Submissions: 2021 January

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Expand view Topic review: Submissions: 2021 January

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by ZoliroAstro » Mon Feb 01, 2021 3:35 pm

*I'm reposting this in the February APOD submissions as I realized I posted this in January's accidentally right before it closed.
Ced 214/NGC 7822
ced 214 v2 Portrait IG Sharp.jpg
Capture details can be found on my AstroBin profile at Ced 214 / NGC 7822

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by afmolinam » Mon Feb 01, 2021 5:58 am

Messier 45 (The Pleiades)

The Pleiades open cluster
https://flic.kr/p/2kxAJDt
Copyright: Andres Molina The most famous open cluster at this year epoch, shines brightly under dark skies, this image was taken on one of the best night's at Tatacoa desert in Colombia.


16/01/20201

Desierto de la Tatacoa, Huila, Colombia

Gear: Camera Canon 70D
Telescope: Orion 6" Astrograph
Mount: Ioptron CEM25P

Image: 89x120s exposure per image, calibrated with dark, flat, bias
Stacked and process Pixinsight 1.8, Photoshop CC 2021

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by theurbanastronomer » Sun Jan 31, 2021 2:00 pm

iss_transit_solar_final.jpg
iss_transit_solar_single_final.jpg
ISS solar transit. (White light)
Copyright: Vineeth Kaimal
Date: 29-Jan-2021
Location: Bengaluru, India
Website: http://TheUrbanAstronomer.com

Equipment:
iOptron CEM25P
GSO 6 Inch F5
Baader Solar Filter
Nikon 1 J5

Processing:
PIPP, Autostakkert, Registax, Gimp
Stacked Sun from the same video as station capture, using PIPP for preprocessing, and Autostakkert (50% of 9153 frames), wavelets/deringing in Registax. Blended with individual frames of the space station transit.

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by jaspalchadha » Sat Jan 30, 2021 9:05 pm

The Super Wide Bubble & Family
Jaspal Chadha - London UK / Bortle 8/9 8-)
https://flic.kr/p/2kx9CEs
Bubble_Nebula_RGB_Full_DBE.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by perezfotografia » Sat Jan 30, 2021 12:54 pm

"Magic reef"

Spain has many magical sea reefs, but this is one of the most beautiful and symbolic ones. The Mermaids' reef is called.
Image

© Alvaro Perez and Jose Manuel Perez

Image Full HD: https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/pty ... 0.jpg?dl=0

Website: http://deviajeconmigo.com

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by StefanoDeRosa » Fri Jan 29, 2021 4:21 pm

Wolf Moon over the Falchera Lake
instagram.com/stefano.derosa_photography
Copyright: Stefano De Rosa Please find above two images taken in the evening of January 28, 2021, showing Full Moon reflecting over the calm waters of the Falchera lake, an artificial lake located in the extreme northern edge of the city of Turin (Italy).

Best regards
Stefano

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by MC75 » Fri Jan 29, 2021 2:11 pm

The most famous horse in the sky
IC434
this is the horsehead nebula taken from Villaverde Observatory, north of Italy with a 180mm f/9 refractor; this image took 50 hours of exposure in Hydrogen alpha and RGB. A tone mapped H-alpha and clear channel were used for the luminance. Camera is a KAF16803.
IC434jpeg8bit_final.jpg

Full 4K resolution here: https://www.flickr.com/gp/cosmacini/68NDP0

Copyright: Marco Cosmacini

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by MC75 » Fri Jan 29, 2021 2:05 pm

An heart in the sky.

IC1805
Taken from Villaverde Observatory, north of Italy with a 180mm refractor; this image took nearly 100 hours of exposure in Hydrogen alpha, Oxigen III and Sulphur II all at 3nanometers. Camera is a KAF16803.
IC1805_mc.jpg
Full 4K resolution at https://www.flickr.com/gp/cosmacini/S5h0jG
Copyright: Marco Cosmacini

IC 5146

by alcarreño » Fri Jan 29, 2021 8:44 am

Copyrights: Raul Villaverde Fraile
ImageIC 5146_2021 by Raul Villaverde, en Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by MC75 » Thu Jan 28, 2021 7:39 am

Good morning all,
these are my shots of M82 and M81 galaxys taken over a month with an Astro-Physics 180mm refractor and KAF 16803 camera. Location north-east of Italy. 15 hours in LRGB eeach.
For the H-alfa I took dedicated images with an astrodon Ha 3nm filter. Especially for M82, this meant 90 hours to be able to have good and deep details in the Hydrogen filaments. Hope you will like.

M81 and M82
Copyright: Marco Cosmacini

M81_mc.jpg
M82_mc.jpg

full images here (M82 is a crop from full field of view):

M81: https://flic.kr/p/2krhhWJ
M82: https://flic.kr/p/2ksY2Sb

Marco Cosmacini
Villaverde Observatory
Italy

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by Kinch » Wed Jan 27, 2021 9:48 pm

Rosette Nebula
(Last years data reprocessed)
New Final Rosette .jpg
Click on above to enlarge.

Full details and higher resolution @ https://www.kinchastro.com/rosette-nebula.html

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by tala » Wed Jan 27, 2021 4:26 pm

In the heart of the Rosette

Image

https://astrob.in/aqhahz/B/
Copyright: Tal Akerman

SHO + RGB Stars

Equipment:
- Telescope: GSO RC 8” Carbon Tube
- Mount: iOptron CEM70
- Main Camera: ZWO ASI1600mm Pro
- Guiding Camera: ZWO ASI174mm Mini
- Filters: Astrodon SHO 3nm, Chroma RGB
- Other: ZWO EAF, Atik EFW, FeatherTouch Focuser, OAG, CCDT67
- Software: N.I.N.A, PHD2, Pixinsight

Acquisition Details:
- Ha - 25x900s
- Oiii - 25x900s
- Sii - 20x900s
- RGB - 30x30s each
- Northern coast of Israel
- Bortel 7

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by markh@tds.net » Wed Jan 27, 2021 4:16 pm

NGC 2327

Copyright: Mark Hanson

This is a beautiful part of the famous seagull nebula. It has a nice variety of nebula, notice the very strange wisp coming off the star in the upper left corner.
NGC2327small2.jpg


Data from El Sauce, Chile 17” Planewave CDK

Lum 6 hours, RGB 5 hours per channel, and 9.5 hrs Ha, for a total of 30.5 hrs.

You can see the full version here: https://www.hansonastronomy.com/ngc2327

Thank you,
Mark

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by astrodoc » Wed Jan 27, 2021 4:07 pm

ImageDouble Cluster by Dave & telescope, on Flickr


Hi folks,
This is a recent image of the Perseus double cluster from Mayhill NM
Full resolution link posted with capture details
Thanks for looking!
Dave Doctor

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by markh@tds.net » Wed Jan 27, 2021 3:42 pm

NGC -3109

Copyright: Mark Hanson

This is a wonderful active dwarf galaxy. The addition of HA really makes this image pop.

Data from El Sauce, Chile 17” Planewave CDK
LRGBHA - 440,300,300,300,300
NGC-3109APODsmall.jpg
You can see the full version here. https://www.hansonastronomy.com/ngc-3190

Thank you,
Mark

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by barretosmed » Tue Jan 26, 2021 9:29 pm

SNAKE NEBULA, THE BLACK SNAKE IN THE SPACE

BEST DETAILS AND QUALITY
https://www.astrobin.com/full/p9gruu/B/?nc=user

Dark nebulae are a show apart, some visible with the naked eye in places with low light pollution, these regions are a type of interstellar cloud so dense that it obscures the starlight in the background.
Dark clouds appear like this due to micrometric dust particles, coated with carbon monoxide and frozen nitrogen, which effectively blocks the passage of light at visible wavelengths.
THESE DUST MOLECULAR CLOUDS PROBABLY CONTAIN SUFFICIENT RAW MATERIALS TO FORM HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF STARS

Equipment:
Apo ESPRIT 150mm
New asi 6200mc
50 x 100seg
Cem60 mount
07/23/2020
Munhoz- MG- Brazil

Processing and capture:
Software: Pixinsight , Adobe Photoshop, Sequence generation pro, PHD, Polemaster, SharpCap

Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
Email: Barretosmed@hotmail.com
Attachments
25012021-snakefinalmenor.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by mdieterich » Tue Jan 26, 2021 5:53 pm

Craters of the Moon National Monument Milky Way
www.MattDieterich.com
Copyright: Matt Dieterich Capturing large panorama shots like this one are a lot of fun to showcase just how stunning the night sky is from our National Parks. I set out to capture the highest resolution panorama ever captured from Craters of the Moon National Monument in Idaho and I think I achieved that feat with this 77 panel image. The original image was so large it contained over 1 billion individual pixels. If you ever get the chance to explore Southern Idaho I highly recommend the trip. (Modified Nikon Z6 10 second exposures ISO 10,000 at F1.4).

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by Daniel DeSclafani » Tue Jan 26, 2021 2:46 am

HaRGB Composition of the Horsehead and Flame nebula.

Backyard Aquired
Location: Monmouth County, New Jersey
Gear:
Skywatcher HEQ5 Pro
ASI 183MM Pro
ASI 120MM Mini (Guide)
William Optics GT81
Astronomik HaRGB filters Ha(6nm)

Instagram: Desclafaniphotography
Copyright: Daniel DeSclafani

Thanks!

Image

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by mdieterich » Mon Jan 25, 2021 3:27 am

Winter Milky Way Deep Sky Objects
www.mattdieterich.com
Copyright: Matt Dieterich
Image
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/508 ... c973_b.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by pincushion » Sun Jan 24, 2021 11:15 pm

The Tarantula Nebula
Located in the LMC deep in the southern skies we have this amazing star nursery
ngc2070-SHO-8.jpg
Equipment
Skywatcher AZ-EQ6
Sharpstar AL140PH Refractor
Chroma 3nm filters (Ha, SII, OIII, NII)
Ha 19 x 300s
SII 21 x 300s
OIII 21 x 300s
Captured using N.I.N.A
Processed in PixInsight
Captured from Bortle 7/8 Randwick, Australia - 11 January 2021
barryfrombondi@gmail.com

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by barretosmed » Sun Jan 24, 2021 9:43 pm

The Grus Quartet (Galaxy) (NGC 7552, 7582, 7590, 7599)


Located in the Grus Constellation, are all 4 spiral galaxies.
Further up we have NGC 7552, the smallest of the three below is ngc 7590, with its mate next to ngc 7599. The most central and most studied of them is NGC 7582.
NGC 7582 is a type 2 Seyfert galaxy, such a classification is due to the fact that the galaxy has an extremely bright supermassive central black hole very similar to a quasar (most energetic objects in the universe). The black hole of NGC7582 is about 10 million times the mass of our sun.

Best details:
https://www.astrobin.com/full/734y09/0/

Equipment:
Apo 150mm triplet
Qhy 16200
15 L 500 "
43 RGB 300 "
Processing and Capture:
Software: PixInsight, Adobe Photoshop, APT, PHD, Polemaster, Sharcap
07/27/2019
Munhoz - MG - Brazil

Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
Email: Barretosmed@hotmail.com
Attachments
24012021-grufinaltif2menor.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by lucam_astro » Sun Jan 24, 2021 9:08 pm

Heckathorn-Fesen-Gull 1 (HFG1, PK136+05) is a very old (~100,000 year old) and extremely faint planetary nebula in the constellation Cassiopeia. It was discovered in deep OIII images by Heckathorn, Fesen, and Gull in 1982 using the emission line survey of Parker et al (1979). The central star is a binary variable pair V664 Cas (13.7 magnitude). HFG1 is the first well observed PN, which reveals a cometary-like structure. As HFG1 moves through the interstellar medium and V664 ejects material, a bluish bow shock is formed and a red long trail of emissions is left in its wake.

Acquisition details:

https://astrob.in/tbilkr/0/

TS ONTC 10in f4
TeleVue Paracorr Type 2
ZWO ASI1600MM Pro, ASI294MM Pro
Astrodon 3nm Ha, 3nm OIII, RGB filters
AP 1100GTO

Data acquired in Schenectady, NY from September 2020 to January 2021
Total integration time: 82 hours.
HFG1_resample_AB.jpg
Copyright: Luca Marinelli 2021

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by jaspalchadha » Sun Jan 24, 2021 3:21 pm

Caph Star
https://flic.kr/p/ZBDyXu
Copyright: Jaspal Chadha
Caph.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by Kinch » Sun Jan 24, 2021 9:43 am

A reprocessing of SH2-115 - Wide Field
sh2-115-wide-1800x1192_orig.jpg
Click on above to expand.

Full info @ https://www.kinchastro.com/sh2-115.html

Re: Submissions: 2021 January

by MC75 » Sun Jan 24, 2021 9:16 am

Good morning,
I would like to show how astrophotography has changed in the last 10-15 year, achieving results that were impossible even to think 15 years ago.
This is a my shot of the galaxy M82 (NGC3034). As you know M82 is an active galaxy about 12 millions of light years away form us. Previously identified as an irregular galaxy, the near-IR observations done in 2005 found two symmetric spiral arms.

The image was obtained with 30 hours of LRGB exposure plus 100 hours in Hydrogen alpha 3 nanometers to identify better the regions with hydrogen filaments. A careful deconvolution process also on the H-alpha channel permitted to achieve deep fine details.

I wanted to compare my image with the image of the same M82 galaxy but taken by the Hubble Telescope. Of course the HST resolution is much, much higher but considering my telescope is a 180mm from the ground (250 meters above sea level in north of Italy), the result is very good and clearly shows how the new devices and image-processing can now obtain results previously impossible for an amateur astronomer.


M82 comparison with HST
Author: Marco Cosmacini, Villaverde Observatory
Link to my M82 galaxy:
https://flic.kr/p/2ksY2Sb

Regards,
Marco Cosmacini
Italy

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