View allAll Photos Tagged messy,

I finally received the data for Messier 13. The posting I made earlier this week was of the luminance version of this, and consisted of fifty nine 30 sec exposures and thirty 300 sec exposures merged, using HDR combination in PixInsight to protect the core from over saturation. In addition I have now added 12 of each in RGB, each at 300s long each. I am very pleased that I have kept the 'propeller' after the further processing, and closer inspection shows that I have also got other propeller-like structures coming through too. I have never really seen the internal structures of M13 before.

 

This was taken through the ITU scope in Southern Spain in Fregenal de la Sierra.

Roundtop Creamery in Damaraiscotta, Maine.

 

smilla4blogs

is my room clean or messy ?

22 x 6 minutes, ISO 800

Orion 8" Astrograph

Atlas EQ-G

Guided in PHD with SSAG/ST80

Processed in CS6/Noiseware

x3 HDR with flash - Still playing with my new camera in my messy bedroom.

Our Daily Challenge/Topic!!

 

Hello everyone, For todays challenge i chose the messy part of the challenge. I chose myself as the picture because I'm in a serious need of a hair cut and many people have said my hair is very messy! So i thought it fits in well with the challenge! Please let me know your opinions on the photography and if I'm in need of any improvements!

 

Kind Regards,

Brad Johnson

 

All photos may not be used or reproduced without my permission. If you would like to use one of my images for commercial purposes or any other reasons, please contact me.

  

Email - mrbjohnson08@gmail.com

  

◘ No images in comments please, or you can be blocked, but group invites are welcome.

  

© Bradley Johnson | All rights reserved

Messier 27 (Dumbbell). Apilado de 84x20 segs (28min), f:400mm @ F/5.7, ISO 1600. Canon 1000D +Celestron 70/400, montura CG4. 07-11-2012

First Light samples with the new Nikon D5500 in deep sky imaging.

  

Beets stain things. Really.

Messier 101, a prototypical spiral galaxy seen face-on.

 

The galaxy Messier 101 (M101, also known as NGC 5457 and also nicknamed the Pinwheel Galaxy) lies in the northern circumpolar constellation, Ursa Major (The Great Bear), at a distance of about 21 million light-years from Earth. This is one of the largest and most detailed photos of a spiral galaxy that has been released from Hubble. The galaxy's portrait is actually composed of 51 individual Hubble exposures, in addition to elements from images from ground-based photos.

 

Credit: NASA/ESA

My messy ass desk... I know, I have a lot of shit and I'm probably spoiled, but I don't take anything I have for granted.

Photo taken as part of a self-assigned bodypainting documentary shooting project during a workshop at Ridley Creek State Park, Pennsylvania, August 2010.

 

The bodypainter was Kirk Dupuis (Model Mayhem #1658634).

 

The model in this photo was DannieO (MM# 877400).

 

See More Shots Here.

Spiral galaxy

 

Exposure Details

 

Lens Celestron Nexstar 6SE

Focal Length 1500mm

Focal Ratio f/10

Mount Alt Az fitted with wedge

Camera Nikon D5300 (unmodified)

Exposure ISO1600, 164x30sec

(total exposure 82min)

Calibration 40 darks, 40 flats, 40 bias

Date 14th April 2021

Location Southampton, UK

Sky Bortle 5

Messier 40 is one of the objects in Messier's catalogue that are considered mistakes. The number 40 is wide spaced double star (most likely just an apparent double), and it's hard to imagine why it's in the Messier's catalogue of comet-like objects. Also listed as Winnecke 4.

 

LRGB, 6x5min each

Messier 22 (M22, NGC 6656) is one of the brightest and remarkable clusters in the sky, and in paticular of those observable from mid-northern latitudes. It was the first of these objects to be discovered.

  

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 Nicholas Louis de Lacaille, 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.

  

M22 is a very remarkable object. At 10,400 light years, it is one of the nearer globular clusters. At this distance, its 32' angular diameter, sligtly larger than that of the Full Moon, corresponds to a linear of about 97 light years; visually, it is still about 17'. It is visible to the naked eye for observers at not too northern latitudes, as it is brighter than the Hercules globular cluster M13 and outshined only by the two bright southern globulars (not in Messier's catalog), Omega Centauri (NGC 5139) and 47 Tucanae (NGC 104) - this is the ranking of the four brightest in the sky.

  

While Shapley and Pease counted 70,000 stars in this great stellar swarm, only the relatively small number of 32 variables has been identified, half of them already known to Bailey in 1902, among them a long-period Mira variable which is probably not a member. The brightest stars are about mag 11. The stars are spread over a region roughly 200 light years in diameter, and receding from us at about 149 km/sec.

  

This cluster is notable because it contains a weak planetary nebula, discovered by the infrared satellite IRAS and cataloged as IRAS 18333-2357 or GJJC 1. This planetary was the second discovered in a globular cluster after Pease 1 in M15, and one of only four known planetary nebula in Milky Way globular clusters.

  

Recent Hubble Space Telescope investigations of M22 have led to the discovery of a considerable number of planet-sized objects which appear to float through this globular cluster; these objects may have masses of only 80 times that of Earth, and were discovered by so-called micro lensing effects, i.e. bending of light of background member stars of the cluster.

  

For the observer, it is of interest that M22 is less than 1 degree of the ecliptic, so that conjuctions with planets are frequently conspicuous.

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

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

A derail in the yard at Fond Du Lac.

 

Aug.16,2002

Canon Rebel

Canon 28-200mm lens

Fujifilm 400X

Nebulosa planetaria Messier 27. Apilado de 120x20 segs (40min), f:400mm @ F/5.7, ISO 1600. Canon 1000D +Celestron 70/400. 04-06-2012

This Hubble photograph captures a small region within Messier 17 (M17), a hotbed of star formation. M17, also known as the Omega or Swan Nebula, is located about 5500 light-years away in the Sagittarius constellation. The wave-like patterns of gas have been sculpted and illuminated by a torrent of ultraviolet radiation from young, massive stars (which lie outside the picture to the upper left).

Image Credit: European Space Agency, NASA, and J. Hester

 

www.space.com/bestimg/index.php?guid=420a597986768&ca...

Evidence that I am, in fact, a slob.

This is T's favourite book & although it doesn't show here, she was filthy.. so I make that 6, not 5 messy babies

Throwing powder paint at my cousin. I don't think she knew what she got herself into when she volunteered.

This is a mouse eye's view of the coffee table in my boyfriend's living room. Scary, right?

This is my first decent astro photo using a telescope. It is the great globular cluster M13 in Hercules, a personal favourite of mine. Taken on the clear, windy night of the 26th; most of the frames had to be discarded .

 

Equipment used...

 

Celestron nexstar 8se

Canon 550D

T2 to 1.25" adaptor

 

16 frames at 3200iso and 11sec shutter. I used photoshop to remove the light pollution then stacked them in Deep Sky Stacker, no dark or flat frames used.

messy blackboard - Blackboard covered by chalk dust ready for cleaning.. To Download this image without watermarks for Free, visit: www.sourcepics.com/free-stock-photography/24709053-messy-...

Camper chose to eat dinner tonight in (ahhemmm....) my old mask - from my days as a masked crime fighter, of course.

Open Cluster

 

Exposure Details

 

Lens Celestron Nexstar 6SE

Focal Length 1500mm

Focal Ratio f/10

Mount Alt Az fitted with wedge

Camera Nikon D5300 (unmodified)

Exposure ISO1600, 42x30sec

(total exposure 21min)

Calibration 40 darks, 40 flats, 40 bias

Date 7th March 2021

Location Southampton, UK

Sky Bortle 5

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