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CROP of original.
The Cigar Galaxy (also known as NGC 3034) is a long and narrow in the constellation of the Big Dipper barred spiral galaxy. It is the prototype of starburst galaxy, being characterized by a high rate of star formation in the center, apparently caused by a gravitational interaction takes between two and five hundred million years with neighboring M81. M82 has long been classified as an irregular galaxy; However, recent studies show that it is actually a barred spiral galaxy delayed type and relatively low mass (1010 solar masses) view nearly edge, and a pair of spiral arms emanate ring surrounding the central bar -reminding a small version of NGC 253.; gravitational distortions and dust regions,
Used equipment data and Exhibition
Observation area:Puerto de Santa MarÃa (Cádiz) February 14, 2009
Photo Telescope:Takahashi FSQ 106 ED
guidescope:Lunatic EZG 60
Mount:Losmandy G-11 Gemini v4
CCD guide:Celestron modified NexImage
CCD capture:Canon EOS 350D DSLR modified
Exposition:16 x 300 \ "ISO 800 RAW
Authors: Jesús M. Vargas & Maritxu Poyal
With the Moon out it's harder to image faint fuzzy stuff, so I figured that M92 would make a decent target, given that it's made of point sources and thus can better burrow its way through the Moon's sky wash. In addition it was well-placed in my sky and it is a spectacular object. It's often overlooked because it's so close to M13, which tends to steal the show.
After a week of experimentation I'm starting to get the hang of using ImagesPlus, which was used to create this image from 25 15-second subframes.
An emu at Birdland, Bourton-on-the-Water that has been very messy and spilled his food all over the floor. Really! Where's Rod Hull when you need him?
The Sombrero Galaxy (also known as M104 or NGC 4594) is an unbarred spiral galaxy in the constellation Virgo.
Apilado de 120x30 segs (1h), f:400mm @ F/5.7, ISO 1600. Canon 1000D +Celestron 70/400, montura CG4. 08-11-2012
This is most often what my desk looks like. :) Okay, always. I rather like it.
Blogged: michelleclement.typepad.com/blog/2011/01/around-here.html
typical state of kiddo when I pick her up after daycare, looking like something out of the Lord of the Flies...
Messier 21 (M21, NGC 6531) is an open cluster which shows quite a strong concentration toward its center. Therefore, it is classified by Woldemar Götz as of Trumpler class I 3 r (strong concentration to the center, large range in brightness, i.e. bright and faint stars, and richly populated), while Trumpler, according to Kenneth Glyn Jones, classified it I 3 p (i.e., poor, or under 50 stars).
According to Burnham, S.N. Svolopoulos, in 1953, has demonstrated the membership of 57 stars (making it Trumpler type I 3 m), the brightest of which are giants of spectral type B0. This implies that this cluster is very young: the Sky Catalog 2000 gives an estimated 4.6 million years, and states that this cluster is part of the Sagittarius OB1 stellar association.
As it is situated close to the Trifid Nebula M20 (the outlayers of which show up in our image at the upper left edge), many images showing the Lagoon-Trifid region do also show M21, e.g. the bigger DSSM image of this region.
The distance of this cluster is discordantly given by the sources: Mallas/Kreimer give 3,000 light years, Burnham 2,200, while Kenneth Glyn Jones and the Sky Catalog 2000 have 4,250 light years. It is interesting that all sources have different distances for the Trifid Nebula M20, but discord which is closer to us, the cluster M21 or the Trifid nebula.
Open cluster M21 was discovered by Charles Messier, who cataloged it on June 5, 1764.
For more information: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messier_21
Galaxia Messier 106
(Re-procesado de datos 2021-2023)
(Datos técnicos👇)
Telescopios:
GSO 8" f/8 Ritchey-Chretien Carbon Tube
Sky-Watcher Evostar 150ED
TS-Optics 200mm/8" Ritchey-Chrétien Pro RC Cámaras Fotográficas:
Omegon veTec 571 M
ZWO ASI294MM Pro
Monturas:
Sky-Watcher EQ8
Filtros:
Antlia EDGE H-alpha 4.5nm 36 mm
Antlia V-Pro Green 36 mm
Antlia V-Pro Luminance 36 mm
Antlia V-Pro Red 36 mm
Baader Blue (CMOS-Optimized) 36 mm
Baader Green (CMOS-Optimized) 36 mm
Baader H-alpha 6.5nm (CMOS-Optimized) 36 mm
Baader Red (CMOS-Optimized) 36 mm
Accesorios:
Sky-Watcher 0.85x Reducer for Evostar 150
Programas:
Adobe Camera Raw
Pleiades Astrophoto PixInsight
Stefan Berg Nighttime Imaging 'N' Astronomy N.I.N.A. Telescopios De Guiado:
Artesky Ultra 70/400mm Guide Scope
Cámaras De Guiado:
ZWO ASI290MM Mini
Tiempo de integración: 21h 38′ 40″
Edad lunar media: 14.45 dÃas
Fase lunar media: 32.15%
Escala de Cielo Oscuro de Bortle: 5.00
Fechas:
7 de Mayo de 2021
17 de Mayo de 2021
24 de Mayo de 2021
6 de Junio de 2021
24 de Marzo de 2023
Tomas:
Antlia EDGE H-alpha 4.5nm 36 mm: 10×600,″(1h 40′) (gain: 100.00) -15°C bin 2×2
Antlia V-Pro Green 36 mm: 20×180,″(1h) (gain: 100.00) -15°C bin 2×2
Antlia V-Pro Luminance 36 mm: 94×180,″(4h 42′) (gain: 100.00) -15°C bin 2×2
Antlia V-Pro Luminance 36 mm: 106×200,″(5h 53′ 20″) (gain: 120.00) -15°C bin 2×2
Antlia V-Pro Red 36 mm: 20×180,″(1h) (gain: 100.00) -15°C bin 2×2
Baader Blue (CMOS-Optimized) 36 mm: 20×180,″(1h) (gain: 100.00) -15°C bin 2×2
Baader Blue (CMOS-Optimized) 36 mm: 21×200,″(1h 10′) (gain: 120.00) -15°C bin 2×2
Baader Green (CMOS-Optimized) 36 mm: 21×200,″(1h 10′) (gain: 120.00) -15°C bin 2×2
Baader H-alpha 6.5nm (CMOS-Optimized) 36 mm: 22×500,″(3h 3′ 20″) (gain: 120.00) -15°C bin 2×2
Baader Red (CMOS-Optimized) 36 mm: 18×200,″(1h) (gain: 119.00) -15°C bin 2×2
A.R. (centro): 12h18m53s.5
Dec. (centro): +47°20′02″
Escala de pÃxel: 0,930 seg.arc/pÃxel
Orientación: 1,921 grados
Radio del campo: 0,434 grados
Resolución: 2794x1871
Messier 31 (Andromeda Galaxy) with Messiers 32 and 110
2018-10-30, Didcot, England
Gear:
Skywatcher 130-PDS with 0.9x coma corrector (585 mm, f/4.5)
Skywatcher NEQ6-Pro Synscan
Canon EOS 550D (unmodified) and Skywatcher 2" LP filter
ZWO ASI120-MC guide camera
Skywatcher Startravel 80 guide scope
Acquisition & Processing:
- AstrophotographyTools (APT) and PHD2 guiding with dithering
- 12 x 300s = total 60 minutes @ ISO 800
- 20 flats, 16 library darks, library bias
- Stacked in DeepSkyStacker and post-processed in Photoshop CC 2018 (including Gradient Xterminator)
A night of perfect hardware operation which was unfortunately plagued with cloud cover, a failed meridian flip (leading to a lost hour), and then dew on the secondary so only 60 minutes of good exposures. Tried stacking with some subs from a session 2 years ago but the poor framing led to issues.
Teen rooms are often messy because teens are busy with more important things than cleaning, like studying, socializing, gaming, or sleeping. Teens also have a different definition of messiness than their parents. What may look like a chaotic pile of clothes, books, and gadgets to an adult is actually a carefully organized system of personal belongings that only the teen can understand. Teens also like to express their individuality and creativity by decorating their rooms with posters, stickers, and other accessories that may not match the rest of the house. Therefore, teen rooms are often messy because they reflect the teen's personality, lifestyle, and preferences.
Source: AI Text Generator
Pipes going all which way. I assume each has some purpose but it's hard to see how anyone could keep track of this jumble. To me, it's just a mess.
This new image of the reflection nebula Messier 78 was captured using the Wide Field Imager camera on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope at the La Silla Observatory, Chile. This colour picture was created from many monochrome exposures taken through blue, yellow/green and red filters, supplemented by exposures through a filter that isolates light from glowing hydrogen gas. The total exposure times were 9, 9, 17.5 and 15.5 minutes per filter, respectively. #L
just like my Life a BIG MESS :)
P.S: i know the picture is not perfect but i love the colors :) will try better next time without holding the monopod :)
Picture Info:
Camera: Nikon D700
Exposure: 8
Aperture: f/6.3
Focal Length: 17 mm
Exposure Bias: +1 EV
Flash: No Flash
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