View allAll Photos Tagged messier

M53 - NGC5024 - a globular cluster in Coma Berenices constellation.

 

Telescope: Celestron C8 Schmidt-Cassegrain

Mount: NEQ6Pro

Camera: Canon 550D

Exposure: 12x35s at ISO6400

Technikai adatok:

Canon EOS 1100D mod

Skywatcher 200/800

AZ-EQ6 GT

19*180s / ISO 1600

2024 10-07

I had to take a photo before I cleaned up, I couldn't help myself. This is what I've been working in over Spring Break.

Here are my "before" pictures.

Photograph of the open star cluster Messier 35 (M35). Naturally, other objects are also visible: NGC 2158 as a brown spot above M35, the nebula NGC 2175 in the upper right corner, and the nebula IC 443 as a faint pink arc between two golden stars. Photographed with a Pentax K-5, 100mm lens, f/4.5, ISO 800. The photograph is the result of 81 individual exposures of 45 seconds each.

02/03/2025, Hotnja

Our Daily Challenge

Theme: Opposite

 

Whenever I do an art project or cook I am one of the messiest people that you will ever meet. What is the fun in being clean when you do a project? Might as well get down and dirty with it. People that know me see me with blue hands and usually shake their head and laugh. They know me. So the opposite of clean is MESSY and that is how I roll.

Edited Hubble Space Telescope image of the globular cluster M92.

 

Original caption: This striking new NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image shows a glittering bauble named Messier 92. Located in the northern constellation of Hercules, this globular cluster — a ball of stars that orbits a galactic core like a satellite — was first discovered by astronomer Johann Elert Bode in 1777. Messier 92 is one of the brightest globular clusters in the Milky Way, and is visible to the naked eye under good observing conditions. It is very tightly packed with stars, containing some 330 000 stars in total. As is characteristic of globular clusters, the predominant elements within Messier 92 are hydrogen and helium, with only traces of others. It is actually what is known as an Oosterhoff type II (OoII) globular cluster, meaning that it belongs to a group of metal-poor clusters — to astronomers, metals are all elements heavier than hydrogen and helium. By exploring the composition of globulars like Messier 92, astronomers can figure out how old these clusters are. As well as being bright, Messier 92 is also old, being one of the oldest star clusters in the Milky Way, with an age almost the same as the age of the Universe. A version of this image was entered into the Hubble’s Hidden Treasures image processing competition by contestant Gilles Chapdelaine. Links Gilles Chapdelaine’s Hidden Treasures entry on Flickr

Eating a Mickey Bar is always a messy affair.

What a fun game?!?

Messy Games at Youth!

After splurging on momoko shoes..I found out Annz feet don't fit lol. Ohh and I do not like re-ment shoes they are sticky :s.

  

portrait during a messy food filmshoot

Cúmulo globular Messier 13 en Hercules. Apilado de 120x15 segs (30min), f:400mm @ F/5.7, ISO 1600. Canon 1000D +Celestron 70/400. 04-06-2012

Messier 39 is an open cluster in the constellation of Cygnus and lies at a distance of approx. 800 light years.

SW 100mm Apo

NEQ6 Pr0

Canon 550D modified

Astronomik Cls clip filter

ISO 800

Guided

5 subs totalling 30mins

My old messy college bedroom, I didn't sleep much and used everything as my table.

Messy Games at Youth!

Messy wiring loom that seemed bodged together, a large amount was trailer wire.

My room was messy, but surprisingly I have cleaned it since then

not-so-messy girlie. missng.tumblr.com/

 

wearing:

casual wear sweater, salvo

indigo top&scarf, h&m

mum's belt&skirt

brown vera wang tights, kohl's

issac mizrahi flats (not pictured)

 

91/365

Triangulum Galaxy

Canon t2i, 70-300mm lens @ 300mm, f/7.1, ISO 1600

162 x 45 second light frames,

50 dark frames, 50 flat frames

Image Credit: ESA/Hubble, NASA; Acknowledgements: G. Chapdelaine & L. Limatola

 

M61 is a barred spiral galaxy located in the nearby Virgo Cluster of Galaxies. Visible in M61 are a host of features common to spiral galaxies: bright spiral arms, a central bar, dust lanes, and bright knots of stars. M61, also known as NGC 4303, in similar to our own Milky Way Galaxy. M61 was discovered by telescope in 1779 twice on the same day, but one observer initially mistook the galaxy for a comet. Light from M61 takes about 55 million years to reach us. The above image of the central regions of M61 was taken with the Hubble Space Telescope and adapted for release as part of the Hubble's Hidden Treasures image processing competition.

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