Submissions: 2021 March

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Expand view Topic review: Submissions: 2021 March

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Victor Lima » Wed Mar 31, 2021 11:28 pm

Water World

After a long time planning, in mid-March/21 I finally managed to realize my dream of photographing Iguazu Falls at night.
I knew that the challenge would be great, after all, you need a special authorization from the National Park to shoot at night. One reason for this is that the park is home to several wild animals, including Jaguar, which are frequently seen in the region.
Having obtained the authorization, the challenge now was to be able to take long exposure photographs close to the more than 270 waterfalls in the place. The water spray generated in the place is very intense, and when you approach the main waterfalls you have the impression that you are photographing, literally, inside the shower.
This image was the first one I captured when I arrived at my main location, right on my first night at work. In it we can see the Santa Maria jump, one of the main falls of the complex, the Milky Way cloud on the left and the Magellanic clouds on the right. In the Milky Way region we can identify the Southern Cross and the Eta Carinae Nebula region.
The result of this unprecedented work in Landscape Astrophotography in the main region of the Iguaçu Falls on the Brazilian side has been gaining prominence in the media in Brazil.

4x 16mm | f/2.8| 30 sec | ISO 6400
Water World - Iguazu Falls - Brazil
Water World - Iguazu Falls - Brazil

Tarantulla & LMC

by IanP » Wed Mar 31, 2021 10:57 am

D810A
Attachments
2021-03-31_NGC2070_123.JPG

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Steed » Wed Mar 31, 2021 9:41 am

ImagePerseus molecular cloud by 虞 骏, on Flickr

Perseus molecular cloud

The Perseus molecular cloud, located at the junction of Taurus, Aries, and Perseus, about 1,000 light-years away from the Earth. It contains over 10,000 solar masses of gas and dust covering an area of 6 by 2 degrees, is the closest giant molecular cloud actively forming large numbers of low to intermediate-mass stars. Unlike the Orion molecular cloud, Perseus molecular cloud is almost invisible apart from two clusters, IC 348 and NGC 1333, where low-mass stars are formed.

By accumulating a very-long-time of exposure, the dust and gas show up, exhibit a complex and chaotic structure consisting of dense cloud cores surrounded by an interconnected network of filaments and sheets. Many voids surrounded by partial arcs or nearly complete rings are also seen. This complicated structure is one possible signature of supersonic turbulence.

The eastern (upper) end of the cloud is associated with IC 348 that contains several hundred young stars. Most of the star formation in IC 348 took place within the last 3 Myr, but some stars in this region formed 10 Myr ago. The apparent age spread in IC 348 may be an indication that two episodes of star formation have occurred. IC 348 appears to be an example of a region that is at or near the end of its star-forming phase.

The western (lower) portion of the Perseus cloud contains the most active region of star formation in the Perseus molecular cloud, including the NGC 1333 cluster. It contains around 150 stars with a median age of a million years, is one of the most active sites of ongoing star formation in the sky within 1500 light-years of the Sun. The molecular ridge extending south (left) from NGC 1333 contains many Herbig–Haro objects, which are bright patches of nebulosity associated with newborn stars.

Between IC 348 and NGC 1333, right in the middle of this photo, there is an area that appears pinky, which is a low-surface brightness HII region surrounded by a dust ring G159.6-18.5, which appears to lie behind the obscuration of the Perseus molecular cloud. The intense ultraviolet light emitted by the central star HD 278942 ionizes the surrounding hydrogen, giving this region its characteristic pink color. The star appears red in this photo and would have been a blue-white star if it were not obscured by dust. The presence of HD 278942 and its HII region suggests that that massive stars may have formed in the recent past within the Perseus molecular cloud.

BTW, the cloud of dust, which obscures the central star and the HII region, is called the“Flying Ghost Nebula” because of its shape.

The area to the west (lower) of the HII region looks relatively empty without too much dense dust, and particularly dark here because the extinction in this region remains high. Perhaps this dead-zone is the youngest portion of the Perseus molecular cloud, formed by the expansion of the dust ring G159.6-18.5.

There are more areas full of dense dust to the south (left) of NGC 1333, see another photo I took if you are interested: https://www.astrobin.com/ggdhla/C/

Location: Galaxy Remote Observatory, Kangbao, Hebei, China
Time: October 18, 2020 - February 7, 2021
Telescope: SharpStar 150 2.8 HNT
Camera: QHY268C
Mount: iOptron CEM70/CEM60
Guide: QHYCCD OAG-M
Guide camera: QHY5L-II-M
Mosaic: 4 panels
Number of shots: 137×1000 seconds, 523×300 seconds
Cumulative exposure: 81.6 hours
Acquired by APT
Processed by PixInsight and PhotoShop

For a larger image, please see the link: https://www.astrobin.com/fiyi3z/

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Jean-Baptiste Auroux » Wed Mar 31, 2021 7:26 am

"Soul nebula" (IC 1848) in SHO
Full version : https://astrob.in/full/s89381/0/

Takahashi TSA102 - AZEQ6 - Atik Cameras Atik16200
Ha : 50 x 900s bin1
OIII : 36 x 600s bin 2
SII : 36 x 600s bin 2

Many thanks to Bernard Michaud who kindly provided me his SII layer in order to reinforce my own SII layer !

22, 23, 24 & 25 August 2019 - Fouras (France)
Pixinsight & PS

Copyright: Jean-Baptiste Auroux
https://millenniumphoton.com/
https://www.astrobin.com/users/Jean-Baptiste_Paris/

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Alexandru Barbovschi » Wed Mar 31, 2021 1:45 am

Alexandru Barbovschi wrote: Wed Mar 31, 2021 1:23 am Title: MINERAL MOON ISS TRANSIT: THE VIDEO

Image

This is a video submission (Flickr allows videos, but sadly the preview only as a static thumbnail). There is also a composite photo available:

Image

Description:
Shot on 26th of March in Republic of Moldova, with the event taking place at 22:19:00 local time (duration just 0.7 seconds). I pulled the trigger on actually attempting to capture it on the evening before, when I saw a chance to get a proper weather around the transit time. Pinged my good old friend and asked him to help me out. He agreed, so 2 hours hours before the transit we hit the road! We were fully ready just 20 seconds before the event, very tight timing. But everything went just fine, we saw the ISS passing in front of the Moon and couldn't be happier! Afterwards we stayed to shoot additional material, so I could attempt to assemble a mineral Moon, something I never did before with my astrocams (DSLRs worked for me before, but my planetary astrocams are monochrome). I have a filter wheel and a Baader LRGB filters set, so it was totally doable. But I didn't expect it to be so awesome, the result turned out to be incredible. ISS was cropped out and stacked separately, to improve clarity and sharpness. It worked wonders, ISS' details showed up nicely and crisp. Final touch - putting it back, exactly in the positions it had on the captured RAW frames :ssmile:
My bad, forgot the technical details! Here they are:

Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer mount (it has a lunar tracking mode available) + Sky-Watcher Evostar 72ED (72/420mm) + filter wheel with Baader LRGB filters set (for the transit UV/IR filter was used) + Barlow 2x + ZWO ASI174MM camera. To get the color shot R, G and B channels, 3000 frames per each (and 3000 more through UV/IR filter, which was used as L channel later on). As Moon doesn't fit the field in this configuration, two panels were shot. ISS cropped out manually using Gimp; stacked and sharpened using cvAstroAlign (25 frames out of 70 went into stack); later on got ISS out using Gimp. Moon stacked using AutoStakkert! 3, then aligned the channels using PlanetarySystemLRGBAligner, then combined to obtain RGB using ImageMagick; L channel added in Gimp. Then assembled the panorama using Hugin. Post-processing in RawTherapee. Adding ISS back using Gimp

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Alexandru Barbovschi » Wed Mar 31, 2021 1:23 am

Title: MINERAL MOON ISS TRANSIT: THE VIDEO

Image

This is a video submission (Flickr allows videos, but sadly the preview only as a static thumbnail). There is also a composite photo available:

Image

Description:
Shot on 26th of March in Republic of Moldova, with the event taking place at 22:19:00 local time (duration just 0.7 seconds). I pulled the trigger on actually attempting to capture it on the evening before, when I saw a chance to get a proper weather around the transit time. Pinged my good old friend and asked him to help me out. He agreed, so 2 hours hours before the transit we hit the road! We were fully ready just 20 seconds before the event, very tight timing. But everything went just fine, we saw the ISS passing in front of the Moon and couldn't be happier! Afterwards we stayed to shoot additional material, so I could attempt to assemble a mineral Moon, something I never did before with my astrocams (DSLRs worked for me before, but my planetary astrocams are monochrome). I have a filter wheel and a Baader LRGB filters set, so it was totally doable. But I didn't expect it to be so awesome, the result turned out to be incredible. ISS was cropped out and stacked separately, to improve clarity and sharpness. It worked wonders, ISS' details showed up nicely and crisp. Final touch - putting it back, exactly in the positions it had on the captured RAW frames :ssmile:

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Quentin De Meur » Tue Mar 30, 2021 4:22 pm

The Microbial Ultra Deep Field

(High resolution here)

Copyright: Quentin De Meur
https://www.astrobin.com/users/OlympusMons-UMONS/


While doing astrophotography a hobby, as a doctor in microbiology, I'm used to counting microbes in various environmental samples. And sometimes those two passions appear not to be as different as we might think they are!

The present submission depicts a few square millimeter area of a ... Petri dish (a kind of container holding growth medium in which cells can be cultured) ! All the observable structures are colonies of various fungal or bacterial microbes that we actually can find in soils. And, not so surprisingly, I was stunned to find out how much this field of microbes looked like the famous Hubble Ultra Deep Field.

This natural "ability" to associate a newly observed structure to an already known object or concept is known as a "pareidolia". The most common example of this phenomenon (that we probably all have already experienced) is the perception of animals or objects in cloud formations.

Feel free to ask any supplemental information.


Clear sky (and plates),

Quentin De Meur

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Kinch » Tue Mar 30, 2021 1:54 pm

Re-processed The Flying Dragon Nebula
my_final_sh2_114 (16x12).jpg
Click on image to Enlarge.

Full info @ https://www.kinchastro.com/sh2-114---th ... ragon.html

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Efrem Frigeni » Tue Mar 30, 2021 11:53 am

NGC4565 - Field around Needle Galaxy
Location : Italian Alps (Imagna's Valley)
Web Site: www.astroefrem.com
Copyright: Efrem Frigeni
NGC4565_AP.jpg
Link dedicated Page and full resolution : https://www.astroefrem.com/gallery/blog ... c4565.html

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by astrodoc » Mon Mar 29, 2021 6:05 pm

M101 "Northern" Pinwheel Galaxy
LRGBHa 4,3,3,4,4 hours respectively
Location: Mayhill NM
Contains M101 and multiple NGC designated HII regions as well as the dwarf galaxy NGC 5477 at the far right
Full version with details can be found here: https://astrob.in/qaxaib/0/

Thanks for looking!
Dave Doctor
Attachments
LRGB11a1.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by The Real BriBri » Mon Mar 29, 2021 3:50 pm

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Yovin Yahathugoda » Mon Mar 29, 2021 2:22 pm

M8 - Lagoon Nebula

https://www.astrobin.com/users/YovinRY/
Copyright: Yovin Yahathugoda
https://cdn.astrobin.com/thumbs/ZBsjvA8 ... UALzhf.jpg Full quality version here: https://cdn.astrobin.com/images/86236/2 ... 379577.png

Telescope - Takahashi FSQ-106ED
Camera: FLI PL16803
Filters: Astrodon Ha 3nm, Astrodon OIII 3nm, Astrodon SII 3nm
Software: Photoshop 2020 & PixInsight
Location - Heaven's Mirror Observatory, Australia

Lum - Synthetic Luminance
Halpha - 6x450s
OIII - 6x450s
SII - 9x450s
Total Exposure time - 2.6 hours
Full acquisition details at https://www.astrobin.com/lc3v81/?nc=user

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by mdieterich » Sun Mar 28, 2021 9:26 pm

I setup a timelapse to shoot the Milky Way rising over the Andes and lighting hundreds of miles away over Argentina cause an incredible atmospheric phenomenon called a Sprite. The red glowing structure is one type of Transient Luminous Event (TLE) cause by thunderstorms and occur between altitudes of 12 to 60 miles!

Milky Way and a Sprite (TLE) over the Andes
www.mattdieterich.com
Copyright: Matt Dieterich

Pleiades

by alcarreño » Sun Mar 28, 2021 8:12 am

Copyrights: Raul Villaverde Fraile
ImagePleyades by Raul Villaverde, en Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by atomo » Sat Mar 27, 2021 4:14 pm

Hello folks here Omega CentauriTelescope: SharpStar 150 f2,8Guide Scope:EvoguideMount : Skywatcher HEQ5Imaging camera: ZWO 2600MCGuiding camera: ZWO 290 MCFilters: Lpro Plate solving: SGproImaging software: SgproGuiding software: PHD2Processing software: PixinsightLpro 45X120s exposure@0GainIntegration: 1.5 hrs
Davide Mancini,Perth,Australia,26/03/2021

https://cdn.astrobin.com/images/35896/2 ... b9856f.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Riccardofiuco » Sat Mar 27, 2021 9:21 am

IC410 HSO
Also called the tadpole nebula ...
These tadpoles are found swimming in a cosmic pond of gas and dust. The cloud, partially obscured by dust in the foreground, surrounds NGC 1893, a young cluster of stars whose radiation causes the gas to glow. The region is home to major star formation processes generating large mass stars. Tadpoles, composed of denser and colder gas and dust, extend for about 10 light years and new stars could be born inside them. Their gaseous tails, sculpted by winds and radiation from massive newborn stars, stretch in the opposite direction to the central region of the cluster. IC 410 is located about 12,000 light years away in the direction of the constellation Auriga

ORION UK CT10 f4. 8
10micron GM2000 HPS
Asi294mm
Astronomik H alpha 7nm
35x300 "bin2 - 15 °
Astronomik OIII 6nm 42x300 "
Astronomik SII 24X300 "
From the garden of Costalpino Siena
Attachments
girino.jpeg

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by nicola montecchiari » Fri Mar 26, 2021 2:11 pm

IC5146 wide field
http://www.skymonsters.net
Copyright: Nicola Montecchiari
IC5146_wide.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by carlos uriarte » Fri Mar 26, 2021 12:18 pm

Hi friends! My new photography from my observatory in Ager, Catalonia, Spain.
Has early 15h exp time with LRGB filtres with 600"subrfames in L bin1 and 300" subframe each color filter bin2. Astrodon Gen2 filter.
Camera: ATIK 460EXMONO
Telescope: Takahashi FSQ106
Mount: Paramount ME
Captured from 2/20/2021 to 2/16/2021
Adquision software: SGPro4
Process: Pixinsight + Photoshop
Early 100 galaxies in this photo!!!!

ImageMessier 97 and 108 by Carlos Uriarte, en Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Melina » Fri Mar 26, 2021 7:41 am

Galaxy Cluster ACO S 1121

Image Credit: NASA/ESA HST (proposal id 15937)
Image Processing: Melina Thévenot
(CC BY 2.0)

Instruments: ACS & WFC3/IR
Filters:
F606W
F814W
IR F140W

Full resolution avaiable at flickr:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/192466979 ... 058333663/

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Robin_Onderka » Thu Mar 25, 2021 11:41 pm

NGC 5793 processed by Robin Onderka | www.instagram.com/robin_onderka

Data: Hubble Space Telescope / Hubble Legacy Archive

From NASA: “NGC 5793 is a spiral galaxy over 150 million light-years away in the constellation of Libra. This galaxy has two particularly striking features: a beautiful dust lane and an intensely bright center — much brighter than that of our own galaxy, or indeed those of most spiral galaxies we observe.

NGC 5793 is a Seyfert galaxy. These galaxies have incredibly luminous centers that are thought to be caused by hungry supermassive black holes — black holes that can be billions of times the size of the sun — that pull in and devour gas and dust from their surroundings.”

Processing, I downloaded set of channels used for color (475nm and 775nm) from Hubble Legacy Archive. I also created an artifical Green channel for possibility of RGB combination. Standard Pixinsight workflow bring me to this final image, with a lots of cosmetic corrections that was present on the RAW files. My goal was to create very deep-sky looking image with dark background and just galaxy in it.

Software: Pixinsight, Photoshop

ImageNGC 5793 reworked by Robin Onderka, on Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by vanamonde81 » Thu Mar 25, 2021 4:43 pm

Yet another moonset pic
Copyright: György Soponyai

The lockdown of COVID-19 pandemic let me discover lots of new photo locations in walking distances near my home. For example: I just realized that despite the 13 km distance, I don't need to travel for capturing great shots about Megyeri bridge, the northernmost and youngest one of Budapest. This photo sequence was taken the evening of 2021-03-15 as the 56-hour-old waxing crescent Moon is setting above the bridge.

Image

2021-03-15 Mogyoród, Hungary
Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Canon EF 100/2.8 macro
(3+12) x 2 sec, f/4, ISO 320

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by atomo » Thu Mar 25, 2021 3:40 pm

Hello folks here IC2944
Telescope: SharpStar 150 f2,8
Guide Scope:Evoguide
Mount : Skywatcher HEQ5
Imaging camera: ZWO 2600MC
Guiding camera: ZWO 290 MC
Filters: IDAS NBZ
Plate solving: SGpro
Imaging software: Sgpro
Guiding software: PHD2
Processing software: Pixinsight
IDAS 180X180s exposure@100Gain
Integration: 6hrs

Davide Mancini,Perth,Australia,24/03/21

https://cdn.astrobin.com/images/35896/2 ... 0d7fd3.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by etunar » Wed Mar 24, 2021 7:45 am

Heart Nebula (IC1805) captured in narrowband from my garden in Somerset, UK. (Bortle 5). Processed in a modified SHO palette to bring out reds.

Camera: ASI1600mm-pro,
Scope: William Optics ZS61
Mount: HEQ5
Heart.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by logandc99 » Wed Mar 24, 2021 5:22 am

The Keyhole to the Carina Nebula

ImageCarina by Logan Carpenter, on Flickr

Carina Nebula.
The Carina nebula is a large complex area of bright and dark nebulosity in the constellation Carina and lies approx 8,500 light years from earth. The nebula is one of the largest diffuse nebulae in our skies. Although it is four times as large as and even brighter than the famous Orion Nebula, the Carina Nebula is much less well known due to its location in the southern sky (ref Wiki)
Credit: Logan Carpenter
Location: Auckland, New Zealand
Telescope : Skywatcher Esprit 120ED
Camera: ASI1600mm pro
FIlters: Optolong 2" Ha, Oiii and Sii
Integration: 10.6 hours (combination of 5min and 10min exposures)

https://www.astrobin.com/e2jqou/?nc=us

Re: Submissions: 2021 March

by Alexandru Barbovschi » Wed Mar 24, 2021 2:15 am

Nova Cassiopeiae 2021: Before and after

Image

Disclaimer: no guarantee on the circled star being the nova which we observe right now!
The creation of this image involved 3 persons: Tara Mostofi (shooting the photo on the right before the dawn on 21st of March), Alexandru Barbovschi (processing the photo on the right) and Dan Vanderzanden (author of the image on the left). There is an animation as well (click on it to view it in motion):

Image

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