View allAll Photos Tagged messier
a final test for Int'l Financial Mgt this monday. so this is how my table looks like now..books and notes everywhere..
msn-ing help me relax abit. hur hur.
Messy Jiverson made a return visit to KDHX Community Media studios after nearly a years absence. The live performance by Messy Jiverson was broadcast live on The Rhythm Section.
Messy Jiverson:
John Carpenter (bass)
Nate Carpenter (keyboards)
Cannon DeWeese (drums)
Gavin Duffy (guitar/keyboards)
Phil James (percussion)
Michael Wehling (guitar/keyboards)
children make art dough, monster mud, bubbles, paints, and edible creations at the Purcell Public Library.
June 9, 16, 23 & 30 2011
children make art dough, monster mud, bubbles, paints, and edible creations at the Purcell Public Library.
June 9, 16, 23 & 30 2011
children make art dough, monster mud, bubbles, paints, and edible creations at the Purcell Public Library.
June 9, 16, 23 & 30 2011
Messy Jiverson made a return visit to KDHX Community Media studios after nearly a years absence. The live performance by Messy Jiverson was broadcast live on The Rhythm Section.
Messy Jiverson:
John Carpenter (bass)
Nate Carpenter (keyboards)
Cannon DeWeese (drums)
Gavin Duffy (guitar/keyboards)
Phil James (percussion)
Michael Wehling (guitar/keyboards)
Messier 12
Stack Size:27
Exposure: 45s
ISO: 6400
Lens: 8in SCT with f6.3 Focal Reducer
Camera: Canon Rebel T7i with Astro Mod
children make art dough, monster mud, bubbles, paints, and edible creations at the Purcell Public Library.
June 9, 16, 23 & 30 2011
This is sort of how I feel lately:
Like spring. Haphazard, and reaching toward the light, and walking the line between blossoming and withering. Green.
This is old, and unedited, but I love it all the same.
I'm considering doing 365, because I need to commit to c r e a t i n g something. What do you think?
I think I need more flowers in my life.
Sometimes, there will be tulips. They are just as beautiful as buds as they are as blossoms.
Messier 100
Stack Size:20
Exposure: 180s
ISO: 6400
Lens: 8in SCT
Camera: Canon Rebel T7i with Astro Mod
Guider: Celeston Off Axis Guider
Guide Camera: ZWO ASI 290mm mini
canon 500d - SW 80ED pro black diamond - 10 light x 30 sec, 3 dark, 1bias - no autoguide
urban site high light pollution
Messier 3 Globular Cluster
T: 190mm Maksutov Newtonian
C: QHY IMG2Pro
F: SXFW, Astronomik RGB
M: NEQ6Pro
G: SX OAG, SX Lodestar
Capture: Sequence Generator Pro
Guiding: Astroart 5
Process: Pixinsight
Red: 10 x 600 seconds
Green: 10 x 600 seconds
Blue: 10 x 600 seconds
Mick Hunt
What the floor of my studio looks like after a day's worth of cutting orders....
The worst parts are behind me from where I took the picture, lol!
Stu took the Jeep to his rehearsal last night and parked near a tree. This is the little present the tree left on the jeep. Little pieces of resin fell on the hood. Then it rained and ran all over the place! Fortunately I was able to remove it, but it sure was hard. It baked in the hot sun so the resin hardened. White vehicles are desirable for this hot climate, but it does have its drawbacks.
Messier 51 - Whirlpool Galaxy by Paul Hutchinson
(Reprocessed)
Wikipedia: The Whirlpool Galaxy, also known as Messier 51a, M51a, or NGC 5194, is an interacting grand-design spiral galaxy with a Seyfert 2 active galactic nucleus in the constellation Canes Venatici. It was the first galaxy to be classified as a spiral galaxy. Recently it was estimated to be 23 ± 4 million light-years from the Milky Way, but different methods yield distances between 15 and 35 million light-years.
Technical card
Imaging telescope: Skywatcher Explorer 200p
Imaging camera: Canon 1100D
Mount: HEQ5
Guiding telescope: SkyWatcher 50mm/162mm Finderscope
Guiding camera: QHYCCD qhy-5 II
Software: APT - Astro Photography Tool, DeepSkyStacker, Adobe PhotoshopCS5
Filters: Astronomik CLS Canon EOS Clip
Frames:
2013-12-01 6x 90s ISO 6400
2013-12-20 6x 300s ISO 800
2014-02-27 9x 300s ISO 800
2014-08-02 10x 300s ISO 1600
Bortle Dark-Sky Scale: 5.00
Centre (RA, hms):13h 29m 55.974s
Centre (Dec, dms):+47° 12' 38.792"
Size:35 x 24.1 arcmin
Radius:0.354 deg
Pixel scale:0.819 arcsec/pixel
Shared from G+ goo.gl/aTd94p
box o' books and stationery. this one was heartwrenching to pack as i had to cull my book pile several times over.
25th October 2010: We are both busy with uni work and other things at the mo, so the tidying goes out of the window!
Az északi égbolt legismertebb gömbhalmaz a Herkules csillagkép irányában. Nagyon sűrű halmaz, a központja környékén köbfényévenként 1–2 csillag található, ami a Nap környékének ötszázszorosa. Igen idős objektumról van szó, mely a galaxisunk halójában járja égi útját, annak centruma körül. Távolsága tőlünk 25000 fényév, átmérője 145 fényév. A halmazt alkotó csillagok számát csak megbecsülni lehet, ami a több százezres számot is elérheti.
Az M13 volt az egyik első objektum, amit 1974-ben kiválasztottak, hogy az esetleges földön kívüli intelligencia számára üzenetet küldjenek. A rádiójelet az Arecibói Obszervatórium nagy rádióteleszkópjával indították útnak. A legszerencsésebb esetben is 50000 évet kellene várnunk az esetleges válaszra.
Távcső: SkyWatcher 150/1200 Newton
Mechanika: SkyWatcher NEQ-5 Pro GoTo
Kamera: Canon 700D
Feldolgozás: Lightroom 6db kép, ISO 3200, 30sec
Hely: Eger
Dátum: 2022.05.05. 01:51 NYISZ
Fotó: Pongrácz Sándor
This was probably the first globular cluster discovered, by Abraham Ihle in 1665. According to Kenneth Glyn Jones, it is supposed (e.g. by Admiral Smyth) that Hevelius may have seen it even earlier, but Halley, De Chéseaux and Messier commonly acknowledge Ihle's original discovery. This globular was included in Halley's list of 6 objects published 1715, and observed by De Chéseaux (his No. 17) and Le Gentil as well as by Abbe Nicholas Louis de la Caille, who included it in his catalog of southern objects as Lacaille I.12. Charles Messier, who cataloged M22 on June 5, 1764, states that it is also included in John Bevis' English Atlas.
children make art dough, monster mud, bubbles, paints, and edible creations at the Purcell Public Library.
June 9, 16, 23 & 30 2011
I only photographed this web because I had never seen one so messy. It wasn't until I brought it up on the computer that I noticed the baby spiders.