View allAll Photos Tagged messier
This is Radha's latest "crazy face" she will make if you demonstrate it for her. She will ball up her fists as well and make a silly crazy/mad sound.
Double Crater Messier and Messier A in the plains of Mare Fecundidatis.
44cm Newton, 742 IR pass filter,
f = 6 m, Imaging Source DBK 21AF04
Messier 35 and NGC2158 (the small one upper left corner) in constellation Gemini.
Camera: Canon 550D + Synta Coma Corrector.
Exposure: 5x105s, ISO 3200
Telescope: Newton 130/650mm
Mount: NEQ6 Pro
Messier 106 (also known as NGC 4258) is a transiting spiral galaxy in the constellation of the Hunting Dogs. It was discovered by Pierre Méchain in 1781. M106 is about 22 to 25 million light years away from Earth. M106 contains an active core classified as a Seyfert type 2, and the presence of a central supermassive black hole has been demonstrated from radio wave observations of the rotation of a disk of molecular gas orbiting in an inner light-year diameter region around the black hole.
NGC 4217 is a possible companion galaxy to Messier 106.
Equipment: SkyWatcher NEQ6Pro, GSO Newton astrograph 200/800, GSO 2" coma corrector, QHY 8L-C, SVbony UV/IR cut, Optolong L-eNhance filter, FocusDream focuser, guiding QHY5L-II-C, SVbony guidescope 240mm.
Software: NINA, Astro pixel processor, GraXpert, Siril, Pixinsight, Adobe photoshop
169x180 sec. Lights gain15, offset113 at -10°C, 94x360 sec. Lights gain15, offset113 at -10°C via Optolong L-eNhance, master bias, 180 flats, master darks, master darkflats
20.4. until 30.4.2024
Reworked version
Belá nad Cirochou, Slovakia, bortle 4
This isn't even my room in the background lol my room is way messier.. sequins,beads,jewelry,stilettos,dresses,& makeup would be everywhere =o no joke
Reprocess of my previous image from 1.9.11. Canon EOS 450D prime focus Skywatcher Explorer 150 Newtonian. 50 lights (20s ISO1600), 10 darks, 20 flats, 20 bias. DeepSkyStacker, PixInsight, Photoshop CS5
Messier 31, the Andromeda Galaxy, taken using a 106mm f/5 Takahashi FSQ-106 telescope with an SBIG STL-11000M.
More information at SEDS.org
All those little things on the floor and on the table will have to go somewhere but after six hours of putting furniture together, I'm so done with this day.
M2 in Aquarius. This is a pretty dense globular cluster. Through binoculars it just looks like an out-of-focus star. Takes a decent aperture to resolve it beyond that!
Messier 104 is also known as the Sombrero Galaxy.
20 Frame Stack @ 30 sec/frame
Meade 8'' LX200R, f/10
Canon Digital Rebel XTi
The office hasn't gotten the love of the rest of the place. We put together the desk and then I've been dumping stuff on it ever since. Maybe next weekend...?
Sacred Heart University hosted An Evening with Mark Messier, former NHL hockey player and current Kingsbridge National Ice Center CEO. The event was part of the Student Affairs Lecture Series. Photo by Mark F. Conrad 1/17/18
My current USB hub is just not working as the power cable is not long enough to make it to the upper tier of my desk.
Picture #20
Day 18 - A picture of your room < 3
I have a very typical room i need too clean : /
towels and stuff are everywhere ;o
Is your room clean?
Follow4follow? (:
Fall Webworm Moth (caterpillar) - Hyphantria cunea (Hodges 8140)
On Boxelder, Acer negundo.
- BugGuide bugguide.net/node/view/453
About 20 minutes processing time. I still need to stack it with a few more images to tease out more details.
Located in the constellation Andromeda can be found M31, the famous Andromeda Galaxy. This spectacular object is a spiral galaxy similar to our own Milky Way. At a distance of only 2 million light years, it is one of the closest galaxies to our own. Its enormous diameter of 200,000 light years gives it a visual magnitude of 3.4, making it the brightest galaxy in the sky and the only galaxy visible to the naked eye. It can easily be seen with binoculars, and telescopes will bring out some of the galaxy's detail.
Projections indicate that the Andromeda Galaxy is on a collision course with the Milky Way (our own galaxy if you didn't know that), approaching at a speed of about 140 kilometres per second. Impact is predicted in about 3 billion years; the two galaxies will probably merge to form a giant elliptical.