View allAll Photos Tagged messier

My attempt to capture M5, a globular cluster in the constellation Serpens.

99x180"

QHY8L

Sky-Watcher 200/1000 reflector

Sky-Watcher NEQ6-Pro

Optolong L-Pro filter

astrocamp.eu/en/messier-56-may25/

 

▼ Vixen VC200L | Canon EOS R(a) '25

 

On the 2nd half of the first night of my multi-night Messier globular cluster project, I captured Messier 56 between 2:00 and 4:00 a.m. The telescope was well aligned, and although the guiding wasn't perfect, the result turned out well considering the relatively short exposure time.

 

Latest Hedghog news is that two have been spotted so far and that they are very hungry and eating well :)

I'm sure some of the hay was eaten by this couple of equines at Bybeck Farm just north of Tebay.

This is how my friends and I left the shop to this friendly and helpful shopkeeper in Rishikesh, after buying some clothes.

I did some different processing on my latest Messier 42 image. This time I used PixInsight to process it. The result was a little strange, but I think it turned out better than the original.

I didn't like the bottom right corner of the previous version so I have had a go in photoshop to improve that area. I think this is better.

Selection of globular star clusters. The Messier 22,55 and 79. All taken from Chile and using the 60 cm Planewave CDK24 the ThelescopeLive is running. Processing in Pixinsight and PS/L

DDC-Messy

 

She is in bad need of a grooming, her hair is quite messy. She goes next week.

Messier 94 (also known as NGC 4736) is a spiral galaxy in the constellation Canes Venatici. It was discovered by Pierre Méchain in 1781, and catalogued by Charles Messier two days later. Although some references describe M94 as a barred spiral galaxy, the "bar" structure appears to be more oval-shaped. The galaxy has two ring structures.

 

M94 contains both an inner ring with a diameter of 70 arcseconds (approximately 5400 LY, 1.700 kpc at the distance of M94) and an outer ring with a diameter of 600 arcseconds (approx. 45,000 LY, 14 kpc). These rings appear to form at resonance locations within the disk of the galaxy. The inner ring is the site of strong star formation activity and is sometimes referred to as a starburst ring. This star formation is fueled by gas that is dynamically driven into the ring by the inner oval-shaped bar-like structure.

 

Acquired on April 2020

 

Luminance - 214 x 60 sec

Light pollution - 77 x 120 sec

Red - 51 x 120 sec

Green - 46 x 120 sec

Blue - 59 x 120 sec

 

Total integration time -11:20 hours

 

Imaging telescope, mount and camera:

 

TS Optics Ritchey-Chrétien 203/1080-1624 mm with 0.67x AP reducer.

 

Celestron CGEM-DX

 

ASI1600MM-Cool

 

Processed with: Pixinsight and Photoshop CC

 

Location:

 

Home Backyard, Geleen, Limburg, Netherlands (Bortle 6/7)

My first attempt at M45, the Pleiades, from data in two locations over two nights. It was in the heat of summer so the DSLR sensor was noisier than normal.

 

Image details:

Data acquired on 2013-10-07 and 2013-09-28

33x5m ISO800

Calibrated with dark / flat / bias

 

Equipment:

Vixen ED80sf 80mm APO refractor

Celestron CG-5 ASGT mount

Orion SSAG autoguider + 50mm guide scope

Canon T2i 550D DSLR (Baader IR modded)

Orion Field Flattener

 

Software:

Image acquisition with BackyardEOS

Guiding with PHD

Calibration/alignment/integration and post-processing with PixInsight

This huge ball of stars — around 100 billion in total — is an elliptical galaxy located some 55 million light-years away from us. Known as Messier 89, this galaxy appears to be perfectly spherical; this is unusual for elliptical galaxies, which tend to be elongated ellipsoids. The apparently spherical nature of Messier 89 could, however, be a trick of perspective, and be caused by its orientation relative to the Earth.

 

More information: www.spacetelescope.org/images/potw1902a/

 

Credit:

ESA/Hubble & NASA, S. Faber et al.

American Goldfinch

Troy Meadows

Parsippany, New Jersey

 

Very slight crop. Unknowingly, I walked within very close range of this vivid character. Spotted him in his "disguise" and fired off a few hundred shots ;)

 

View Large On Black

 

© DRB 2009 all rights reserved

Unauthorized use or reproduction for any reason is prohibited

Dirty messy weather out.

I think soy looks really realistic when you give it a little texture. In that Messy-on-purpose kind of way.

 

Really love this girl <3

tint. Messy Gloss ( Mystery Collection )

   

Available on SL Marketplace

marketplace.secondlife.com/p/tint-Messy-Gloss-Mystery-Col...

 

♡ Crib - {KK} TD/LB White TwinCrib

 

♡ Messy clothes - {Seams Legit+Lagom} Messy Clothes

 

messy leather pants

Spiral galaxies in Ursa Major

Aberkenfig, South Wales

Lat +51.542 Long -3.593

 

Skywatcher 254mm Newtonian Reflector, Olympus E410 at prime focus. EQ6 Syntrek Mount.

 

30 light frames of 50s at 800 ISO. Also 10 dark frames.

 

Processed with Deep Sky Stacker and final levels adjusted with G.I.M.P.

A globular cluster of approximately half a million stars located 34,000 light years away in the constellation Canes Venatici.

 

Total exposure time: 31 mins

Telescope: Tele Vue-60 APO refractor

Mount: Vixen Super Polaris

Free stuff and news from swallow, FuLo, id. and [ S H O C K ]

 

for more info and style card here:

 

freebiesailors.blogspot.pt/2012/09/messy-hair.html

 

Here is M 99, the third of Messier's trio (M 98, M99 and M100) discovered in the spring of 1781.

 

M99 is also a member of the Virgo cluster of galaxies at a distance of 53 million light years.

 

One thing I enjoy about the images from the RC scope is the quality of the colour data. The bright star to the lower right is a magnitude 6.5 orange giant star and the blue-white star to the top right is magnitude 8.9. The galaxy itself has an integrated magnitude of 9.9.

There are many magnitude 16 and fainter galaxies sprinkled across the image.

 

Data gathered end March through April '19. A vigorous jetstream was very unkind to much of the data.

 

T: 8-inch Ritchey-Chretien

C: QSI 583

M: SW EQ8

Can't really blame Grandpa for this mess since as of now it does not exist anymore (the mess). At least, I must give him credit in that this was a very pleasant mess to look at.

A messy squirrel.

 

Crumbs on her whiskers, crumbs on her nose.

 

There are lots of crumbs at the bottom of a bag of walnuts.

I was sure it isn't an empty nest.

When this Acadian Flycatcher's nest was first pointed out to me my first thought was messy nest.

 

Empidonax virescens

 

Curiously, no information exists on the ability of the Acadian Flycatcher to walk or hop. It is an excellent flier, though, extremely maneuverable and able to hover and even fly backward. It has been observed bathing not by standing in water, but rather by diving into water from above, hitting the water with its chest, and then returning to a perch to preen and shake.

 

Nest is a shallow, thin cup of fine materials held together with spider and insect silk, usually dangling streamers of material on silk below nest. Slung hammock-like in fork of small branch in tree, usually over water.

 

source - Cornell Lab of Ornithology

Going through my shots from 2017 and tidying up (read: throwing away hundreds of them) and seeing some I've not really seen. I quite like the chaotic messy reflections in this one, and the way it appears as if the guy in the coffee shop is looking at a shadow, rather the person he was with.

Bubble car gets some attention outside Finch's. That kid wants one instead of his scooter.

Messier 6 imaged from a Bortle 6 suburban backyard

One and a half hours of integration- 5 minute subs

Gain 111 offset 5

Equipment:

 

Redcat51/ZWO ASI 183MC/Optolong L pro/EQ6

 

Software

NINA/AstroPixel Processor/ Photoshop CS6/NoiseXterminator

Images taken by Roger and Laia, students fourteen years-old.

 

Images taken by Roger and Laia, students of fourteen years-old, the Astronomical Observatory of the Institute of Alcarràs (blocs.xtec.cat/oaia)

  

Messier 95 is a barred spiral galaxy located 33 million light years away in the constellation Leo. The galaxy is a barred spiral, with an inner ring surrounding the bar.

 

Details:

Lum: 120 x 180s

RGB: 40 x 180s per channel

 

Gear:

 

Camera: ZWO ASI1600MM-Pro

Optic: AT6RC Ritchey-Chretien

Filters: Astronomik LRGB

 

Capture Software: EQMOD, Sequence Generator Pro

 

Processed in Pixinsight

 

Love the messy look going on here!

Newton 200/1000 , moravian 8300

L 2,5 H bin 1

RGB 1,5 H bin 2

Messier 33, taken on 26th March 2022. Taken with a SkyWatcher Explorer 300PDS on a SkyWatcher EQ6-R mount, ZWO ASI294MC Pro with Optolong L-Pro filter, 50 x 240s exposures in NINA, darks, dark flats and flats, stacked in APP and processed using StarTools and GIMP.

The Messier objects are a set of 110 astronomical objects catalogued by the French astronomer Charles Messier in his Catalogue des Nébuleuses et des Amas d'Étoiles (Catalogue of Nebulae and Star Clusters

Messier 45

Credit: Giuseppe Donatiello

Mix Data

 

RA 3h 47m Dec +24° 07′

The Pleiades or Seven Sisters (Messier 45 or M45), is an open star cluster containing middle-aged, hot B-type stars located in the constellation of Taurus. It is among the nearest star clusters to Earth and is the cluster most obvious to the naked eye in the night sky.

The distance to the Pleiades can be used as an important first step to calibrate the cosmic distance ladder.

More recent results using the Gaia satellite (September 2016), determine distances of 134 ±6 pc.

Dust that forms a faint reflection nebulosity around the brightest stars was thought at first to be left over from the formation of the cluster, but is now known to be an unrelated dust cloud in the interstellar medium, through which the stars are currently passing.

The Crab Nebula is the remnant of a massive star that ended its life in a supernova explosion.

Almost a thousand years ago, the explosion was recorded in the constellation Taurus by Chinese astronomers in the year 1054…

 

The spectacular Crab Nebula, the first object in the Messier Catalog According to the records of these Chinese astronomers, the supernova explosion was visible to broad daylight for 23 days, shining six times brighter than Venus. At night, it remained visible for 653 days (almost two years) with the naked eye. Japanese, Arab, and Native American astronomers also noted observations of it (and, interestingly, no one in Europe).

 

In 1731, the British astronomer John Bevis observed a kind of cloudy droplet in the sky and included it in his star atlases, although it was Charles Messier (who observed it himself) who added it to his catalog 27 years later. .

For a time, Messier himself took credit for the discovery of the nebula, until he was contacted by the British, who corrected him. Messier 1 is a plerion (or pulsar wind nebula), that is, the nebula is made up of material ejected by a pulsar interacting with interstellar gas and the pulsar's own magnetic field. Charles Messier The Crab Nebula expands at a rate of 1,500 kilometers per second and contains two faint stars in the center, one of which is the pulsar, and is well known for its complex structure, full of dusty filaments that can be seen in the visible spectrum. It contains enough dust, made up of carbons and silicates, to create 30,000 to 40,000 earths. Furthermore, it is the most powerful persistent source of X-rays and gamma rays known. The pulsar in the center is called the Crab Pulsar, and it is about 30 kilometers across. It rotates on itself in just 33 milliseconds (that is, it makes about 30 revolutions per second) and is tremendously useful for studying objects that pass in front of the nebula and block its radiation, such as the Sun, the moons and the stars. planets of the Solar System. Without going any further, in 2003, scientists used it to measure the thickness of the atmosphere of Titan (moon of Saturn), and in the middle of the last century it was used to map the Sun's corona. Messier 1 has an apparent magnitude of 8, 4 and cannot be seen with the naked eye. If you want to see it with binoculars, you will need the conditions to be unbeatable (and nothing to be close to a city). In a 4-inch telescope, you will be able to see some trace of the nebula's shape in its central region, and in smaller telescopes it will look like a comet with a tail. The filaments and details of the nebula are only visible in telescopes 16 inches or larger, and in very good viewing conditions.

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