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Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Mon Mar 05, 2018 8:21 pm
by Maicon Germiniani
[img3]ImageTarantula by maicon germiniani, no Flickr[/img3]

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Mon Mar 05, 2018 8:21 pm
by Maicon Germiniani
[img3]ImageOmega Centauri by maicon germiniani, no Flickr[/img3]

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Mon Mar 05, 2018 8:22 pm
by Maicon Germiniani
[img3]ImageClouds Of Rho Ophiuchi by maicon germiniani, no Flickr[/img3]

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Mon Mar 05, 2018 8:22 pm
by Maicon Germiniani
[img3]ImageSNAKE NEBULA by maicon germiniani, no Flickr[/img3]

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Tue Mar 06, 2018 3:08 am
by Thirteen
Sun - A Massive Prominence in Motion

Image Copyright: Jason Guenzel and Awni Hafedh
Sun - A Massive Prominence in Motion.jpg
An amazing, massive, and evolving prominence hangs over the sun's limb.

Please click to the following link for additional information and the animated GIF timelapse captured over the span of about 1 hour.
https://astrob.in/336309/E/
Image

The full size animation can be seen here...
https://astrob.in/full/336309/E/
Image

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Tue Mar 06, 2018 2:17 pm
by pedro
M42 and surrounding nebulas
Copyright: Pedro Santos
Click to view full size image
Higher resolution link:https://www.flickr.com/photos/23636605@ ... 9/sizes/o/

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Wed Mar 07, 2018 1:29 am
by Rothkko
the sword and the satellites
merida, spain. 2018-03-07, 00:05
merida, spain. 2018-03-07, 00:05
343" of geostationary satellites and the orion sword

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Wed Mar 07, 2018 3:43 pm
by Paulee97
Zodiacal light behind the iron curtain
Copyright: Pavel Váňa
2h5lawl[1].jpg
http://i66.tinypic.com/2h5lawl.jpg

About 30 years ago people from Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland and other countries could not travel without any problems. The biggest problem was iron curtain. Now we can travel around the world and see beautiful night sky but there is new big problem, light pollution. In this picture you can see remains of iron curtain, beutiful winter Milky way and Zodiacal light.
It is mozaic composed by 29 single pictures. This image was captured in Cizov, which is located in Podyji national park in Czech Republic.

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Wed Mar 07, 2018 5:10 pm
by pedro
The star formation RSF 3 Monoceros
IC2169,IC446,NGC2245,NGC2247,NGC2264

Copyright: Pedro Santos
Click to view full size image
Higher resolution link:https://www.flickr.com/photos/23636605@ ... 4/sizes/o/

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Thu Mar 08, 2018 7:52 pm
by tommy_h

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Thu Mar 08, 2018 7:55 pm
by tommy_h

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Fri Mar 09, 2018 11:06 am
by Paulee97
Correction
Zodiacal light behind the iron curtain
www.pavel-vana.cz
Copyright: Pavel Váňa
Click to view full size image
For higher resolution and size see: https://www.flickr.com/photos/153081618 ... ed-public/
About 30 years ago people from Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland and other countries could not travel without any problems. The biggest problem was iron curtain. Now we can travel around the world and see beautiful night sky but there is new big problem, light pollution. In this picture you can see remains of iron curtain, beutiful winter Milky way and Zodiacal light.
It is mozaic composed by 29 single pictures. This image was captured in Cizov, which is located in Podyji national park in Czech Republic.

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Fri Mar 09, 2018 1:59 pm
by AnnaKong
I toke this picture in Dolomites Italy, on Feb 16th,about 5am. The milky way was hanging in the sky, and there are some mountains far away. The sun will rise up soon, so dawn is beginning to show in the east. The location i toke the picture is above 2000 meters, and there is some beautiful airglow in the air.

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Fri Mar 09, 2018 2:13 pm
by AnnaKong
The panorama milk way in Dolomites Italy, I composed by 6 single picture. It's the spectacular view of Dolomites, which is UNESCO World Heritage, the shining stars is amazing. Meanwhile, i toke a shooting star, it just like a fairy.

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Fri Mar 09, 2018 3:43 pm
by Ajay Narayanan
The Southern Pinwheel Galaxy, or M83

This image was processed with data provided by the Las Cumbres Observatory. The Principal Investigator for this data set was
BJ Fulton. This image included data collected with B, V and I' filters. The data comes from 1 m telescopes at the Cerro Tololo Interamerican Observatory and the South African Astronomical Observatory. This image is released under LCO's Creative Commons, non commercial and is free for use with attribution. Full image here. Thanks for looking.

Ajay
Click to view full size image

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Sat Mar 10, 2018 6:27 pm
by Sandgirl
The Bubble Nebula (NGC 7635) recorded with planetary camera from Italy
Copyrights: Tommaso Massimo Stella
BubbleNebulaTommasoStellaAPOD_jpg.jpg
M42/NGC 1976/The Orion Nebula
Copyrights: Chris Souza
M42_30m13s_ISO400 (3)_Copyright_jpg_small.jpg
Andromeda Galaxy
Copyrights: Vikram Kohli
Andromeda Galaxy 50Per - Vik Kohli_jpg_small.jpg
Aurora Borealis
Copyrights: Matt Robinson
IMG_2837_small.jpg
IMG_3595_small.jpg
Waxing Gibbous Moon in Singapore
Copyrights: A Kannan
DSCN9653-1_small.jpg
DSCN9654_small.jpg
Waxing Gibbous Moon in Singapore
Copyrights: A Kannan
DSCN4160_small.jpg
Sunset in Singapore
Copyrights: A Kannan
DSCN9774_small.jpg
Venus, Moon and Orion from Brazil
Copyrights: Jordan Patrick
IMG_1444_jpg_small.jpg
Betwwen California and the Pleiades
Copyrights: Ji Hwan Kim
california pleiades-큰파일_small.jpg
Orion: From the hip to the sword
Copyrights: David McFeely
Project Orion Jpeg_small.jpg
Night sky over New Mexico
Copyrights: Feilong Luo
DSC_8078-HDR-1.8m_small.jpg
Aurora panorama
Copyrights: Mia Stålnacke
AuroraPanoramaL_small.jpg
GreatestView2L_small.jpg
Fall Milky Way Above the Trona Pinnacles
Copyrights: Tom Masterson
IMG_0050 Panorama-masterwarp-stretch3-resize-13-sig-smaller_small.jpg
Gems of Auriga
Credits and copyrights: Data: POSS-II, Tom Masterson, Terry Hancock; Processing: Tom Masterson
GemsOfAuriga-POSS-II-TMasterson-THancock_small.jpg
Startrails over the house
Copyrights: David Fox
Star Trails over house Final_small.jpg
Milky Way from Grand Prismatic Springs in Yellowstone National Park
Copyrights: Dave Lane
Yellowstone Chromatic Version 2 Final 3-0_small.jpg
M45
Copyrights: Thomas Pickett
Pleiades M45_small.jpg
Andromeda Galaxy from Swiss Alps
Copyrights: Sandro Casutt
unnamed_small.jpg
M31, M33 and more
Copyrights: Raul Villaverde
Andromeda&Triangulo_for_APOD_small.jpg
Sunset in Osaka Castle
Copyrights: Nicolas Maderna
ultima-2_small.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Sun Mar 11, 2018 7:18 pm
by SteveRosenow
A ONE OF A KIND ECLIPSE COMPOSITE

A few nights ago, an idea hatched in my head. On a whim, I decided I was going to photograph the same region of the constellation Leo where last August's eclipse occurred. The purpose? Create a one-of-a-kind composite that rarely - if ever - gets published.

It wasn't a hard thing to do, actually. I would shoot a series of quick 30-second exposures for a two-pane stitch, then through Photoshop I would seamlessly (as much as possible) blend the eclipse shot from last August, into the final composite through layer blending and masking.

To do this, I shot a total of twenty 30-second exposures. Ten would comprise the top half, while another ten would comprise the lower half of the final image. Each was stacked separately in Deep Sky Stacker and manually blended in Adobe Photoshop in a process that brought this stout laptop to its knees. After that, I imported the coronal mask layers from the original composite from last August. After that, I then fine-tuned things up a bit, and then exported.

In short, it's a view - complete with the star Regulus and Nu Leonis (as well as dwarf galaxy Leo 1) - of the eclipse that one would've seen from outside Earth's atmosphere.

Image captured on August 21, 2017 with a Nikon D5500, coupled to a Meade Series 5000 80mm APO @f/6.
Click to view full size image
(Link to full size: https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4792/4070 ... e911_o.jpg / https://www.flickr.com/photos/rosenow_p ... 2/sizes/o/ )

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Sun Mar 11, 2018 8:00 pm
by sixburg
B33, LRGBHa with FSQ and ML16200 from Deep Sky West. Focused on "glow" in dusty area under the horse head silhouette. I imagine that area to be lit by the light of surrounding glowing red gases and glowing somewhat red itself. The shadow of he horse head is clearly visible below and to the left of the opaque silhouette. Sigma Orionis' impact is obvious. A lot going on in this favorite part of the sky!

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Mon Mar 12, 2018 6:06 am
by Ann
SteveRosenow wrote: Sun Mar 11, 2018 7:18 pm A ONE OF A KIND ECLIPSE COMPOSITE

A few nights ago, an idea hatched in my head. On a whim, I decided I was going to photograph the same region of the constellation Leo where last August's eclipse occurred. The purpose? Create a one-of-a-kind composite that rarely - if ever - gets published.

It wasn't a hard thing to do, actually. I would shoot a series of quick 30-second exposures for a two-pane stitch, then through Photoshop I would seamlessly (as much as possible) blend the eclipse shot from last August, into the final composite through layer blending and masking.

To do this, I shot a total of twenty 30-second exposures. Ten would comprise the top half, while another ten would comprise the lower half of the final image. Each was stacked separately in Deep Sky Stacker and manually blended in Adobe Photoshop in a process that brought this stout laptop to its knees. After that, I imported the coronal mask layers from the original composite from last August. After that, I then fine-tuned things up a bit, and then exported.

In short, it's a view - complete with the star Regulus and Nu Leonis (as well as dwarf galaxy Leo 1) - of the eclipse that one would've seen from outside Earth's atmosphere.

Image captured on August 21, 2017 with a Nikon D5500, coupled to a Meade Series 5000 80mm APO @f/6.
(Link to full size: https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4792/4070 ... e911_o.jpg / https://www.flickr.com/photos/rosenow_p ... 2/sizes/o/ )
I really like this image, and I'm very impressed at all the very hard work that went into making it.

Ann

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Mon Mar 12, 2018 1:12 pm
by mikiclinic
Detail of NGC4565
This image was taken with 20inchRC&PL09000 Cooled CCD with Adaptic optics(AO-X).
ASTRODON LRGB (240/40/40/40min)
http://www.miki-hosp.or.jp/BIND/
Copyright: Nobuhiko Miki
Click to view full size image

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Mon Mar 12, 2018 4:07 pm
by whwang
Milky Way Panorama
Click to view full size image
It will be a challenge for APOD to present this image to its readers. It's a high-resolution, 24-frame mosaic image of the 360-deg Milky Way. Here are two alternate presentations of this image at higher resolution:
http://www.gigapan.com/embeds/fcgjJQXjzrQ/
http://group.asiaa.sinica.edu.tw/whwang ... index.html

copyright: Wei-Hao Wang

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Mon Mar 12, 2018 6:43 pm
by spinlock
LBN 437
Author: Leo Shatz
Author: Leo Shatz
Imaged @DSW remote observatory
FSQ106/QSI683wsg/Paramount MyT
L:25x900s,R:16x900s,G:16x900s,B:15x900s
Link to full size image https://flic.kr/p/FnMYzH

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Tue Mar 13, 2018 12:28 pm
by SteveJ
Halley's Comet 1986
Copyright: Steve Johnston
Halleys_Comet.jpg
Image taken with an Olympus OM-1, 50mm f/1.4 lens, Kodak Ektachrome E6 400 ASA in early 1986 from Harkaway, 40 km southeast of Melbourne, Australia. The original color positive has been scanned and converted to B&W with inverted image for comparison.

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Tue Mar 13, 2018 1:52 pm
by AnnaKong
Mountain Peitlerkofel, one mountain in dolomites, I toke this single picture more than 900 seconds. there are some beautiful airglow behind the mountain.

Re: Submissions: 2018 March

Posted: Tue Mar 13, 2018 5:40 pm
by Chris-PA
IC 405 and IC 410: The Flaming Star and Tadpoles

Image

Copyright: Christopher Sullivan

Higher resolution can be found here: https://www.astrobin.com/full/329654/0/