View allAll Photos Tagged proline
CAROL G - Blackout Male TaTToo
FurtaCor Male:::Billy Tank
Val'More - Sinful earrings
Badwolf - Ruthless rings
Optmus Race - OR DRAG XKILLER PROLINE SERIES
TMD
eBento
Men only Monthly
Credit: Optmus Race -- OR DRAG XKILLER PROLINE SERIES --- Esclusive items for EBENTO Event --- more details in Blogg .
My Blogg
lunarubydeveraux.blogspot.com/2020/10/yes-to-heaven.html
My flickr
www.flickr.com/photos/rubynandahar/
Song
Something a bit different for today... Have a lovely day!
Catch up soon...
Thanks for looking ... :-)
New blog: I was looking for an affordable action camera and this is it. This camera is everything I would expect it to be.
REVIEW: Sunplus SP5K Series
blog
ATEO-01
Locations: Pie Town, NM USA
Telescope: Dreamscope 16" f/3.7 Astrograph
Mount: Software Bisque Paramount ME
Camera: FLI Proline 16803
www.insightobservatory.com/p/ateo-1.html
Integration: 115min
L: 5 x 300 sec
R: 4 x 300 sec
G: 4 x 300 sec
B: 10 x 300 sec
PixInsight + LR
NGC6888 - Crescent nebula
5nm ha 24x600s, 7x1800s (7.5h)
5nm oiii 20x600s, 13x1800s (9.83h)
(R:G:B) = (Ha:OIII:(0.8xOIII+0.2xHa))
OTA: Ceravolo 300 riding on an AP1100AE
camera: FLI Proline 16803
acquired at sierra remote observatories, auberry, ca, June/July 2015
processing in PixInsight 1.8
this is a collaborative project between John Kasianowicz, Daniele Malleo, Leonardo Orazi, Rob Pfile, Rick Stevenson and Jerry Yesavage.
Running_Chicken_Nebula.
The Lambda Centauri Nebula or the λ Centauri Nebula, is an open cluster with an associated emission nebula found in the constellation Centaurus
Narrowband image of IC 2948. Data courtesy of Telescope live.
Telescope
CHI-1 Planewave CDK-24
Camera
Camera
FLI ProLine PL9000
Location
Location
Location El Sauce Observatory, Rio Hurtado, Chile
Date of observation
Date of observation
25-12-2021
Filters
Filters
Astrodon 3nm narrowband
Processing
Processing
PixInsight & PS
Credits
Paul Swift / Telescope Live
:: OPTMUS RACE ::
OR DRAG XKILLER PROLINE SERIES
..::MUCH FASHION::..
Car key GOLD
ROSE BODYSUIT-RED
more credits
Here is my first image in LRGB since my return after some time out.
Some nice data to play with from SSRO - spent a lot of time working on the layers of colour and tone to try and provide as many perceived details as possible.
Plate solving does not seem to recognise this area - maybe it is too busy!
There are a plethora of images from the main blue reflection nebulae a variable nebula, some dark nebula and for good measure some Herbig-Haro objects.
Hope you enjoy.
Imaging telescope or lens:RCOS 16
Imaging camera:FLI Proline 16803
Mount:Planewave 200HR
Filters:Astrodon Blue, Astrodon Red, Astrodon Luminance, Astrodon Green
Resolution: 3927x3886
Dates:May 25, 2017
Frames: 134x1800"
Integration: 67.0 hours
Avg. Moon age: 29.15 days
Avg. Moon phase: 0.17%
Astrometry.net job: 2612749
Locations: SSRO Remote Observatory, Cerro Tololo, None
20" AG Optical iDK, focal length of 3420mm
ASA DDM85XL mount
FLI Proline 16803 CCD
Location: Namibia
My first image with a remote telescope
12 photos Ha 600"
12 photos OIII 600"
Hi all - it's been a while. Apologies for absence and lack of support etc - life been getting in the way.
Having not opened PI for 6+ Months (so be kind :) )I thought I would start with something relatively straightforward to dust the processing down a little, sure there are a few errors. Bits in Spain are taking shape so will have an abundance of data this year, best I get ready for that!
Thanks to SSRO for the great data too.
Imaging telescope or lens:RCOS 16
Imaging camera:FLI Proline 16803
Mount:Planewave 200HR
Filters:Ha, SII, Oiii
Resolution: 3921x3878
Dates: 2016
Integration: 21.0 hours
My processing of ChileScope data
Newton 500:3,8
FLI ProLine 16803
LRGB: 340-120-110-190
Processing: Fitstacker, PixInsight, Photoshop
100%
This photo was taken as part of the competition from ChileScope.com (www.chilescope.com/), thanks to the access granted to raw materials from a remote telescope in the mountains in Chile.
Telescopes NN 2 and 3:
OTA Newtonian ASA 1900mm/500mm (F/3.8) + 10 position dual color filter wheel on German Equatorial mount
CCD Camera FLI ProLine 16803
L (Bin1) = 43frames * 10min (07:10:00)
R (Bin2) = 26frames * 5min (02:10:00)
G (Bin2) = 22frames * 5min (01:50:00)
B (Bin2) = 26frames * 5min (02:10:00)
H-Alpha (Bin1) = 20frames * 20min (06:40:00)
Total time of exposure on both telescopes = 20:00:00
+ calibration
See this link (www.chilescope.com/equipment-and-infrastructure/telescope...) for more details about the telescope
In this frame:
Star of the Unicorn/Monoceros (15 Mon, S Mon, HIP 31978 A, SAO 114258, HD 47839, HR 2456, WDS J06410+0954AB), 4.65m
the Cone Nebula, the Christmas Tree Cluster, Snowflake Cluster, Fox Fur Nebula (NGC 2264 - SH 2-273 - LBN 911 - Cr 112 - Mel 49 - Ced 84b), 3.90m
* * *
Soft: DeepSkyStacker v. 4.1.1
Here is M83 The Southern Pinwheel Galaxy captured in HaLRGB from the dark skies of Chile processed by myself. Really enjoyed processing this so many thanks to @mattdieterich
for sharing this great data 😁. There is over 26 hours of data captured by @mattdieterich from @observatorioelsauce he used a PlaneWave CDK600 (CDK24 with the L-600 mount) and FLI Proline 16803 to capture the data @planewaveinstruments.
H-alpha = 27 x 20 min subs
L = 20 x 10 min subs
RGB = 6 x 10 min subs per channel
Calibrated and processed in PixInsight.
View My Full Stream on Black | [Highest in Explore! on June 4, 2013, #111]
Thanks to all of you for your comments and faves!
I spent a few hours until sunset just exploring the land. Burned more gasoline than I planned. Found some interesting places. Also learned that much of the water access is already claimed by rich folks who have their houses built there. I wonder if I knocked on their doors and asked if I could take some shots of the river from their docks if they would let me or chase me away...
Ended up here, a new place for me. Can't believe this was the first time I've been here. When I saw the colors in the sky, I tried my best to get setup as quickly as possible. There was one other guy with a camera and tripod who had the same idea. The weather was phenomenal! Constant gentle breeze. Perfect temperature. Hard to leave.
I don't do many shots like these, so some improvements in my methods could be used, but it was a learning experience and an inspiration to do more. If you have any advice or constructive criticism, please share. Thanks.
On another note, I was able to finally use my new Dolica tripod to the fullest. I really needed one that was light, could get really low to the ground, have nice quality and features, but not cost over $100, like the Manfrotto I was thinking about... Quality is great. We'll just have to wait and see how long it lasts....
Looking forward to the next exploration. ;)
M33 Triangulum Galaxy
Optics: AG10 CDK F6.7 f=1665mm
Camera: FLI Proline 6303
Blue: 9x300 sec
Green:18x300 sec
Ha: 34x900 sec
Lum:105x300 sec
OIII: 15x900 sec
Red: 8x300 sec
SII: 12x900 sec
26h, integration in PixInsight done
starbase.insightobservatory.com/home
nova.astrometry.net/user_images/11716474#annotated
Calibration
Center (RA, Dec):(23.489, 30.656)
Center (RA, hms):01h 33m 57.317s
Center (Dec, dms):+30° 39' 20.507"
Size:48.8 x 34.3 arcmin
Radius:0.497 deg
Pixel scale:1.12 arcsec/pixel
Una foto del campo de nebulosas de NGC 2035, 2032 y 2030, y el cúmulo NGC 2040, que se encuentran en la Gran Nube de Magallanes, en la constelación de Dorado. NGC 2040 tiene como fondo una nebulosa de emisión de hidrógeno ionizado que se asemeja a una rosa roja, y es un área de estrellas altamente masivas que parecen viajar juntas.
La imagen se tomó con un telescopio iDK óptico AG de 20 ", una distancia focal de 3420 mm y una montura Planewave L-500.
Cámara FLI Proline 16803 CCD con rotador.
Son ocho horas y media de tomas de 10 minutos de Hidrógeno Alfa y Oxígeno III.
Procesado con Pixinsight y Photoshop.
La imagen está tomada en dos lotes, unos realizados a principios de noviembre y otros a finales del mismo mes desde Namibia.
A photo of the nebula field of NGC 2035, 2032 and 2030, and the cluster NGC 2040, which are located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, in the constellation of Dorado. NGC 2040 has as its background an ionized hydrogen emission nebula that resembles a red rose, and is an area of highly massive stars that appear to travel together.
The image is taken with a 20 "AG Optical iDK telescope, focal length of 3420mm and a mount Planewave L-500 mount.
Camera FLI Proline 16803 CCD with rotator.
They are eight and a half hours of intake of Alpha Hydrogen and Oxygen III.
Processed with Pixinsight and Photoshop.
The image is taken in two batches, some made at the beginning of November and others at the end of the same month from Namibia.
M20
Trifid Nebula in Sagittarius
Image taken using the
Telescope Live CHI-1 telescope.
This is a total reprocess of earlier data acquired on 29/03/2020.
Planewave CDK24 60cm f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000
LRGB image with Astrodon filters.
Lum: 5 x 600s
Red: 3 x 600s
Green: 3 x 600s
Blue: 4 x 600s
Processed with PixInsight and Affinity Photo
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THANKS TO EVERYONE FOR ONE MILLION + VIEWS!!!👍👍
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
More than 38 hours of total exposures went into this 4 panels mosaic covering about 140 square degrees of sky.
Pentax 67 EDIF 300mm f/4 - FLI Proline 16803 - Ha (920m) OIII (890) R (160m) G (160m) B (160m) - Coonabarabran, NSW, Australia
If you would like to see larger sizes of this image or get high quality professional prints please visit my homepage at www.glitteringlights.com
IC 2948 nebulosity in the 'Running Chicken' Nebula.
Data from the Telescope Live remote imaging platform.
El Sauce Observatory, Chile.
Telescope: Planewave CDK 24" f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine
PL9000 3056 x 3056 pixels.
SHO Hubble palette image.
Ha: 13 x 600s
SII: 13 x 600s
OIII: 12 x 600s.
Processed with Astro Pixel Processor, PixInsight and Affinity Photo.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THANKS TO EVERYONE FOR ONE MILLION + VIEWS!!!👍👍
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
M78 is a reflection nebula about 1350 light years from Earth in the constellation Orion. A prominent member of the Orion Molecular Cloud, it's one of the brightest diffuse reflection nebulae in that region of space. M78 is colloquially referred to as the Casper the Friendly Ghost Nebula. I'm not sure I can see it, but many will point to the large, bright reflection nebula as being Casper's head.
This is a 2 pane mosaic shot in through RGB filters (no luminance) from Chile using via Telescope Live.
-= Tech Data =-
-Equipment-
Imaging Scope: Planewave CDK24
Imaging Camera: FLI Proline PL9000 CCD
Filters: Astrodon
- Acquisition -
∙ 90 minutes per filter per panel (total 540 minutes)
This data set is from the Telescope live remote program.
Equipment Details :
Telescope: Planewave CDK 24" f/6.5
Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000
Filters : S, H , O
Total Integration time : close to 8 hrs.
On this night the skies were beautifully clear and I was able to capture the data to create this image of Centaurus A (aka NGC5128 or 'The Hamburger Galaxy').
This is one of the closest radio galaxies to earth and is the fifth-brightest in the sky thanks to the supermassive black hole at the centre. This black hole has an estimated mass of around 55 million solar masses and ejects cosmic rays from it's core which can be captured in images taken at different wavelengths.
🌀🌠🌌🌟
Image Information
Telescope: Planewave 17" CDK | f6.8
Camera: FLI Proline 16803 CCD
Mount: Planewave Ascension 200HR
Exposure Details: L 12 x 300 sec (bin 1x1), R 6 x 200 sec (bin 2x2), G 6 x 150 sec (bin 2x2), B 6 x 300 sec (bin 2x2),
Observatory: Siding Spring, NSW, Australia
Date Taken: 15 April 2020
Post-Processing: AstroPixelProcessor, Lightroom Classic CC
M20 Trifid Nebula
Data courtesy of the Telescope Live remote imaging platform.
El Sauce Observatory, Chile.
Telescope: Planewave CDK 24" f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine
PL9000 3056 x 3056 pixels.
Astrodon 3nm filters.
SHO Hubble palette image.
Ha: 10 x 600s
OIII: 10 x 600s
SII:10 x 600s
Data acquired 01--5-2022 and 03-05-2022
Processed with Astro Pixel Processor, PixInsight and Affinity Photo.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THANKS TO EVERYONE FOR ONE MILLION + VIEWS!!!👍👍
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
M42 Orion Nebula
Data courtesy of the Telescope Live remote imaging platform.
El Sauce Observatory, Chile.
Telescope: Planewave CDK 24" f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine
PL9000 3056 x 3056 pixels.
SHO Hubble palette image.
Ha: 33 x 60s and 18 x 30s
OIII: 44 x 60s and 18 x 30s
SII: 44 x 60s and 18 x 30s
Data taken between 01-09-2021 and 20-11-2021
Processed with Astro Pixel Processor, PixInsight and Affinity Photo.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THANKS TO EVERYONE FOR ONE MILLION + VIEWS!!!👍👍
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Imaged remotely from Siding Spring Observatory using iTelescope T32 (17 inch Corrected Dall-Kirkam, FLI Proline 16803 CCD, Planewave Ascension 200HR mount).
Total imaging time: 9 minutes through LRGB filters.
FOV: 40 x 40 arcminutes.
A wee bit tricky to process this as the Red-filter image wasn't properly focused.
This is a large and remarkable galaxy.
Size 200,000 light-years , distance 56 million light years.
NGC 1365
Two bars are visible. Spiral arms have unique shape.
2 million solar mass black hole at center.
Telescope live, Chile.
9hr total exposure LRGB
PI, LR
FLI ProLine PL9000 CCD.
Jan to Feb 2022
Explore 304
Planewave CDK24
Aperture: 610 mm (24 inches)
Focal Length: 3962 mm
F-ratio: 6.5
Mount: Mathis MI-1000/1250 with absolute encoders
Astrodon MonsterMOAG
El Sauce Observatory
Río Hurtado, Coquimbo Region, Chile
Coordinates: 30.4725° S, 70.7631° W
Credits: Eric Ganz / Telescope Live
Cropping the previous image.
Meade LX200 ACF 10"
CCD FLI ProLine 11002
Astrodon Filters
10Micron GM2000 HPS II
L 13 h RGB 3h each, Ha 5 h Total 27 hours unguided, (20' and 10') were acquired by Antonio Ferretti (Gruppo Astrofili Frentani) with the collaboration of my son, Manuel.
All the images were calibrated and processed by Attilio Bruzzone (Gruppo Astrofili Frentani), with PixInsight 1.8.
SQM 18.5 Bortle 7
CG4 Cometary Globule in Puppis
Image taken remotely with the Telescope Live CHI-1 telescope.
El Sauce Observatory, Chile.
Telescope: Planewave CDK 24" f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine
PL9000 3056 x 3056 pixels.
L: 15 x 600s
R: 8 x 600s
G: 7 x 600s
B: 8 x 600s
Processed with Astro Pixel Processor and Affinity Photo.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THANKS TO EVERYONE FOR ONE MILLION + VIEWS!!!👍👍
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NGC 3324
Outer part of the
Eta Carina Nebula
Image taken using the
Telescope Live CHI-1 telescope.
El Sauce Observatory, Chile.
Planewave CDK 24" f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000 3056 x 3056
1.62 arcsec / px (bin 2x2)
Narrowband image using 3nm Astrodon filters.
Ha: 6 x 10m
OIII: 6 x 10m
SII: 8 x 10m
Processed with PixInsight and Photoshop CC2020
Imagen de la galaxia del escultor o dólar de plata NGC 253 que se encuentra en la constelación del escultor a 12,9 millones de años luz de nuestra galaxia , una de las mas cercanas a la Vía Láctea. fue descubierta en 1783 por Carolina Herschel.
La galaxia del escultor es visible en los dos hemisferios , visible con prismáticos en cielos relativamente limpios.
La imagen esta compuesta de 61 fotos de 300s cada una que tomé en remoto desde Namibia (Skygems observatories), son 61 fotos realizadas con los filtros LRGB , H alfa y OIII (12/9/9/9/10/12), en total algo mas de 5 horas.
Telescopio IDK 20" de focal 3420 mm y apertura 500 mm, cámara CCD FLI Proline 16803.
Procesada con Pixinsight, RC Astro utilidades y PS
Image of the Sculptor's Galaxy or silver dollar NGC 253, which is located in the Sculptor's constellation 12.9 million light years from our galaxy, one of the closest to the Milky Way. It was discovered in 1783 by Carolina Herschel.
The Sculptor's Galaxy is visible in both hemispheres, visible with binoculars in relatively clear skies.
The image is composed of 61 photos of 300s each that I took remotely from Namibia (Skygems observatories), there are 61 photos taken with the LRGB, H alpha and OIII filters (12/9/9/9/10/12), in total just over 5 hours.
IDK 20" telescope with 3420 mm focal length and 500 mm aperture, FLI Proline 16803 CCD camera.
Processed with Pixinsight, RC Astro utilities and PS
Apo TEC140 (140/f7.2) - FLI Proline 16803 - Ha (270m) L (200m) R (120m) G (120m) B (120m) - Warrumbungle Observatory, Coonabarabran, NSW, Australia
If you would like to see larger sizes of this image or get high quality professional prints please visit my homepage at www.glitteringlights.com
Lagoon Nebula in Sagittarius
Messier 8
Image taken using the
Telescope Live CHI-1 telescope.
El Sauce Observatory, Chile.
Telescope: Planewave CDK 24" f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000 3056 x 3056
0.8 arcsec / px
Narrowband image with Astrodon filters
Ha: 5 x 450 sec
OIII: 7 x 450 sec
SII: 4 x 450 sec
Processed with Maxim DL and Photoshop CC2020
NGC 6744 Spiral Galaxy in Pavo.
Image taken remotely with the Telescope Live CHI-1 telescope.
El Sauce Observatory, Chile.
Telescope: Planewave CDK 24" f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine
PL9000 3056 x 3056 pixels.
L: 9 x 600s
R: 7 x 600s
G: 8 x 600s
B: 7 x 600s
Processed with Astro Pixel Processor and Affinity Photo.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THANKS TO EVERYONE FOR ONE MILLION + VIEWS!!!👍👍
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sitting in a rich field of OIII and Halpha emission nebulae, a remarkable and beautiful, striated, teal coloured, almost perfectly spherical, bubble, is being blown in the interstellar medium by the intense stellar wind from a very hot and massive Wolf-Rayet star at its centre. Wolf-Rayet stars have surface temperatures of between 30 000K and 210 000 K, compared to our Sun, which has a surface temperature of just 5800K!
Takahashi FSQ106EDX4
FLI Proline 16803, CFW-5-7, Robofocus
HaOIIIRGB = 525 555 140 140 160min = 25.3hrs total exposure (bin 1X1)
New Deep-Sky RGB Astronomik filters
-30C chip temp, dark frames and flats (using Aurora Flat Field Panel) applied
Focal length 530mm, FOV = 4deg X 4deg
Image scale 3.5"/pix
Guide Camera: Starlightxpress Lodestar
Comments
Data collected over 5 nights 8, 9, 15, 16 and 18 Jan 2020
L: 25x600"
R: 11x600"
G: 10x600"
B: 12x600"
Date: 2019/10/21
Telescope: ASA 500:3,8
Camera: FLI Proline 16803
Mount: ASA DDM 85
Exposure: LRGB total 9.6 hours
Procesado por Ariel Cappelletti
Processing: Pixinsight 1.8.8 and PS
This wonderful vista in Sagittarius, features the The Lagoon
Nebula (M8), The Trifid Nebula (M20) and the lovely nebula NGC 6559/IC1274 completes the famous Trio of nebulae, towards the heart of the Milky Way. The golden star fields of the Milky Way complete the scene.
Takahashi FSQ106EDX4
FLI Proline 16803, CFW-5-7, Robofocus
LHaOIIIRGB = 150 60 60 45 45 45 = 6.75 hrs total exposure (bin 1X1)
New Deep-Sky RGB Astronomik filters
-30C chip temp, dark frames and flats (using Aurora Flat Field Panel) applied
Focal length 530mm, FOV = 4deg X 4deg
Image scale 3.5"/pix
Guide Camera: Starlightxpress Lodestar
Comments
All data collected on 15 July 2020
Equipment setup:
This smaller neighbor to the bright Lagoon nebula maybe more famous. The unusual name means three-lobe and was discovered by Messier in 1754. The image was captured as HSO but I processed to give a realistic colors.
H: 24x10m
O: 26x10m
S: 27x10m
Total Integration = 12.8hrs
Pixinsight: WBPP, BXT, SXT, NXT with Mask, DBE, Stars from HSO, Nebula from HOOS.
Photoshop: ColorEfex, DfineX, Levels, Curves (local), Smart Sharpen (local), StarShrink.
Data from Telescope.Live
CHI-1-CCD
CDK24
FLI ProLine PL9000
NGC 2264 Region - Fox Fur Nebula - Capture Data acquired in Chilescope facility in Chile, by Chilescope team.
ASA 500: 3.6 corrected Newtonian - FLI Proline 16803 CCD
Helix Nebula in Aquarius
NGC 7293
Image taken using the
Telescope Live CHI-1 telescope.
El Sauce Observatory, Chile.
Planewave CDK 24" f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000 3056 x 3056
1.62 arcsec / px (bin 2x2)
LRGB image with Astrodon filters
Lum: 105m
Red: 65m
Green: 65m
Blue: 65m
Processed with Maxim DL, PixInsight and Photoshop CC2020
Aperture: 500 mm
Focal length: 1900 mm
Focal length with 4" Wynne Corrector: 1800 mm
Focal ratio with 4" Wynne Corrector: f 3.61
All details are at
www.chilescope.com/equipment-and-infrastructure/telescope...
FLI ProLine 16803
LRGB: 340-120-110-190
Data obtained by Chilescope's team. Processing is mine.
Image data courtesy of the Telescope Live remote imaging platform.
Two-pane mosaic image.
Planewave CDK24 60cm f/6.5 telescope
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000
RGB image
R: 32 x 600s
G: 32 x 600s
B: 32 x 600s
18-12-2020 to 14-01-2021
Processed with Astro Pixel Prtocessor, PixInsight and Affinity Photo
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THANKS TO EVERYONE FOR ONE MILLION + VIEWS!!!👍👍
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thor's Helmet Nebula, also known as NGC 2359, sits about 12000 light-years away from Earth. It's a cosmic beauty located in the constellation Canis Major. It has this majestic, helmet-like appearance due to its bubble shape, created by strong stellar winds from a massive Wolf-Rayet star at its center. This star, thought to potentially be in pre-supernova stage, is incredibly hot and blasts out intense stellar winds, which both cause the bubble shape of the nebula and ionize its gases into the glowing colours we see.
-= Tech Data =-
-Equipment-
∙ Scope: Planewave CKD24
∙ Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000
∙ Mount: Mathis MI-1000/1250
∙ Filters: Astrodon
- Acquisition -
∙ 260 minutes of 5 and 10 minute exposures per filter
∙ Total 13 hours of exposure time.
- Software -
∙ Stacking: Astro Pixel Processor
∙ Processing: PixInsight
∙ Post Processing: Photoshop CC
Shot from the El Sauce Observatory, Coquimbo Region, Chile (Telescope Live)
Image data courtesy of the
Telescope Live remote imaging platform.
Planewave CDK24 60cm f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000 3056 x 3056
0.62 arcsec / px
LRGB image with Astrodon filters.
L: 8 x 300s
R: 8 x 300s
G: 8 x 300s
B: 11 x 300s
Data acquired 25th April and 18th May 2023.
Processed with Astro Pixel Processor, PixInsight, Blur Xterminator, Star Xterminator and Affinity Photo.
Astronomy tutorials and music videos on my You Tube Channel:
www.youtube.com/channel/UCdNHCly_2ueWSe-Hh4OiuDA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THANKS TO EVERYONE FOR ONE MILLION + VIEWS!!!👍👍
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The plane of our Milky Way Galaxy runs through this complex and beautiful skyscape. At the northwestern edge of the constellation Vela (the Sails) the telescopic frame is about 4 degrees wide, centered on the brightest glowing filaments of the Vela Supernova Remnant, an expanding debris cloud from the death explosion of a massive star. Light from the supernova explosion that created the Vela remnant reached Earth about 11,000 years ago. In addition to the shocked filaments of glowing gas, the cosmic catastrophe also left behind an incredibly dense, rotating stellar core, the Vela Pulsar. Some 800 light-years distant, the Vela remnant is likely embedded in a larger and older supernova remnant, the Gum Nebula (text adapted from APOD).
66 hours of total exposure for a 50 million+ pixels mosaic taken over several weeks of night imaging..
Apo TEC140 (140/f7.2) - FLI Proline 16803 - 4 panels mosaic, total Ha (1440m) OIII (1200m) R (480m) G (480m) B (360m) - Warrumbungle Observatory, Coonabarabran, NSW, Australia
If you would like to see larger sizes of this image please visit my homepage at www.glitteringlights.com
M16
The Eagle Nebula
Image taken using the
Telescope Live CHI-1 telescope.
El Sauce Observatory, Chile.
Planewave CDK 24" f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000 3056 x 3056
0.62 arcsec / px
Narrowband image using 3nm Astrodon filters.
Ha: 8 x 10m
OIII: 10 x 10m
SII: 4 x 10m
Processed with PixInsight and Photoshop CC2020
M83
Spiral galaxy in Hydra
Image data courtesy of the
Telescope Live remote imaging platform.
Planewave CDK24 60cm f/6.5
CCD Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000 3056 x 3056
0.62 arcsec / px
LRGB image with Astrodon filters.
Lum: 32 x 450s
Red: 72 x 450s
Green: 71 x 450s
Blue: 72 x 450s
Processed with Astro Pixel Processor, PixInsight, Blur Xterminator, Star Xterminator and Affinity Photo.
Astronomy tutorials and music videos on my You Tube Channel:
www.youtube.com/channel/UCdNHCly_2ueWSe-Hh4OiuDA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THANKS TO EVERYONE FOR ONE MILLION + VIEWS!!!👍👍
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Una foto del campo de nebulosas de NGC 2035, 2032 y 2030, y el cúmulo NGC 2040, que se encuentran en la Gran Nube de Magallanes, en la constelación de Dorado. NGC 2040 tiene como fondo una nebulosa de emisión de hidrógeno ionizado que se asemeja a una rosa roja, y es un área de estrellas altamente masivas que parecen viajar juntas.
La imagen se tomó con un telescopio iDK óptico AG de 20 ", una distancia focal de 3420 mm y una montura Planewave L-500.
Cámara FLI Proline 16803 CCD con rotador.
Son ocho horas y media de tomas de 10 minutos de Hidrógeno Alfa y Oxígeno III.
Procesado con Pixinsight y Photoshop.
La imagen está tomada en dos lotes, unos realizados a principios de noviembre y otros a finales del mismo mes desde Namibia.
A photo of the nebula field of NGC 2035, 2032 and 2030, and the cluster NGC 2040, which are located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, in the constellation of Dorado. NGC 2040 has as its background an ionized hydrogen emission nebula that resembles a red rose, and is an area of highly massive stars that appear to travel together.
The image is taken with a 20 "AG Optical iDK telescope, focal length of 3420mm and a mount Planewave L-500 mount.
Camera FLI Proline 16803 CCD with rotator.
They are eight and a half hours of intake of Alpha Hydrogen and Oxygen III.
Processed with Pixinsight and Photoshop.
The image is taken in two batches, some made at the beginning of November and others at the end of the same month from Namibia.