Submission: 2019 January

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Topic review
   

Expand view Topic review: Submission: 2019 January

Rosette Nebula

by Dickvantatenhove » Fri Mar 01, 2019 3:30 pm

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by nicola montecchiari » Mon Feb 04, 2019 9:12 am

NGC2403

http://www.skymonsters.net

Copyright: Nicola Montecchiari
NGC2403
NGC2403

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by Andromeda 2013 » Sun Feb 03, 2019 10:50 pm

1st Blood Moon of 2019


clink on link for zoom-able larger version

https://www.flickr.com/photos/92681330@N06/46061376735

Copyright: Daniel Pasternak
Attachments
Daniel Pasternak 2019.jpg
Daniel Pasternak 21 Jan 2019 6d 11.jpg
Daniel Pasternak 21 Jan 2019 6d 10.jpg

Carinae nebula SHO

by litobrit » Sun Feb 03, 2019 9:13 am

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by psemil » Sat Feb 02, 2019 11:28 pm

Fox, cone and the christmas tree
bicolor image Ha and O3 - 24 h exposure, older data reprocessed.
Image

https://cdn.astrobin.com/thumbs/xMxKDI9 ... hqkGbg.jpg
biger resolution here

Thanks

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by Stefano79 » Sat Feb 02, 2019 7:24 pm

The California Nebula in Ha RGB
about 7 hours with a kaf8300 and nikon 300 2.8
Copyright: Stefano Campani
Hope you enjoy. Feel free to use it, with credits

Full image on my site
https://stefano-campani.000webhostapp.com/

Full image direct link
https://stefano-campani.000webhostapp.c ... anoRed.jpg

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by Václav Hýža » Fri Feb 01, 2019 2:37 pm

Earth shadows
location: Jeseníky Mountains in the Czech republic.
in the picture is: Two Earth Shadows. Earth's shadow in the atmosphere. Earth shadow on the moon. Above the Earth's shadow is the Belt of Venus.
date: 21.1.2019
Processing Information: Panorama from 32 shots. 2x BKT, ISO 100, f / 8, 1/25 and 1/6 s.
Full resolution http://www.vaclavhyza.cz/galerie/stíny.jpg

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by anismo » Wed Jan 30, 2019 1:58 pm

The Cigar Galaxy in HaLRGB.

Here is a smaller preview image
M82_PASS3_LRGB_MASTER_ROT_forAPOD.png
Larger image is at: https://www.astrobin.com/388109/L/?nc=user

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by Andromeda 2013 » Mon Jan 28, 2019 7:02 am

Sun Spot AR2733

There have not been many Sun Spots in the past year? and AR2733 is one of the largest active regions in over a year.

Today a C5.0 solar flare erupted from AR2733, the strongest since February 18, 2018

clink on link for zoom-able version

https://www.flickr.com/photos/92681330@N06/31947552407

Copyright: Daniel Pasternak

Video of Blood Wolf Super Moon impact here ->https://www.flickr.com/photos/92681330@N06/45987680525
Attachments
Daniel Pasternak 26 Jan 2019 7d 2S.jpg

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by Andromeda 2013 » Mon Jan 28, 2019 6:36 am

Blood Wolf Super Moon

Blood Wolf Super Moon - moment of meteoroid impact: Canadian Daniel Pasternak an amateur photographer videos first ever lunar impact during an eclipse.

clink on link for zoom-able version

https://www.flickr.com/photos/92681330@N06/46850202472


Copyright: Daniel Pasternak
Attachments
Daniel Pasternak 21 Jan 2019 a.jpg

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by bzpc » Sun Jan 27, 2019 4:36 pm

http://bzpc.hu/upl/etc/tulipan.jpg

The Tulip Nebula Stewart Sharpless was added to his catalog in 1959 with Sh2-101. 70 light diameter and approx. It is 8,000 light years away from us in one of the foggy and star-rich regions of the Milky Way. The strong ultraviolet radiation from the nearby HDE 227 018 hot-star star ionizes the atoms that make up the nearby Tulip haze, which makes it radiate.

Cygnus X-1

In addition to the visual experience of the picture, it is the bluish arc on the right side of the photo. This arc of ionized gas is a shock wave, which we know is a black hole (Cygnus X-1) from which we can see a material congestion of a relativist jet that breaks out due to material transfer in visual form. While black holes cannot be seen, the effects on their surroundings are still indirectly revealed.

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by shaunnesy » Sun Jan 27, 2019 3:03 pm

Around the world in 80 panes!
Thats the explanation to this image. It is an 80 pane mosaic taken 6 months apart , 44 panes were taken in March this year when on a trip to New Zealands South Island at Hoopers Inlet on the Otago peninsula. And the other 36 panes were taken in September 2017 at Lands End , Cornwall UK .
I wanted to put this together for some time if poss but got the opportunity after visiting New Zealand. With a little artistic licence the 2 halves were manually stitched together to form what is the entire Milky Way as seen from Earth as it appears to wrap around us here on Earth. All shots were done with a Canon 6D and 24mm f1.4 Lens . Interesting to see the Magellanic clouds to the lower Right and, to scale, Andromeda on the lower left from the Northern hemisphere to give an idea just how large the Magellanic clouds are
Attachments
full Milky Way
full Milky Way

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by aramgrg » Sun Jan 27, 2019 12:54 am

Ooops, image link is broken. Here is the image.
_DSF0069-f-3.jpg

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by geckzilla » Sun Jan 27, 2019 12:30 am

aramgrg wrote: Sat Jan 26, 2019 5:26 am made the composite to illustrate a friend the size of the umbra. Hope you like it.
Hi aramgrg, try uploading the image directly to Asterisk now. The link you used doesn't seem to be working.

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by psemil » Sun Jan 27, 2019 12:28 am

I have imaged very dim nebulas, like Cocoon and Eagle Head, but I have never seen a nebula which is invisible in 30' subs... The first glimpse of Outters 4 nebula are seen after 5 hours of integration.
The Ha nebula is a little brighter, but not as bright as expected so I found that showing details of it was never going to be easy.
Total exposure time is 50 hours.

Image

full resolution here
https://cdn.astrobin.com/thumbs/lkCTazv ... hqkGbg.jpg

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by aramgrg » Sat Jan 26, 2019 5:26 am

made the composite to illustrate a friend the size of the umbra. Hope you like it. Image

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by barretosmed » Fri Jan 25, 2019 4:23 pm

THE MOON IS HIGH
One day after the eclipse, I leave here my contribution of January 22, 2019.
My first moon of the year, showing its peculiar characteristics. And always a pleasure to photograph it.

The Moon is usually seen in subtle shades of gray or yellow
The different colors are recognized to correspond to real differences in the chemical composition of the lunar surface.
The blue tones reveal areas rich in ilmenite, which contains iron, titanium and oxygen, mainly titanium, while the orange and purple colors show relatively poor titanium and iron regions.

Equipment:

Apo 150mm
Thus 1600 mc
Filter baader L
January 22, 2019

Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
Attachments
LUACOLORMENOR.jpg

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by barretosmed » Fri Jan 25, 2019 4:19 pm

LAGOON NEBULA
Astrobin with various details?
https://www.astrobin.com/full/387385/0/… can click on full resolution and see all the extended details.

Equipment:
150mm Support Triplet
Qhy 16200mm
40 x 500 "- h alpha and SII
São Carlos - SP - Brazi
July 28-29, 2018

Copyright:FERNANDO OLIVEIRA DE MENEZES
lagoaaaaaaajpgmenor.jpg

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by leandroprz » Fri Jan 25, 2019 1:58 pm

Click to play embedded YouTube video.

This a little short film I've been planning since 2015 when I shot my second total Lunar eclipse. This third time I wanted to do something different and decided to mix time-lapse with video.

I used 3 cameras and shot from sunset to sunrise.

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by Ann » Fri Jan 25, 2019 5:47 am

sebasmc_f wrote: Thu Jan 24, 2019 8:58 pm
After traveling several hours a road that took me further away from everything, I decided to stop to take nighttime photographs.
It was impossible not to try to take some photographs with a less panoramic lens and this was one of the results, where several nebulae and globular clusters are seen, a true portrait of the galactic center.
It is a panorama of 4 photographs with the following Exif
Nikon d810 + Sigma 135mm f / 1.8 art.
T: 5sec
f / 18
ISO 51200

See more quality: https://www.flickr.com/photos/sebasmc_f ... ed-public/
Copyright: Montoya
That's a great picture, but I couldn't see the full size size version because I had to sign in to see it, and I don't have a password! :(

Ann

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by markh@tds.net » Fri Jan 25, 2019 3:41 am

Bubble Nebula - NGC 7635

Copyright: Paul Gardner

Taken by Paul Gardner at Great Basin Observatory, Processed by Mark Hanson

Description By "Sakib Rasool"
"This dramatic image shows the Bubble Nebula in the constellation of Cassiopeia. It is a windblown bubble caused by the stellar activity of an O-type star, which is the white star that can be seen above and to the left of the centre of the bubble. Images such as this one that isolate the specific light of oxygen and hydrogen gas with specialized Ha and OIII filters render this cosmic scene in exquisite detail. A second false color image further accentuates the chemistry of this region with the colors of the narrowband filters mapped according to a scheme known as the Hubble palette, named after the space telescope, which first utilized this approach in the 1990's. The bubble has a size of 7 light years and is embedded in the emission nebula Sh2-162 at a distance of about 7000 light years."

Taken with a PlaneWave CDK 700 with exposure times as follows: Lum-180min, Red-120min, Green-180min, Blue-180min, S2-290min, O3-250min, HA-240min. Total of 780 min or 13 hours.

The first image is LRGB with HA and O3 added, the second image is a Hubble palette color map version, with RGB stars.
GBO-Bubble-LRGBSmall.jpg
GBO-Bubble-Narrowsmall.jpg
Full resolution images can be found here: https://www.hansonastronomy.com/bubblenebula

Thank you,
Mark Hanson

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by sebasmc_f » Thu Jan 24, 2019 8:58 pm


After traveling several hours a road that took me further away from everything, I decided to stop to take nighttime photographs.
It was impossible not to try to take some photographs with a less panoramic lens and this was one of the results, where several nebulae and globular clusters are seen, a true portrait of the galactic center.
It is a panorama of 4 photographs with the following Exif
Nikon d810 + Sigma 135mm f / 1.8 art.
T: 5sec
f / 18
ISO 51200

See more quality: https://www.flickr.com/photos/sebasmc_f ... ed-public/
Copyright: Sebastián Montoya

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by trobison » Thu Jan 24, 2019 4:21 am

NGC 1055 - A Dramatic Looking Galaxy

NGC 1055 is an edge-on spiral galaxy located in the constellation Cetus. It has a percular dark lane of dust and gas that appears to be elevated above the galaxy's plane, almost blending away from the central plane. If you look carefully, several bright Ha areas can be easily seen.

The galaxy is fairly small in my instrument as it is only has an apparent size of 7'.6 × 2'.7 arc min. NGC 155 is 52 million light years away, and has a diameter of about 115,800 light years across. The apparent size is 7.6 X 2.7 arc min with an apparent magnitude of 11.4. It’s a fairly dramatic looking galaxy with an incredible glow around it.

Now for the inner geek stuff. The guiding is performed with a SBIG Remote guide head. It may be old, by it’s really a nice bit of kit having its own shutter and TEC cooler. It measures 4.86 X 3.66 mm in size, giving it a field of view of 7.31 by 5.5 arc minutes. So, it’s fairly small, but the galaxy presented will fit diagonally on the guide chip of this system. Hopefully, this helps to convey the size of this galaxy shown. An entire galaxy on a guide chip :)

Astobin link:
Image

Flickr Link
Image
NGC 1055 by Terry Robison, on Flickr

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by delberson » Thu Jan 24, 2019 12:31 am

Re: Submission: 2019 January

by avdhoeven » Wed Jan 23, 2019 9:11 pm


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