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An Unfinished Dream
Interplanetary Travel
Youtube: Supermoon of April 8, 2020 (Beautiful Full Moon Rise Through) - Canon
Camera: Canon EOS Kiss X7i
Photograph by Yusuf Alioglu
Location: Outer space (space)
Here is a view of the Flaming Star Nebula, IC 405, in the constellation Auriga. This is both an emission and reflection nebula and is about 1500 light-years away from Earth. Processed using PixInsight.
TECH SPECS: Sky-Watcher Esprit 120mm ED Triplet APO Refractor, Canon 6D, ISO 3200, 60 x 60 second exposures. Image date: December 4, 2018. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, PA, USA.
"But outer Space,
At least this far,
For all the fuss
Of the populace
Stays more popular
Than populous."
— Robert Frost
Signpost seen at...
Decatur (Decatur Heights), Georgia, USA.
12 July 2020.
****************
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▶ Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II.
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Another Dream
Interplanetary Travel
Youtube: June 6, 2020 Full Moon "Moonrise" 1080p HD Full Moon video and Relaxing Ambient Music - Canon
Camera: Canon EOS Kiss X7i
Photograph by Yusuf Alioglu
Location: Outer space (space)
The Disappearance
Interplanetary Travel
Youtube: Strange New World - Interplanetary Travel (Descent - Houses of Heaven) Ambient / Calm
Camera: Canon EOS Kiss X7i
Photograph by Yusuf Alioglu
Location: Outer space (space)
I took the opportunity on March 1st to try and capture an image of Sirius and the Pup, the companion white dwarf to the brightest star in the sky (besides the Sun). I chose to use the Meade 12” LX-90 and the ZWO ASI290MC camera to tackle this image. Information from Stella Doppie (www.stelledoppie.it/index2.php?iddoppia=27936) was showing the Pup at a distance of 11.193 arc-seconds from Sirius, the next few years are prime for imaging the Pup as it is approaching its maximum distance from Sirius.
The snapshot shown was taken from inside SharpCap (v3.2) using a GAIN of 109 and exposure setting of 0.986 seconds. To help confirm this was the companion to Sirius, the camera was rotate to make sure the Pup rotated with the camera.
Using the CCD Calculator tool from Astronomy Tools (astronomy.tools/calculators/ccd), the resolution of the photograph was calculated to be 0.2"/pixel (using a 2.9 um CCD pixel size and a 3,048mm focal length). Measuring the pixel distance from the center of Sirius A to what I believe is Sirius B shows a calculated distance of 12.6 arc seconds, which is close to the predicted 11.193 separation provided by Stella Doppie.
Additional details including a video can be found at this link:
sites.google.com/view/thedarksideobservatory/deep-sky-ast...
Tech Specs for all images and video: Meade 12” LX-90, ZWO ASI290MC camera. Captured using SharpCap v3.2. Image date: March 1, 2020. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, PA, USA.
That's what the twins called them. I made them for an afterschool snack. It helps me practice but I thought this was cute and it was worth it to see the smiles on their faces.
Chuck manged to end up on Mars and is Greeted by Marvin the Martian.
Chuck: This is really Mars?
Marvin: Well it's certainly not Venus!
November 28th is Red Planet Day. For more information check out www.holidayinsights.com/other/redplanetday.htm
Day 333 of 366.
This is the open cluster Messier 103 (M103) and is one of the most distant of the Messier open clusters at 9,000 light years away.
Tech Specs: Sky-Watcher Esprit 120mm ED Triplet APO Refractor, ZWO ASI071mc-Pro running at -10C, Sky-Watcher EQ6R-Pro mount, 16 x 60 second exposures (calibrated with darks from the library and flats taken the next morning), guided using a ZWO 30mm f/4 mini guide scope and ZWO 120 Mini, controlled with a ZWO ASIAir Pro running v1.5 Beta software, processed in PixInsight. Image date: November 9, 2020. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, PA, USA.
Lost & Alone
Interplanetary Travel
Youtube: "4K" Road Trip in Tunisia - Visiting Tunisia "2019"
Camera: Canon EOS Kiss X7i
Photograph by Yusuf Alioglu
Location: Outer space (space)
Here is a view of Mars from the early morning hours of August 5, 2018. Horrible seeing, Mars just barely makes it high enough to image. Tried both 25% and 10% best of the captured frames and this seems to be the most detail I can pull out of it.
Tech Specs: Sky-Watcher Esprit 120mmED Triplet Refractor, Celestron CGEM-DX mount, ASI 290MC, Televue Powermate x2.5, best 25% of 30k frames. Captured with SharpCap, processed in AutoStakkert, refined in Registax and Lightroom. Image Date: 5 Aug 2018. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, Pennsylvania, USA.
Shot at 50mm under a near half moon. The details in several nebulae can be seen; witchhead, baarnards loop, flame and horsehead. But the color is lacking. I believe this to be simple because of the moon's light.
<2hr exposure at F2.8 ISO 400
Canon Rebel t3i, star adventurer ti
Outerspace...Featuring Sneak Peek with Jumo
Blog:
diamondswithjewel.blogspot.com/2015/09/outerspacefeaturin...
FB:
This flower with the small flowers in the background remind me of outer space. Maybe that's where I need to go? 225th Explore
NGC 5395 is a spiral galaxy in the constellation Canes Venatici that is interacting with an adjacent galaxy (NGC 5394). It is also listed in the Arp Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies as Arp 84. This system is about 160 million light years away from Earth.
Tech Specs: Sky-Watcher Esprit 120mm ED Triplet APO Refractor, Canon 6D, ISO 3200, 30 x 60 seconds (with darks and bias frames), guided using a ZWO ASI290MC and 60mm guide scope. Stacked with DSS and processed in ImagesPlus. Image date: 30 June 2019. Location: The Dark Side Observatory in Weatherly, PA, USA.
Burning Dreams
Interplanetary Travel
Youtube: "4K" Road Trip in Tunisia - Visiting Tunisia "2019"
Camera: Canon EOS Kiss X7i
Photograph by Yusuf Alioglu
Location: Outer space (space)
Sagitta is a small constellation found between the bright stars Vega and Altair. The name is Latin for arrow and represents the weapon that Hercules used to kill the eagle (Aquila). There is one nice Messier object contained in this constellation, the globular cluster designated as M71. The famous Dumbbell Nebula lies nearby, but it lies just over the border in the constellation Vulpecula.
M71 is about 12,000 light years away from Earth and is about 27 light years across. Up until the 1970’s this cluster was designated as a densely packed open cluster because of the loose central region, today it is designated as a loosely concentrated globular cluster with a young age of 9-10 billion years.
Tech Specs: Sky-Watcher Esprit 120mm ED Triplet APO Refractor, Celestron CGEM-DX mount, Canon 6D stock camera, ISO 3200, 14 x 60 second exposures with dark/bias frames, guided using a ZWO ASI290MC and Orion 60mm guide scope. Image date: July 7, 2018. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, PA, USA.
IC 59 and IC 63 are found in the constellation Cassiopeia very near the bright star Gamma Cassiopeia. This set of objects is also known as the Ghost of Cassiopeia. Gamma Cassiopeia also has the informal nickname of Navi. The “IC” designation comes from a group of objects discovered between 1888 and 1907, most made possible by photography, and known as the Index Catalogue.
These nebulae are a combination of emission and reflection, they are located about 610 light years from Earth and are about 10 light years across. Gamma Cassiopeia provides the radiation to light up this area of dust and gas, eventually dissipating the area.
Tech Specs: Williams Optics Redcat 51 APO, Celestron CGEM-DX mount, Canon 6D stock camera, Optolong L-eNhance 2” filter, ISO 3200, 12 x 300 second exposures with dark/bias frames, guided using a ZWO ASI290MC and Orion 60mm guide scope. Image date: October 23, 2019. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, PA, USA.
i bit fly today :))
to another outer space! i guess it's all because i swallowed something... pill!
bokeh~pill!?
p.s: follow The New Theme Gallery with Prizes to be Won!
www.houseofbokeh.com/new-theme-gallery-with-prizes-to-be-...
Light....Color & Geometrics in this one .... wanted to give it a bright finish.....
A big thanks for looking in ..... appreciated ..... best bigger .... hope you have a Great Week
NGC 6765 is a small dim planetary nebula in the constellation Lyra, overshadowed by the Ring Nebula (Messier 57) which is only about 4-degrees away. The magnitude of this planetary nebula hovers around 13 and it only measures 0.67 arcmin wide. You can just start to see evidence of an outer shell on the upper part of the nebula.
Tech Specs: Meade 12” LX-90 (f/10), ZWO ASI071mc-Pro, 54x60 second exposures, guided using a ZWO ASI290MC and Orion 60mm guide scope. Captured using Sequence Generator Pro and processed using PixInsight. Image date: October 8, 2020. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, PA, USA.
2021 All images and use thereof are copyright of Daryl Hutchinson. Reproduction of them is forbidden without prior permission
About Endlessness
Interplanetary Travel
Interplanetary travel has begun.
My interplanetary journey has begun again. I entered the path of the planet I was going to go to the space coordinate system in my spaceship's computer. I am sorry that I will not be able to communicate with you while traveling in outer space. I will still try to communicate. I hope I can be successful. I'm leaving behind another planet that I finished exploring. Thank you for accompanying me on this journey to find new life forms. See you again on the next planet I visit.
Youtube: 4K | Plutonia - Interplanetary Travel (Tunisia 🇹🇳)
"4K" Road Trip in Tunisia - Visiting Tunisia "2019"
Camera: Canon EOS Kiss X7i
Photograph by Yusuf Alioglu
Location: Outer space (space)
Visit Mars! Rocket ships departing daily!
This Blythe doll is Zoe and Her Pet Fish, posing for the theme “Girl from Mars” in the Blythe a Day group on Flickr. The background is a wall hanging. I gathered up all my weirdo toys to portray the Martian citizens for this travel poster.
Io Transit Across Jupiter - June 15, 2018
Here is another attempt at capturing Jupiter using the Sky-Watcher 120ED and a Televue 2.5x Powermate. I have not mastered derotation using WinJupos yet…. This image captured Io in transit across Jupiter.
Tech Specs: Sky-Watcher Esprit 120mm ED Triplet APO Refractor, Celestron CGEM-DX mount, ASI290MC, Televue 2.5X Powermate, best 15% of 5000 video images. Image date: 15 June 2018. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, PA, USA.
View Season 3 Episode 1 Here featuring Cometan's conversation with David Mathisen – www.youtube.com/watch?v=AaY_lLuNs9A
As 2022 begins so does the anticipated Third Season of A Conversation with Cometan. Season 3 begins with a surprising return for David Warner Mathisen who was featured in the first two episodes of Season 1. You will see other familiar faces conversing with Cometan this season and some new ones too.
Later episodes will see Cometan present various lectures from his Year of Predissemination Lecture Series, presentations which will cover all the topics Cometan knows and loves like Astronist philosophy, cosmocentrism, transcension, and cosmism. Also, Cometan will lecture on new topics, a notable example is his recent work concerning his grandparents' joint cause for beatification in the Catholic Church.
A Conversation with Cometan is coming back better than ever for Season 3 with a refreshing new look and of course, many new fascinating yet at times challenging and mind-bending conversations.
Here is the Western Veil Nebula in the constellation Cygnus.This section is also known as Caldwell 34 or NGC 6960 (the Witch's Broom) and includes the star 52 Cygni. This was caused by an exploding star known as a supernova and is estimated to have occurred between 3,000 BC to 6,000 BC.
Tech Specs: Sky-Watcher Esprit 120ED Telescope, ZWO AS2600mc-Pro running at 0C, Sky-Watcher EQ6R-Pro mount, Optolong L-eNhance filter (2”), 23 x 300 second exposures, guided using a ZWO 30mm f/4 mini guide scope and ZWO 120 Mini, focus with a ZWO EAF, controlled with a ZWO ASIAir Pro. Processed using PixInsight and DSS. Image Date: June 4, 2022. Location: The Dark Side Observatory, Weatherly, PA, USA (Bortle Class 4).