm.

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

 

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

Hi Folks,

 

Once again, the weather has stopped me from collecting new data, so I have done another Reprocessing Project!

 

This time, I went back two years to 8.3 hours of narrowband data I had collected for SH2-132 - better known as the Lion Nebula!

 

This is an impressive region of emission and dark nebulae and star clusters measuring more than one degree across. This is located 10,00 light-years away in the constellation of Cepheus.

 

The original image looks a little crude to me today, and I am much happier with my new version. It's fascinating what can be done with old data when leveraging new tools and techniques - along with some more experience under my belt.

 

Both the old and the new versions can be seen below.

 

You can see the original Project Post for this here:

cosgrovescosmos.com/projects/sh2-132-the-lion-nebula

A detailed processing walkthrough of the new version can be seen here:

cosgrovescosmos.com/projects/sh2-132-the-lion-nebula-repr...

 

Hope you like the new version!

 

Clear Skies,

Pat

Decided to reprocess some data taken last August.

 

ZWO ASI294MC Pro

Sky Watcher EvoStar 72ED

iOptron CEM26

ZWO Dual Band Filter

ZWO 120mm mono guide scope

ZWO ASIAIR Plus

97 / 3 minute subs

10 Dark frames

120 gain / -10c

A third edit of the Tesseract Nebula. (OKA the Iris Nebula) Pentax K3II, iOptron RC6

Acquisition Data:

-Explorer Scientific ED127CF

-ASI2600MM

-iOptron CEM40

-ASI120MM Guide Cam

-Exposure (~20 hrs):

SII: 62 x 5 min

Ha: 79 x 5 min

OIII: 96 x 5 min

-Bortle 8/9

59x120s exposures, Askar PRO 180 mm and Uranus-C camera on iOptron HAE29 mount. Taken from Lika, Croatia. Processing in PixInsight.

HaRGB image

Ha 16c300sec

R,G,B 8x180 each

 

TS80APO (480mm f/6)

QSI 583wsg

iOptron iEQ30 pro mount

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0) + TeleVue 2" Mirror Star Diagonal + Televue Powermate 1,25” 5X

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4900 mm.

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

Nikon d810a

85mm

ISO 6400

f/2.8

Foreground: 22 x 20 seconds

Sky: 112 x 30 seconds

iOptron SkyTracker

Hoya Starscape filter

 

This is a 134 shot panorama of the Milky Way setting above The Pinnacles Desert, 2 hours north of Perth in Western Australia.

This was taken just at the end of astronomical twilight so you can clearly see the Zodiacal Light just left of centre. Just above the horizon on the left is the Carina Nebula and on the opposite side of the image is the North America Nebula.

Nikon d810a

35mm

ISO 2500

f/1.8

13 x 20 seconds

 

This is 13 shot panorama of the Milky Way rising above Stirling Dam, 1.5 hours south of Perth in Western Australia.

This was taken during the recent geomagnetic storm event of May 11 producing vivid aurora displays across the world. This image was taken after the aurora peaked for the evening but you can still see it shining quite brightly above the horizon on the right.

Beidou Observatory

Photo By Cao Yue

Post processing by Fluorine Zhu

 

Image Telescope/Lens : 8” F4 BlackHole Newtonian

Image Camera : QHY9S-M

Mount : iOptron CEM60

Probably one of the more famous deepsky objects that almost everyone easily recognizes, The Horsehead Nebula in the constellation Orion. This is a work in progress and consists of 29 x 1 minute exposures at ISO 3200 using a Canon 6D and Canon 400mm lens. The brightest star in this image is also the left-most star in Orion's Belt (named Alnitak). Photo taken last evening (December 25, 2014).

Mosaic of 4 panels taken over 4 nights each ~55x75 seconds.

 

Imaging telescope or lens:Canon 40mm prime

 

Imaging camera:Canon 500D Canon T1i

 

Mount:IOptron Skytracker pro

 

Software:Auriga Imaging RegiStar, Adobe Photoshop CS4 Photoshop CS4 , Stark Labs Nebulosity Nebulosity 2.1.2

 

Resolution: 4065x8566

 

Dates: Sept. 4, 2018

 

Frames: 55x75"

 

Integration: 1.1 hours

 

Avg. Moon age: 23.61 days

 

Avg. Moon phase: 34.65%

 

Data source: Backyard

10 hrs Narrowband. RGB stars. ASI 1600. Askar Quad Petzval refractor 130mm F/7.7 1000mm FL. Cropped.

Optic: Sharpstar 90mm f/5.6 Askar FRA500

Mount: Ioptron CEM60 HP

Camera: QSI 583wsg

Filters: 31mm unmounted Astrodon gen. 2

Frames: Ha 3nm: 18X600sec - OIII 3nm: 18X600sec - RGB 4X600sec each Bin1 -15°

Autoguider: ZWO ASI290MM mini on ZWO 30 F/4, Phd guiding

Processing: Pixinsight, Photoshop

NINA automation

Comet C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) is seen in the early morning hours of April 2, 2020 shortly after moonset. The comet was approximately magnitude 8 on this date. The image was made of 85 twenty second exposures taken with a Canon 80D and a Canon 200 mm f/2.8L II lens. (ISO 1000, f/3.5)

MEADE SN10, iOptron CEM60, ZWO-ASI174MM,

 

1000 frames captured in Firecapture 160fps, 0 Gain,

Best 65% Stacked in AS3, Wavelets applied in Registax 6.0

extra mayo & no pickles ;-)

Telescope: INTES MK-69 PhotoMak

Camera: ZWO ASI071MC Pro

Exposure: 40 x 3min @ unity gain -5°C

Filters: no filter

Mount: iOptron CEM60

Location: Cesseras France

Date: 2022.05.26

I love this shot because it shows the unique diversity of the cosmos in one frame. The emission nebula (sh2-101) at the lower right is an H II region emission nebula in the constellation Cygnus. It is sometimes called the Tulip Nebula because it appears to resemble the outline of a tulip in photographic images. It lies at a distance of about 6,000 light-years from Earth.

 

The blue ring nebula WR 134 at the upper left is a Wolf-Rayet variable star also located about 6,000 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus and is surrounded by a faint bubble nebula created by the star's intense radiation and fast winds. It has five times the radius of the sun, but is 400,000 times brighter than the sun due to a temperature of over 63,000 K.

 

This is a result from a total exposure time of more than 9 hours: 600 seconds for OIII, and 450 seconds for Hα and SII, a total time of nearby 9 hours, captured in my Garden Observatory in the Alps in Pongau in Salzburg/Austria with the QHY268M and a 420mm f/2.8 Newton. I developed it with Astro Pixel Processor, Pixinsight and Adobe Photoshop.

 

more/mehr: www.fascinationcosmos.com

 

source: NGC6883_SH2_101_WR134_2023Sept_Wfw_SGP_QHY268M_HEM27EC_15Ha450s_30OIII600s_16SII450s+APP+PI+PS24d

40x90s Integration from a relatively dark site.

 

D610 180mm

ISO 1600

IDAS D1 Light pollution Filter

iOptron Skytracker V2

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Beloptik Telecentric 5x

Filter H alfa : Coronado PST

Filter H alfa : SolarSpectrum S.O. 1.5 0.5A

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4900 mm.

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier

Trolley : JMI Large Size Universal Wheeley Bars.

 

Software : FireCapture by Torsten Edelmann, AutoStakkert3 by Emil Kraaikamp, ImPPG by Filip Szczerek, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

The deep southern Milky Way arching across the sky, from Puppis and Vela at upper right, to Centaurus at lower left. The two Magellanic Clouds are at lower centre, with the Large Cloud at top. The Small Cloud is just setting above the treetops with the globular cluster 47 Tucanae visible as a star below the Cloud amid the trees.

 

The Carina Nebula and Southern Cross are at upper left, and the paired stars of Alpha and Beta Centauri are rising above the trees at left. Canopus is at right, while Sirius shines through the gum tree at upper right. The faint red arc of the Gum Nebula in Vela can be seen at top in the Milky Way.

 

The scene depicts the austral autumn evening sky of late March from a latitude iof 30 degrees south.

 

This is a stack of 5 x 1.5-minute exposures, all tracked on the iOptron Sky Tracker, at f/2.8 with the 15mm fish-eye lens, and Canon 5D MkII at ISO 3200. The ground comes from just one of the tracked exposures to minimize blurring. Taken from the Tibuc Gardens Cottage near Coonabarabran, NSW, Australia on March 30, 2016.

Telescope: Celestron Edge HD 800 with 0.7 reducer

Camera: ZWO ASI 071MC Pro

Exposure: 50 x 4min @ unity gain -5°C

Filters: IDAS LPS filter

Mount: iOptron CEM60

Location: Beveren-Waas Belgium

Date: 2023.09.14

 

Nikon d810a

50mm

ISO 2000

f/2.0

Foreground: 9 x 10 seconds

Sky: 48 x 30 seconds

iOptron SkyTracker

 

This is a 57 shot panorama of the Crux & Carina region of the Milky Way above the sand dune desert of Nambung National Park, two hours north of Perth in Western Australia.

 

Crux is the dark nebula almost in the direct centre of the image while a little further above is the pink coloured Carina Nebula. Near the top is the deep red coloured Gum Nebula, captured thanks to a Nantong Foric screw on h-alpha filter. To the far left, just above the horizon, is a red noctilucent cloud.

The Eastern Veil Nebula is a part of the much larger Veil Nebula, a supernova remnant of a star 20 times the size of the Sun. It exploded 8000yrs ago and this cloud of ionized gas has been expanding ever since.

 

This image acquired through Ha (red) and OIII (blue) filters over a total integration time of 5.6hrs.

 

30 Ha and 38 OIII images (each 5min exposure length) stacked and processed in Pixinsight and Lightroom

Nikon D610

70-200mm at 165mm f2.8

45x90 seconds

iOptron Skytracker

ISO 1600

Stacked in PS using smart object method.

 

Quite happy with it for my 2nd attempt at imaging this area.

Stargazing with my family is always a fun experience, and during our recent Namibia vacation, I had the great pleasure of introducing them to the wonders of the southern hemisphere sky.

 

Northern hemisphere dwellers are probably familiar with the constellations and nebulae in the upper part of the image, including the famous Dark Horse and Rho Ophichui. The Lobster, Cat's Paw, and Prawn Nebulae may also still be known to those not living too far north.

 

The next bright red hydrogen emission nebula, however, was a new one for me. NGC6188. Even though it was discovered by John Herschel in 1836, it never rises above the horizon in my home country, Switzerland.

 

Following the dust lanes of the Milky Way band further south, leads to the bright stars Rigil and Hadar (Alpha and Beta Centauri) and eventually to a very dark and dusty area, called the Coalsack.

 

To the lower right of the Coalsack lies the famous constellation Crux, the Southern Cross. South of the Southern Cross are two more prominent red nebulae, IC 2948, the 'Running Chicken Neblua', and NGC 3372, the bright 'Eta Carinae Nebula', one of the largest diffuse nebulae in our skies. Although it is four times as large as and even brighter than the famous Orion Nebula, the Carina Nebula is much less well known due to its location in the southern sky.

 

I conclude this little tour with the open star cluster IC 2602, the 'Southern Pleiades' near on the upper left edge of the Eta Carinae Nebula.

 

EXIF

Canon EOS-R, astro-modified

Tamron SP 15-30mm f/2.8

IDAS NBZ filter

iOptron SkyTracker Pro

 

Sky:

10 x 90s @ ISO1600, unfiltered & 4 x 180s @ ISO6400, filtered

 

Foreground:

Single exposure of 1s @ ISO100 during blue hour.

Picture saved with settings applied.

It was nice and clear last night and it yielded this image of the Pleiades. First time out with my IOptron pro. Shot with Canon 70D and manual Leica 135mm f2.8 lens at f4.

Optics : TEC140 Apo + TeleVue Barlow 1 1/4" 5x

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4900 mm.

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

Optic: Lunt LS80THa D.S. + ZWO EAF + Lunt B1200 Ha blocking filter

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

Camera : ZWO ASI 178 MM;

Equivalent focal length = 560 mm.

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

This was a misty, awe-inspiring night at Spruce Knob Lake while the AT111 and Nikon D5300 captured data on the Leo Triplet of Galaxies. Jupiter taking center stage while following closely behind Antares and Rho Ophiuchi.

 

Even after growing up in SW Colorado, I believe the clarity and visibility of the Milky Way that was offered later that night was the best I've ever seen with the naked eye. Taken on Monday, June 3rd / morning hours of Tuesday June 4th, 2019 in West Virginia.

 

Canon 6D, iOptron Skyguider, Rokinon 24mm.

 

1x180 tracked sky shot, ISO 1600

1x200 untracked foreground shot ISO 800

 

Merged in Photoshop, refined in Lightroom CC.

M101, a face-on grand spiral galaxy, 23 million light-years away. Nikon D850, 200-500 f/5.6 lens, 500mm, 11 frames each 90 sec., f/7.1, ISO 5000. Post-processed in Lightroom and combinded in Starry Sky Stacker.

My first deep sky mosaic made up of 3 panels joined to create a single image covering an area of the night sky nearly 15 degrees wide by 10 degrees high.

Objects visible include the Southern Cross (Crux) which should be recognisable by anyone in the Southern Hemisphere. NGC4755, the Jewel Box, is a cluster of bright stars just to the left of the left star in the cross. In the bottom right of the image the red cloud is hydrogen gas in IC2944 also known as the Running Chicken Nebula. Directly above this the bright cluster of stars is NGC3766, the Pearl Cluster.

The Jewel Box and Pearl Clusters were identified in 1752 by French astronomer Nicholas Louis de Lacaille who travelled to South Africa to catalogue the Southern night sky during 1751 and 1752. The Running Chicken Nebula (IC 2944) was first catalogued in 1834 by Englishman John Herschel during a four year trip to South Africa made to catalogue and describe over 1700 night sky objects using a large reflector telescope with a 20 foot (roughly 6 metre) focal length.

This image was taken on 21 February 2025 from Bortle 2 skies in Coalgate in Canterbury, New Zealand, using a Samyang 135mm lens, ASI2600MC camera and CEM40 mount without guiding. Each of the 3 panels were 84 images of 30 seconds stacked in DSS, then GraXpert, combined in PS, and final edit in Siril. The second image was named using the nova.astrometry.net site.

 

Thank you for choosing this image of the Southern night sky for Explore on March 5, 2025.

www.flickr.com/explore/2025/03/05/

  

There's a bright-ish comet passing through Orion these days [C/2020 M3 (ATLAS)]. It's the green fuzz at the top of the first photo, above Orion's three belt stars along with the decidedly bright Orion Nebula at lower right and nearby Horsehead and Flame nebulae around the. bottom belt star. The other image shows a detail of the comet with a longer focal length; no tail showing but a nice big coma. By the way the green is from carbon molecules excited by sunlight to emit mostly green light.

Nikon D800 (modified to record hydrogen light), 200-500mm f/2.8 @200mm, 20 exposures, each 90 sec., f/7.1, ISO 2500, iOptron CEM25P drive, processed in Lightroom, combined in Starry Sky Stacker.

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Beloptik Telecentric 5x

Filter H alfa : Coronado PST

Filter H alfa : Solar Spectrum S.O. 1.5 0.5A

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4900 mm.

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

 

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, ImPPG, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

Taken at Table Mountain in WA state. Equipment: Tele Vue 76mm refractor, Modified Canon XSi (450D) DSLR, iOptron iEQ45 Pro Mount. Total integration time: 80 minutes (16 x 5 mins).

I was hoping to shoot Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks before it fell below the horizon, but I was overly optimistic. By the time I arrived at my imaging site, the comet was sitting on the western horizon. I had all my gear and nearly clear skies and hadn't imaged in well over a year, so rather than head home, I decided to image something. I chose the Pinwheel Galaxy on a whim. I was able to squeeze the Whirlpool Galaxy into the frame as well.

 

Instead of using Astro Pixel Processor for gradient removal (my license expired), I used GraXpert for the first time. It worked well, especially considering the cost (free!).

 

Acquisition details: Fujifilm X-T10; Samyang 135mm f/2.0 ED UMC @ f2.0, ISO 1600; tracking with iOptron SkyTracker Pro; 32 x 60 sec; stacking with DeepSkyStacker; gradient (i.e. vignetting) removal with GraXpert; and curves adjustment/star reduction/editing with GIMP; taken on April 8, 2024 under Bortle 3/4 skies.

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