View allAll Photos Tagged messier
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 55 globular cluster. 45x60" on an ASI1600MC at -10C. Skywatcher 120ED triplet. Guided. Corrected, stacked, and processed in PixInsight.
children make art dough, monster mud, bubbles, paints, and edible creations at the Purcell Public Library.
June 9, 16, 23 & 30 2011
The other side of the messy kitchen. It's never pretty when a bookshelf goes pantry. And yes, Mr. Rowe has informed me that Marvel characters should not be held aloft by DC magnets.
M110 is the second brighter satellite galaxy of the Andromeda galaxy M31, together with M32, and thus a member of the Local Group.
Curiously, this galaxy was discovered by Charles Messier on August 10, 1773, as described in the Connaissance des Tems for 1801, and depicted on his fine drawing of the "Great Andromeda Nebula" and its companions published in 1807. However, Messier did never himself include this object in his catalog, due to unknown reasons, perhaps a certain sloppiness in recording. It was the last additional object, added finally by Kenneth Glyn Jones in 1966. Independent of Messier's discovery, Caroline Herschel discovered M110 on August 27, 1783, little more than 10 years after Messier, and William Herschel numbered it H V.18 when he cataloged it on October 5, 1784.
Messier 95
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
Messier 96
Stack Size:21
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
Messier 101 (auch als NGC 5457, Pinwheel-Galaxie oder Feuerrad-Galaxie bezeichnet) ist eine Spiralgalaxie mit den Abmessungen 28,8' x 26,9' und der scheinbaren Helligkeit von +7,50 mag im Sternbild Großer Bär. Ihre Entfernung beträgt 27 Millionen Lichtjahre, ihr Durchmesser 170.000 Lj.
Quelle: Wikipedia
children make art dough, monster mud, bubbles, paints, and edible creations at the Purcell Public Library.
June 9, 16, 23 & 30 2011
Female cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis - Cardinalidae),
Lake Woodruff Wildlife Refuge, DeLeon Springs, Central Florida
Messier 2 is a globular cluster in the constellation Aquarius. Shot with an EOS 550D mounted to a Meade ETX 70 Telescope. Exposure was around 48 minutes with ISO 800.
El Cúmulo de la Mariposa (también conocido como Objeto Messier 6, Messier 6, M6 o NGC 6405), es un cúmulo abierto que se encuentra en la constelación de Scorpius.
Su magnitud conjunta en banda B (filtro azul) es igual a 4.48,[1] la medida en banda V (filtro verde) es igual a la 4.20;[1] se encuentra formado por estrellas calientes y jóvenes de tipos espectrales O y B, aunque no falta una vieja (del tipo gigante roja) de tipo espectral K, la más brillante del conjunto.
De su velocidad radial, -11.50 km/s,[1] puede calcularse que se aproxima a la Tierra a unos 41 400 km/h: esta velocidad es la combinación del movimiento orbital del conjunto alrededor del núcleo de la Vía Láctea y del movimiento del Sol.
Entre sus brillantes estrellas hay algunas variables, fácilmente visibles para el aficionado dotado de un telescopio mediano (150-200 mm de abertura) equipado con cámara CCD: V976 Sco, de magnitud 11.51, de tipo Delta Scuti; V971, de magnitud 9.81, del tipo Alfa2 CnV o la brillante V862 (magnitud 6.75). Para los más pacientes es factible seguir los cambios de brillo de BM Sco, una brillante estrella supergigante amarillenta (magnitud 6.03) del tipo espectral K2Ib, que por su color destaca del resto de las componentes: es un astro pulsante del tipo semirregular.
Although a conspicuous cluster, even in the smallest telescopes or opera glasses, M25 has only obtained an IC number. This is because due to unknown reason, John Herschel did not include it in his General Catalog, although it had been observed by de Chéseaux in 1745-46, Charles Messier in 1764 (added to his catalog on June 20, 1764), added to the 1777 catalog of Johann Elert Bode, observed by William Herschel (1783) and Admiral Smyth (1836), and by Reverend Thomas William Webb (1859). According to Kenneth Glyn Jones, it was finally rediscovered by Julius Schmidt (1825-84) in 1866, but the present author [hf] could not yet verify this presumed rediscovery, despite studies e.g. of the Astronomische Nachrichten of that years. Eventually, M25 was added to the second Index Catalog by J.L.E. Dreyer in 1908, based on photographic observations and using a position obtained by Solon Irving Bailey (1854-1931), published in Bailey (1908).
this is where I keep all my craft stuff - it should be all neat and tidy . . . .hmmmm. . . .time for some tidying up . . .
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
Messier 04
Stack Size:30
Exposure: 45s
ISO: 6400
Lens: 8in SCT with f6.3 Focal Reducer
Camera: Canon Rebel T7i with Astro Mod
Discovered by Pierre Méchain in 1781.
M104 is numerically the first object of the catalog which was not included in Messier's originally published catalog. However, Charles Messier added it by hand to his personal copy on May 11, 1781, and described it as a "very faint nebula." It was Camille Flammarion who found that its position coincided with Herschel's H I.43, which is the Sombrero Galaxy (NGC 4594), and added it to the official Messier list in 1921. This object is also mentioned by Pierre Méchain as his discovery in his letter of May 6, 1783. William Herschel found this object independently on May 9, 1784.
Callum has taken to "stealing" the spoon when we're feeding him and chewing on it, I suppose to relieve teething pain.
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
Messier 38
Stack Size:22
Exposure: 45s
ISO: 6400
Lens: 8in SCT without 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