Submissions: 2022 May

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Expand view Topic review: Submissions: 2022 May

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by PedroArrudaSampaio » Wed Jun 01, 2022 12:47 am

NGC 6188 The fighting Dragons of Ara

https://cdn.astrobin.com/thumbs/NpIQUey ... cMNONP.jpg

Image


Dual Narrowband with RGB stars.

Full resolution and aquisition details on: https://www.astrobin.com/ehi8s3/B/

Shot on April 16, 2022 and May 28, 2022, for a total integration time of 13h 54', using a OSC camera and a dual narrowband filter. Location: Aguas da Prata, São Paulo, Brazil.

NGC 6188, and its companions, NGC 6193, NGC 6164 and NGC 6165 form a truly wonderful region in the Ara constellation, a jewel of the southern skies. Nicknamed "The fighting Dragons of Ara", this emission nebula is situated in about 4000 light-years away from us. I framed the target in an 30 degree angle as to add some dynamic to the composition. Although called the Fighting Dragons of Ara, this object in fact remind me of two lions fighting, the one on the right winning over the left one.

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by prashant_naik » Tue May 31, 2022 8:13 pm

Twilight at Blue Ridge Parkway

ImageTwilight at Blue Ridge Parkway by Prashant Naik, on Flickr

Location: Black Balsam Knob, North Carolina.

The Beauty of Rho Ophiuchi

by Marcin7 » Tue May 31, 2022 3:20 pm

I do have a pleasure to present to you one of the most beautiful object in our night sky.🔭😀☄️ Rho Ophiuchi is embedded in the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex, a large nebula of dust and gas which is one of the most colourful areas of our sky and a favourite target for many astrophotographers. The Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex is one of the nearest star forming regions to the Sun. It lies at a distance of about 427 light years from the Earth.

I have taken this photo in Tenerife island in Teide National Park at the end of April this year and I need to say astrophotography conditions in Teide Park is really excellent. 😀 The darkest sky I have seen so far.🔭😀🔭

Lights:45x80s ISO-800; Bias-70; Darks-45; Flats-30

📷Canon 6D mod
💫Samyang 135mm
✨SWSA
🌌 APP,Pixinsight,Photoshop

Author: Marcin Rosadziński
Image

See more photos on my instagram account

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by gdemessieres » Tue May 31, 2022 2:18 pm

The Tau Herculid meteor shower was a lovely one, but the real fireworks were on the ground!

In this composite image of 66 images (each 18 seconds long), an orange tau Herculid meteor streaks down from the vicinity of Arcturus. Bright knots in the meteor streak tell the story of the disintegrating meteoroid. In the far background, stars streak across the background, but it was a much closer phenomenon that stole the show: thousands of fireflies dancing in the warm summer night above a meadow of wildflowers.

These images was taken in Barnesville, Maryland on May 31, 2022 around 12:45 am.

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Mathieu80 » Tue May 31, 2022 12:29 pm

ImageNGC2174 by Mathieu Guinot, sur Flickr

NGC 2174 (also known as Monkey Head Nebula) is an HII emission nebula located in the constellation Orion and is associated with the open star cluster NGC 2175. It is thought to be located about 6,400 light-years away from Earth.

Data set from Telescope Live (12/12/20 to 03/03/21 at El Sauce Observatory, Chile).
SHO : 14/14/14 x 300s
Processed with Pixinsight & Photoshop

Mathieu Guinot

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Sergio » Sun May 29, 2022 4:14 pm

Inside the Coalsack in Crux - NGC 4609; Hogg 15 & RCW 69

There are many interesting objects within the Coalsack in Crux.Within the FOV in the image below we have NGC 4906 and Hogg 15, two small open clusters separated by 5,27 magnitude star SAO 252002 right in the centre of the image. Studies indicates that NGC 4609 (approximately 5000 light years away), is well beyond the Coalsack which is only 600 lights years from Earth.
Added a labeled image also to check RCW 69 and RCW 70

Cheers to all
Sergio

More info at
www.baskies.com.ar
Attachments
TMB 92 SS QSI 583 WS - Crop Image
TMB 92 SS QSI 583 WS - Crop Image
TMB 92 SS QSI 583 WS - Labeled Image
TMB 92 SS QSI 583 WS - Labeled Image
TMB 92 SS QSI 583 WS - Crop Image
TMB 92 SS QSI 583 WS - Crop Image

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Kinch » Sat May 28, 2022 2:21 pm

WR 134 in Cygnus
Cygnus WR134.jpg
Click on above to enlarge

Full info and higher resolution @ https://www.kinchastro.com/wr-143-in-cygnus.html

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by iro » Sat May 28, 2022 12:49 pm

Rho Ophiuchi

Rho Ophiuchi region - in my opinion, one of the most beautiful objects in our sky - there is almost everything here, dust lit by various stars, hydrogen nebulae, and bright globular clusters. It's hard to find more beautiful object for DSLR astrophotography.

The frame was taken with Samyang 135m/2 lens and modded Nikon D610.
Acquisition Time: April of 2022
Location: Bieszczady Mountains in southern Poland
rho-final-33.jpg
Credit: Ireneusz Nowak

Astrobin location of the full size picture: https://www.astrobin.com/full/fzv9dv/
Author Astrobin link: https://www.astrobin.com/users/iro/

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Marsbymars » Sat May 28, 2022 8:40 am

Going deep in Markarian's chain
90 hours of LRGBHa data with Moravian C4 GSENSE 4040 camera and Officina Stellare UCRC 320 scope. All unguided.
Was happy to get Ha rings around the cores of M84 and M86.
Markarian Chain LRGBHa
Markarian Chain LRGBHa

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Thierry Legault » Fri May 27, 2022 8:35 am

The lunar eclipse of May 16 from the HESS observatory in Namibia.
Stacking of 4 consecutive images of 8s, taken with a Sigma Art 14mm lens and a fp L body on tripod (no tracking, no assembly of pictures taken earlier or later).
The Milky Way is reflected in the main mirror whose parabolic shape accelerates the apparent movement of the sky.

The High Energy Stereoscopic System (HESS) observatory consists in five segmented mirror telescopes: 28m for the main one surrounded by four 12m units. They use the atmospheric Cherenkov effet to detect cosmic gamma rays and study supernovae remnants, pulsars, active galaxy nuclei, black holes...
The observatory was named in honor of Victor Hess, the first to observe cosmic rays.
Many thanks to Volker Buchholz and Toni & Sonja Hanke for their essential help at HESS observatory!
Attachments
20220516_eclipse_hess_namibia_16_9_c.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by sergio_vindas » Fri May 27, 2022 5:12 am

Airglow explosion over the Atacama Desert

Image
Click to view full size


Why the sky looks so colorful? An extraordinary multicolor light filled the sky during the capture of this image in March 2022 in the Antofagasta region in Chile.

The night sky is not 100% dark even in places like the Atacama Desert where is almost zero light pollution, the effect of the ultraviolet rays on the nitrogen and oxygen molecules during the day is responsible for bringing light to the sky at night, this reaction is known as chemiluminescence where take place the atoms and molecules' excitement 80 km or higher in the thermosphere.

In the airglow spectrum, the brightest and most common emission is green 558nm light from the atomic oxygen radiation but in some cases, we can capture red light from OH radicals at 86-87km and yellow light from sodium atoms altogether.



Place: Magic Bus, San Pedro de Atacama
Location: Antofagasta Region, Chile.
Date 03/31/2022 between 19:38 and 19:51 UTC-4
Elevation: 2450 m / 8038 ft
Technique: Panorama 40 singles images (no tracking or stacking)

Exif data
ISO: 1600, F1.4, 10 sec
Camera: Sony A7III Full Spectrum using Visible + H-Alpha filter
Lens: Sony FE 24mm f1.4 GM

https://www.instagram.com/sergio_vindas/

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by prashant_naik » Fri May 27, 2022 3:32 am

Blue Ridge Parkway - Where the stars still shine!

ImageBlue Ridge Parkway - Where the stars still shine! by Prashant Naik, on Flickr

Stars glittered across the night sky as I stood at the edge of an overlook embracing the mountain altitude. I was visiting Blue ridge parkway after many years and the views never gets old. It was the night of the peak of the Lyrid Meteor shower. Silence filled the night as the Milky Way arched over the night sky. I made a few easy vertical clicks panning horizontally to capture the spiral band of our Milky Way Galaxy. I watched in awe as billions of stars lit up the night sky. And soon the moon rose and the mists filled the night.

Location: Blue Ridge Parkway, North Carolina
Image was captured using Nikon D810 and Nikkor 14-24mm. Exposure time 15sec at f2.8 and ISO 8000.

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by KuriousGeorge » Thu May 26, 2022 10:58 pm

M106 with 15 hours of Ha. KG Observatory, Julian, CA.

https://www.astrobin.com/ky5r3g/C/
Attachments
M106_S1_Crop_CBHRed_CBS_HVLG_SCCyan_Sat15_Cos_SS2083_Noise303010_Levels_SCCyan_Ha_SCRed_SCCyan_SCWhite_Noise_Levels_DeSatStars.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Kinch » Thu May 26, 2022 9:58 pm

M17: It is considered one of the brightest and most massive star-forming regions of our galaxy.
M17.jpg
Click on above for larger image.

Full info and higher resolution @ https://www.kinchastro.com/m-17-2022.html

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by tommasostella » Thu May 26, 2022 2:08 pm

NGC 4725 & NGC 4712
https://www.facebook.com/tommaso.m.stella
Copyright: Tommaso Stella
From: Taranto

Lights: 54x180s L-Bin1 (sky Bortle 4) + 3x40x180s RGB-Bin2 (sky Bortle 6)
Total exposure: 8.7 h
Telescope: SkyWatcher 200/1000 PDS + GPU Coma Corrector
Guide: Takahashi FS60CB + PlayerOne Neptune C II + Astronomik Planet Pro 807nm
Camera: QHY 294 Pro Mono
Filters: Optolong LRGB-CCD
Mount: Skywatcher AZ-EQ6 GT
Processing: DeepSkyStacker, PixInsight, Photoshop CC
NGC4725-TommasoStellaWEB.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by asro8042 » Wed May 25, 2022 6:34 pm

A lonely bubble in Hydra - Abell 34
Copyright: Jonathan Talbot

Abell 34, also know as PK 248+29.1 and PNG 248.7+29.5 is a very faint planetary nebula in the constellation Hydra. It lies some 2,400 light years distant. It glows mainly due to doubly ionized oxygen (OIII) but does have a bit of Ha emission as seen on the left side and bottom of the gas shell. As a bonus, the galaxy PGC 3081651 shines through the gas shell on the extreme left edge.
Image

Image details: http://www.starscapeimaging.com/Abell34/Abell34.html

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Antonio Grizzuti » Wed May 25, 2022 11:23 am

From North America to Crescent
Copyright: Antonio Grizzuti Hi everyone!

Three panel mosaic of the central region of the Cygnus constellation. From left to right, in order of appareance, the North America Nebula (NGC 7000), the Pelican Nebula (IC 5070), the Butterfly Nebula (IC 1318), the Crescent Nebula. At the bottom right, some molecular clouds and dark nebulae.

Framing was planned with the software NINA, the single subs stacked with DeepSkyStacker, and the panels merged with Astropixelprocessor. Processing with Pixinsight and Photoshop.

Gear and technical data:
Samyang 135 @ f/4
QHY183C
Optolong L-enhance filter
30 subs x 3 panels x 180s
From Sassari, Sardinia, Italy (Bortle 6)

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Antonio Grizzuti » Wed May 25, 2022 11:01 am

Propeller Nebula and surroundings
Copyright: Antonio Grizzuti

https://astrotips.me/wp-content/uploads ... scaled.jpg
PropellerNebula-scaled[1].jpg
The Propeller Nebula (also known as DWB 111 or Simeis 57) is an emission nebula located in Cygnus. It's a less known H-alpha region in the center of a triangle made by Deneb, Sadr and Delta Cygni. Its surroundings are rich in dark nebulae and open clusters.

Data and technical gear:
Samyang 135 @ f/4
Optolong L-enhance filter
68 subs x 300s total integration 5hrs & 40 mins
From Sassari, Sardinia, Italy (Bortle 6)

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Victor Lima » Wed May 25, 2022 1:16 am

CATEGORY: Stacked
SOCIAL IG:
www.instagram.com/victorlimaphoto
STORY:
The Milky Way's core hovers over Piedras Rojas, Atacama Desert in Chile.
Piedras Rojas is located about 150 km from San Pedro de Atacama and above 4300 meters of altitude. Far from any source of light pollution and accessible by the main road that crosses the Atacama, the sky in this place is certainly one of the most incredible on the planet.
In this image, with only 25 seconds of exposure, we can highlight the quality of the sky at this location for astrophotography, being able to highlight with a good level of detail the nucleus of the milky way and also the nebulae present in this portion of the sky, in addition to the beautiful Air Glow that gives color and brightness to the horizon of Piedras Rojas.
EXIF:
Stacked
Canon 6Da | Sigma 20mm f/1.4 Art
5x 25 sec | f/2 | ISO 4000

ImagePiedras Rojas by Victor Lima, no Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by ajpsleiman » Tue May 24, 2022 8:48 pm

Hello everyone!

I took this photo in the Florida Bay in the Everglades National Park during the new moon in April 2022.

Gear used:
- Sony a7R3
- Tamron 17-28 2.8


Exposure: 15 seconds, Iso 3200 aperture F2.9
Location: Florida, USA
Attachments
Crab Milky Way 3 (Large).jpg

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by blastrophoto » Tue May 24, 2022 3:48 pm

MESSIER OBJECT 51 - THE WHIRLPOOL GALAXY
Link to full resolution image:
https://flic.kr/p/2nnBnNS

Follow the handle of the Big Dipper away from the dipper's bowl until you get to the handle's last bright star. Then, just slide your telescope a little south and west and you might find this stunning pair of interacting galaxies, the 51st entry in Charles Messier famous catalog. Perhaps the original spiral nebula, the large galaxy with well defined spiral structure is also cataloged as NGC 5194. Its spiral arms and dust lanes clearly sweep in front of its companion galaxy (right), NGC 5195. The pair are about 31 million light-years distant and officially lie within the angular boundaries of the small constellation Canes Venatici. Though M51 looks faint and fuzzy to the eye, deep images like this one can reveal striking colors and the faint tidal debris around the smaller galaxy.

Technology has come so far to allow just a 5-inch refractor to capture such detail and wonder in a galaxy 31 million miles away. This HDR composite is composed of 5 hours RGB data captured from Sky Meadows State Park in Delaplane Virginia, 3 hours Luminance data captured from Cherry Springs State Park, PA, and 9 hours of Hydrogen Alpha data captured from my backyard in Woodbridge, VA. I traveled to ensure I could get the best possible data for this particular image. I used 3 separate stretched layers to create a beautiful HDR composite, otherwise the core of this galaxy would have completely blown out the rest of the surrounding details. This is my first completed project using the new QHY533M. I'm extremely proud to have captured something in such detail. I hope you enjoy it too.

Gear:
QHY 533M
Explore Scientific ED127 FCD100
Optolong HA(7nm) and RGB filters
Skywatcher EQ6R-Pro
QHY OAG
QHY EFW
ZWO EAF

Integration:
36x180s - R
36x180s - G
36x180s - B
60x180s - Lum
109x300s - Ha

Processing:
Stacked and Processed in Pixinsight and Photoshop
NoiseXterminator for noise reduction

Locations:
Cherry Springs State Park, PA
Sky Meadows State Park, VA
Woodbridge, VA

Captured and Processed by:
Brandon Lewis (blastrophoto)

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by mdieterich » Mon May 23, 2022 9:06 pm

Horsehead Nebula
www.mattdieterich.com
Copyright: Matt Dieterich

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by firas » Sun May 22, 2022 8:51 pm

IC 59, IC 63 and Gamma Cassiopeiae (Ghost of Cassiopeiae)

This image consists of a little over 9:20 hours of exposure.
LRGB 72x300
Ha 13x900

My main focus in the image was actually not the nebula rathan than the star Gamma Cas and its illumination and effect on the nebula despite that the nebula lays light years away from the star.

It was taken in November last from Stockholm/Sweden.
I used a 200mm Newtonian telescope with Moravian G2-8300 CCD camera.

Regards
/Firas
Attachments
LRGBHa_Final.png

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Hellobozos » Sat May 21, 2022 5:23 pm

Click to play embedded YouTube video.
https://spaceweathergallery.com/submiss ... 767850.gif

Image

Image

Image

My whole experience with the May 2022 Super Flower Blood Moon, Universal,Orlando,FL,USA at the link below.
Click to play embedded YouTube video.

Re: Submissions: 2022 May

by Carballada » Sat May 21, 2022 3:27 pm

Image

The Spider Nebula (Sh2-234, IC417) in Hα/OIII+rgb by Jose Carballada, on Flickr
Located in the constellation of Auriga IC417, or the Spider is an emission nebula approximately 100 light years across.
It is located about 10,000 light years from Earth.
It is a hotbed of new star formation.

This image it's the result of about 60 hours integration time with narrow band filters, mapped using a "natural colors" palette.

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