View allAll Photos Tagged messier
Messier 16 in H-Alpha.
22x10min + 5x20min (total: 5:20h).
EOS 500Da + Astronomik H-Alpha 12nm Clip-In-Filter,
Canon EF 5,6/400m L @ f5,6/ISO 800.
Mount: Avalon Linear, Guiding: MGEN.
arizona tea cans in the back. <3 i collect them, ive got like 40 / 50. my friend did my hair like this today. i love it. (:
The Omega Nebula (Messier 17) is one of several brilliant deep sky astrophotography targets located in the constellation Sagittarius. M17 (Also called the Swan Nebula) is an H II region (emission nebula) that lies between 5000-6000 light years from Earth.
The Omega Nebula (Messier 17), SkyWatcher NEQ6 PRO Syn Scan GO TO / SkyWatcher N 150/750mm . Canon eos 600D , (57 frames) 57mn, ISO 1600 ,.darks, flats , darks flats, DSS , CS6.
"The Crab Nebula (catalogue designations M1, NGC 1952, Taurus A) is a supernova remnant in the constellation of Taurus" (source:wikipedia)
APM LZOS 130/780 CNC LW II with Riccardi Reducer, ATIK ONE 9.0 with Baader narrowband filters
Ha: 3h, O3: 2h, S2: 1,5h, all in 30min subs.
Imaged May 6th.14, 300 sec exp's @ ISO 400. iOptron ZEQ25, AT6RC, Nikon D5100.
Stacked median in DSS, processed and cropped in CS5. Noise removal Noiseware Comm. Edition.
Messier 101 with supernova SN2011fe marked.
Taken 15 September 2011
10 images of 3 minutes stacked (30 minutes total) at ISO 1600 using Canon 550D
10" LX200GPS
Christmas 2005 was quite materialistic and messy. My room was a post-apocalyptic wasteland of packaging for a few hours there.
Southeast corner of my bedroom. Still moving in, obviously...but the X-mas lights were top priority!
This was my favourite photo taken on this trip to Hillhead Tunnel and I was going to give it top billing. However, I felt the other scene, taken slightly further back from here provided a better summation of what this tunnel offers. What we're looking at in this photo is a short section of the tunnel where spalling is an issue.
Whilst the tunnel is still structurally sound, water ingress has caused the brick faces throughout this short section of tunnel to fall off, creating slightly disconcerting piles on the ground. Photographically, there's an advantage to capturing a scene of mild chaos like this. Essentially, the spalled brick means red is on show as opposed to just blue and the rougher edge means the shadows look better.
My messy, messy desk. I am not a neat freak in any other aspect of my life. But I just can't concentrate with a cluttered deck. So I cleaned it off first this morning.
I don't have a date or location for this picture.
I see on the table:
2 jars of Sanka
1 Heinz ketchup bottle
1 pack of Winston.
Messier 53 (M53) is a globular Star Cluster
camera: Canon t4I using Orion 80mm ED.
exposure: 18 x 120sec , 4 Dark, bios and flats.
stacked using DSS, Photoshop cs
Taken on March 17th 2018 from FluffyDuck Observatory
Messy Background graphic available for download at dryicons.com/free-graphics/preview/messy-background/ in EPS (vector) format.
View similar vector graphics at DryIcons Graphics.
Messy Nation via Instagram www.instagram.com/p/BUow6crAd0V/
Shot on Ilford PanF+ 50iso pushed at 100, (under)developed in HC110, 11min 30sec is not enough.
The Whirlpool Galaxy, also known as Messier 51a, M51a, and NGC 5194, is an interacting grand-design spiral galaxy with a Seyfert 2 active galactic nucleus. It lies in the constellation Canes Venatici, and was the first galaxy to be classified as a spiral galaxy. Wikipedia
Age: 400.3 million years
Distance to Earth: 23.16 million light years
Radius: 30,000 light years
Coordinates: RA 13h 29m 53s | Dec +47° 11′ 43″
Stars: 100 billion
Messy party to celebrate graduating from 8th grade
Beginning to play "Pie Roulette". You pass the pie around, and when the music stops, you can pie yourself to stay in the game or pie your neighbor and you are out.
Messier 15 in soft seeing (best focus was 5" stars). LRGB with 2 minute sub exposures, 5 per channel.
Messier 22
Credit: Giuseppe Donatiello
J2000 RA 18h 36m 23.94s Dec –23° 54′ 17.1″
Messier 22 (NGC 6656) is an elliptical globular cluster in Sagittarius, near the Galactic bulge region. It is one of the brightest globulars visible in the night sky and one of the nearer to Earth at a distance of about 10,600 light-years. It spans 32' on the sky which translates to a spatial real diameter of 99 ± 9 light-years.
It was one of the first globular clusters to be carefully studied first by Harlow Shapley in 1930.
M22 is very unusual in that it is one of only four globulars (the others being M15, NGC 6441 and Palomar 6) that are known to contain a planetary nebula.