Submissions: 2024 March

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Expand view Topic review: Submissions: 2024 March

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by WolfHeart » Thu Apr 04, 2024 7:25 am

Winter Milkyway over Qussor Al Arab Rocks

ImageWInter Milkyway over Qussor Al Arab Rocks by Ahmed Waddah, on Flickr

This is a blebded composite of the winter milkyway over the Western Desert in Al Fayoum, Qussor Al Arab Rocks from the night of the Geminids meteor shower back in December. Both sky and foreground were taken on the same night of the 13th of December, 2023. I had put it aside as the sky was hard to process which is usually a hit or miss when using the CLS so this was as good as it gets!

Sky:
Nikon Z6II - Astro-modified
Nikkor Z 14-24mm
f/2.8 S - 60x 60s - ISO 3200 - f/2.8 - 14mm
Astronomik CLS clipin filter
SGP

Foreground:
Nikon Z6II
Nikkor Z 14-24mm
F/2.8 - ISO 400 - 120s - 14mm

13th of December 2023
Al Fayoum Desert, Egypt

https://www.astrobin.com/oko0zk/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/waddah.photography
Astrobin: https://www.astrobin.com/users/WolfHeart/
IG: https://www.instagram.com/waddahphotography/

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by pepe30 » Wed Apr 03, 2024 6:13 pm

This winter I dedicated to the beautiful object NGC 2264 - the Cone Nebula and a cluster of Christmas trees.
Technique used: Astronomik LRGB +Ha filters, ASA10, DDM85, ASI2600mono.
I believe you will like the Christmas tree.
Peter, Slovakia

Image


https://astrobook.sk/2024/04/01/ngc-226 ... e-cluster/

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by chassaigne » Sun Mar 31, 2024 8:17 am

The spider and the fly
The spider and the fly
IC 417, sometimes known as the Spider Nebula, is a large visible emission nebula in the Auriga constellation. It is linked to the open cluster Stock 8 and is the site of important star formation processesNGC 1931 is an emission nebula located in the constellation Auriga. It was discovered by the German-British astronomer William Herschel in 1793.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/145132004 ... en-public/
Full data and image:
https://www.georges-chassaigne.fr/433170348/ic-417

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by Pav1007 » Fri Mar 29, 2024 12:44 pm

Hello,
IC2118 Witch Head Nebula
https://cdn.astrobin.com/thumbs/yGuGdem ... TZ0INm.jpg

Image

Full res: https://www.astrobin.com/full/0zeszg/0/?mod=&real=

Scope: WO Redcat51
Camera: ASI1600MM-C
Mount: SWSA GTi

L: 114×180sec
RGB: 40x120sec each

Location: LaPalma Island
Dates: early march (few nights)

My IG: https://www.instagram.com/astroscapes_pawel_radomski/
My astrobin: https://www.astrobin.com/users/Pav1007/

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by rowan.prangley » Fri Mar 29, 2024 12:35 am

APOD Submission: NGC7293 - Fully Resolved The Helix Nebula
APOD Submission: NGC7293 - Fully Resolved The Helix Nebula
I'm pleased to submit to NASA APOD and your consideration: NGC7293 - Fully Resolved The Helix Nebula, "An Eye Wide Open".

If required, please find the following link to the image in a high resolution format:

https://www.astrobin.com/e8t3hs/


Description

The beautiful bright core region of NGC7293 is home to a dying, sun-like star whose—almost—circumstellar nebulous regions have been expanding and evolving during its final phase of stellar evolution. Affectionately called, “The Helix Nebula” and “God’s Eye”, the Planetary Nebula's structure is one of the most well studied and imaged celestial bodies in the night sky.

Exploring this target using narrowband imaging techniques utilising the emission lines of Hydrogen Alpha (Ha), Oxygen III (O-III) and Sulfur II (S-II); these specific segments of the visible spectrum reveal not just the broader and intensely strong knots and large-scale emission arcs of the inner core; it also makes it possible to discover several jets, many faint bipolar outflows causing bow-shaped filaments and bow shocks, as well as successive event-lead halos.

Combining narrowband data with Red, Green and Blue (RGB) filter datasets (captured a month or two post the narrowband series) showcases the natural and softer colour tones of the inner nebulous regions of The Helix. Although minimal time was given to capturing RGB due to poor weather conditions, I plan to revisit this next season.

It has been a pleasure capturing NGC7293 and I’ve spent far too much time resolving it. As the clear nights progressed, the extra integration times has been both fortuitous and prosperous! To-date, I have not found an amateur image that fully resolves the most outer nebulous regions of The Helix Nebula - If one exists, please link me to it!
A paper tilted, “Discovery of A Halo Around The Helix Nebula NGC 7293 In The Wise All-Sky Survey” by Zhang et al proposes the existence of jets located north-east of the nebula; excitingly, the image I present here resolves not one but the existence of five jets!

As portion of time was spent capturing natural colour, RGB stars have been given priority over that of narrowband stars. This has added a colour-rich star field and the image has been presented cropped, albeit, with a wider field-of-view to honour this.

Acquisition details

Dates:

Aug. 19 - 23, 2023
Aug. 25 - 27, 2023
Sept. 6 - 10, 2023
Sept. 12 - 18, 2023
Nov. 8, 2023
Nov. 11 - 12, 2023

Frames:
Baader Blue (CMOS-Optimized) 2": 12×300″(1h)

Baader Green (CMOS-Optimized) 2": 19×300″(1h 35′)

Baader H-alpha Highspeed(f/2) Ultra-Narrowband 3.5nm (CMOS-Optimized) 2": 594×300″(49h 30′)

Baader O-III Highspeed(f/2) Ultra-Narrowband 4nm (CMOS-Optimized) 2": 155×300″(12h 55′)

Baader Red (CMOS-Optimized) 2": 19×300″(1h 35′)

Baader S-II Highspeed(f/2) Ultra-Narrowband 4nm (CMOS-Optimized) 2": 48×300″(4h)

Integration: 70h 35′

Avg. Moon age:
14.89 days

Avg. Moon phase:
24.49%

Locations: Wollongbar NSW Australia

Imaging Equipment:

Imaging Telescopes - Celestron RASA 36cm (14")
Imaging Cameras - QHYCCD QHY268M
Mount - 10Micron GM3000 HPS

Many thanks for your consideration.

Best Regards,

Rowan

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by matuutex » Thu Mar 28, 2024 5:59 pm

The ghost forest in Chile.
Copyright: Marcelo Maturana Rodríguez (@matuutex)
Location: Lago Chapo (Chapo lake), Lakes Region, Chile
Date: 24 June 2022
Instagram: @matuutex
Nikon d5600, Tokina lens 14/20mm f2
14mm f2 iso 2000 20 segs
180 degrees panorama

Lake Chapo is a turquoise pre-mountain lake of glacial origin, located at 240 meters above sea level, 40 km northeast of Puerto Montt and 110 km southeast of Puerto Varas. It is located between the Alerce Andino National Park and the Llanquihue Natural Reserve, so it offers a very beautiful view of both the mountains that surround it and the lush vegetation of the place. It is the only lake in the Puerto Montt commune. Since 1990, it has had to endure the devastating effects of a basin transfer, producing an ecological imbalance without return associated with the operation of the Canutillar hydroelectric plant.

In the photograph we see the reflection of the Milky Way in the lake, next to the ghost forest impacted by past eruptions of the Calbuco volcano in the area, also the Carina nebula, the Magellanic clouds, the southern cross and the galactic center, as well as well as the airglow that dyes the scene red.

ImageThe ghost forest in Chile. by Marcelo Maturana, en Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by Guest » Thu Mar 28, 2024 12:03 pm

Image

Hi all,
I am Simone Curzi from Italy.
The region around Antares and Rho Ophiuchi is dotted with stars and painted splendid colors. An artist couldn't do better.
Captured from ElSauce in Chile (bortle1) with Nikon 100mm f/2 + FLI CCD Proline 16200
A 100-megapixel mosaic obtained from 9 panels of 9x600s L + 3x300s RGB.
I thank Alessandro Ravagnin for allowing me to process his beautiful data.
I authorize the use of my image.
full res at: https://www.flickr.com/photos/197697877 ... ed-public/
Cleary skies
Simone

https://www.instagram.com/simone_curzi_skylover/
https://www.astrobin.com/users/MRWSKYLOVER/

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by Roi Levi » Thu Mar 28, 2024 9:22 am

Aurora Shapes & BigDipper ✨
location iceland
Image Credit - Roi Levi
Date september 2023
there are several common shapes and patterns for the aurora
Arcs, Curtains, Coronas, Rays Bands, Patches, Veils
Attachments
aurora dipper copy.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by JakeCravino » Thu Mar 28, 2024 1:13 am

Compressed file
Compressed file
My go at Thor's Helmet (NGC 2359). It took me a long time to finish this one because of the clouds.


Please see the full resolution at
https://mega.nz/folder/SIsUBTjZ#GLT0TVJda6K9VX7ChW-2cA
--------

INFO:

The ATLAS Observatory

- Celestron CGX mount
- QHY268M main camera
- ZWO ASI 120 mm guide camera
- Celestron C11 EdgeHD at the native focal length
- Atik 7nm bandpass filters, Ha, OIII

Main camera:

- 1300sec exposure
- 35 gain
-15°C
-DSO mode
-16-bit full capture area
-1x1 binning

Final Image:

Ha: 9 * 1300 s = 3.2 hrs
OIII: 9 * 1300 s = 3.2 hrs

Total exposure time ~ 6.5 hours

Colour: OOH

Processed in PixInsight and Photoshop. BlurX and NoiseX were used.

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by JakeCravino » Thu Mar 28, 2024 1:07 am

Compressed file
Compressed file
I am so happy with this shot! I've been waiting for a lunar transit for years!

I had to deal with some clouds and a very late night, but luckily, everything worked out for the 1/2 second the ISS was in front of the moon.


_____

Info:

The ATLAS Observatory

Celestron CGX mount
QHY268M camera
Celestron C11 EdgeHD at the native focal length
Sirius Optics Red Color Filter

Main camera:

1.5 ms exposure
65 gain
-10°C

DSO mode
8-bit full capture area
1x1 binning

Captured through a break in the clouds at 02:32:55 on March 28, 2024, from NSW, Australia

Edited in Photoshop (levels). Single frame only (no stacking)


Please see the full resolution on my astrobin: https://www.astrobin.com/0ysae6/

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by zombi » Wed Mar 27, 2024 9:59 pm

El Clasico

Image
El Clasico by .zombi., on Flickr

TELESCOPE LIVE SPA-1, 10CM F3.6 REFRACTOR

Imaging Telescopes: Takahashi FSQ-106EDX4
Imaging Cameras: QHY 600M Pro
Mounts: Mathis Paramount MX+

Frames:
S2: 27×300″(2h 15′)
Ha: 43×300″(3h 35′)
O3: 30×300″(2h 30′)

Photographic technique: SHO
Integration: 8h 20′

Dates: May, June, October and November 2023
Location: Almería, Spain

Description: The North America Nebula (NGC 7000) and the Pelican Nebula (IC 5070) are part of a vast region of ionized hydrogen in the constellation Cygnus. This area is a cloud of interstellar gas energized by young, hot stars. The North America Nebula is named for its shape that resembles the continent, with a dusty region akin to the Gulf of Mexico. The Pelican Nebula is adjacent to it, separated by dark dust lanes. Both nebulae are located about 1,700 light-years away from Earth and are prominent emission nebulae, showcasing the complex interplay of stellar birth and interstellar medium1234.

Image processed by Przemysław Ząbczyk, original data from Telescope Live

Links to my other photos:
www.astrobin.com
www.astropolis.pl
www.flickr.com

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by astrosirius » Wed Mar 27, 2024 7:37 am

NGC 3077 Small Disrupted Elliptical Galaxy

NGC 3077 looks like a typical, relatively peaceful elliptical galaxy. It lies about 1​2​.5 million light-years from Earth.

NGC 3077 was first seen by William Herschel with his 47 cm telescope in England in 1801, when he was close to completing his sky surveys. It is located in the far northern sky in the constellation of Ursa Major (the Great Bear) and forms a triplet with two brighter nearby galaxies, the graceful spiral Messier 81 and the very peculiar and active starburst galaxy Messier 82.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/194102627@N04/
Copyright: Lluís Romero Ventura
Attachments
NGC 3077_APOD_March_2024.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by GruppoAstrofiliPalidoro » Mon Mar 25, 2024 11:44 pm

This is a magical sunset view of comet 12P/Pons Brooks taken on March 21, 2024 at Casale Delle Pietrische (property of Manziana Agricultural University). Obtained by Marco D'angelo of Gruppo Astrofili Palidoro who took a single 30-second shot at ISO-400 and 70mm focal length (illuminated with a flashlight) for the farmhouse, while for the sky he used the same focal length but taking 10 shots of 60 seconds each at ISO-800. All with a modified Canon 6D camera and astro tracker.
This result required difficult processing by Marco D'angelo and Giuseppe Conzo.
20240321_COMETA_CASALE[1].jpg
https://www.astrofotografia.astrofilipa ... CASALE.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by zombi » Mon Mar 25, 2024 9:08 pm

Galactic Center of the Milky Way

Image
Galactic Center of the Milky Way by .zombi., on Flickr

Imaging telescopes: Samyang 135mm F2.0 ED UMC
Imaging cameras: Canon EOS 6D (modified)
Mounts: Sky-Watcher AZ-GTi
Software: PixInsight Ripley · Adobe Photoshop

Frames: 28×120″ (56')

Photographic technique: DSLR/RGB

Integration: 56'
Bortle Dark-Sky Scale: 1/2

Location: RPA - Blesfontein Guest Farm
Dates: April 18, 2023

Description:
Picture taken in April during an astrophotography safari in South Africa.

Image Credit & Copyright: Przemysław Ząbczyk

Links:
http://www.astrobin.com/users/zombi/
https://www.astropolis.pl/tags/zombi/

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by PatrickWinkler » Mon Mar 25, 2024 9:43 am

NGC 5128
NGC5128_7.png
(c) Patrick Winkler

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by maxifalieres » Mon Mar 25, 2024 1:22 am

Hello, my name is Maximiliano José Falieres and i'm an Amateur astrophotographer from Argentina. In this case, i want to share with you this three pictures of a Total Solar Eclipse ocurred in the south of Argentina on 14th of December of 2020, showing the begining, the full cover of the sun and the ending. For me this images have a lot of meanings, considering the context of the pandemic situation at that time and some family issues.

Also there are two solar systems objects here, and knowing the sizes of the Moon and the Sun, we can calculate the size of the solar flares. I messaured the most biggest is around 56.000 kms from the surface to the top, so this means that we can put together 5 planets Earths in line.

I hope that you like them

Before the Totally
Image
Total Solar Eclipse 14-12-2020
by Maximiliano Falieres, en Flickr

During the Totally
Image
Total Solar Eclipse 14-12-2020
by Maximiliano Falieres, en Flickr

After the Totally
Image
Total Solar Eclipse 14-12-2020
by Maximiliano Falieres, en Flickr

Thank you

And clear skies!

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by a.carrozzi » Sun Mar 24, 2024 10:57 am

A full-disk photo of the Sun taken with an H-Alpha filter on 23 March 2024. The active regions 3614 and 3615 are almost in the center, the latter in particular is very bright due to an ongoing flare. Many protuberances on the edge complete the picture

ImageSun in H-Alpha - March 23rd 2024 by Alessandro Carrozzi, su Flickr

ImageSun in H-Alpha - March 23rd 2024 by Alessandro Carrozzi, su Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by gszeleczki » Sun Mar 24, 2024 6:08 am

Perseids '23
https://i.imgur.com/A0NmYb5.jpeg
A0NmYb5[1].jpeg
The image shows 29 meteors from last year's Perseids meteor shower. Instead of the usual widefield lens, I used a fast, short-telephoto lens - with this setup I could catch less meteors, but the captured meteors show more details and color. One meteor was almost point-like as it was heading towards us. The radiant is not a well-defined point because the images were taken for 4 days, so the diurnal drift is visible.
The background shows the Heart- and Soul Nebula, the Double Cluster in the bottom-left, the Vdb 14 reflection nebula in the top-left corner, and many other deep-sky objects (including 4 planetary nebulae).

Time and location: 2023. August 11.-14., Kócsújfalu, Hortobágy National Park, Hungary (meteors), 2023. November-December (several nights), Ipolyszög, Hungary (background)
Exposure time: 10s/meteor, 9h 12m total for the background
Camera: Canon R7
Lens: Sigma 105mm f/1.4
Mount: Fornax LighTrack II, Avalon EVO Zero

Gábor Szeleczki

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by AstraPharmaQ8 » Sun Mar 24, 2024 2:43 am

Farewell Orion - By Ali Alobaidly

Image

Image description:

Although many believe that the Great Orion Nebula is one of the simplest targets to photograph, I believe that it is one of the most difficult targets to truly master. With its wide dynamic range and elusive core details, this nebula continues to amaze and mesmerize. The Image you see above was captured using a 384mm triplet apochromatic refractor in both broadband, to emphasize the nebula's natural colour, and in narrowband to give those hydrogen alpha emission some shine. Indeed, exposures that are 3 minutes long may blow up the core of the nebula out of proportion, but with modern data stretching techniques and histogram manipulation, the core's intense light can be pushed back to reveal the stellar nursery's intricate core without sacrificing too much contrast or background detail. Every season, I point my telescope towards Orion, so, for my final image of the winter skies, I present this farewell as I turn my attention (and my telescopes) towards those long awaited spring galaxies.



Acquisition details:
Dates: December 13, 2023 · December 14, 2023 · December 15, 2023


Frames:

RGB with a One-Shot Colour Camera: 207×180s (10h21’)
Hydrogen- Alpha With a Mono Camera: 91x300s (7h35')



Setup:
Telescope: WO GT81 + small guide scope + WO Flat6A III 0.8x Reducer / Flattener
Mount: ZWO AM5
Imaging Cameras: ASI2600MM pro + ASI2600MC pro
Guiding Camera : ASI120MM-S for guiding

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by andrea_girones » Sat Mar 23, 2024 9:51 pm

He's Back with a Bang- Sunspot 3615

The monster sunspot from a month ago, the spot formerly know as AR3590 is back and bigger and sparkier than ever.

A magnetic mess of solar activity, Sunspot 3615 as we refer him now, has rotated back into Earth view. A complex beta-delta-gamma region AR3615 has been flaring his way across the face of the sun and may have contributed, in combination with AR3614, in launching a massive solar storm towards earth MArch 23, 2024.
Watch for Aurora the night of March 24th into the 25th, 2024

Imaged from my home in Ottawa, Ontario Canada with a Quark chromosphere solar filter, the Starfield optics102 refractor, and the ZW0174MM camera. Stacked in Autostakkert and processed in IMPPG and Photoshop. (false colour added)

ImageHe's Back Sunspot3615 by Andrea Girones, on Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by FrederickS » Fri Mar 22, 2024 1:59 pm

Hello,
With the upcoming eclipse next month, here are some photos of the June 10, 2021 eclipse at sunrise. These were taken in NJ. Edits include: Cropping, adding the copyright to the corner, minor adjustments to exposure, contrast, etc., and in 2 images I removed powerlines that were small and just peeked out of the corners. One image had several lines in it, but I decided to leave them as that would be a significant edit, and I wanted to keep the photos as real as possible.
Copyright: Frederick Sacco
June 10, 2021 Eclipse 4.jpg
June 10, 2021 Eclipse 1.jpg
June 10, 2021 Eclipse 3.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by ExplorerEGYWO » Fri Mar 22, 2024 8:26 am

ImageSnaky Sun by Wael Omar, on Flickr

The inclination of the Earth's rotation axis causes the seasons and also the position of sunrise and sunset to change every day so the Sun rises due east and sets on due west only twice per year during the equinox but changes its position along the rest of the year.On 20th March,2024 the Earth's axis is tilted neither toward nor away from the sun, resulting in a "nearly" equal amount of daylight and darkness at all latitudes. I have photographed the sun for 12 months from a fixed place to monitor the path of the sun along the horizon. My first image was in April 2023 and I continue to shoot the sunset on the 21th day (± 2 days) of every month to show the drift of the sunset location until 20th of March 2024. The image shows the summer solstice on 21st of June as the sun sets considerably north of due west. After the summer solstice, the sun's path gradually drifts southward. By 23rd of September, the sun is at equinox, its path is again along the celestial equator and the sun sets directly on due west. The southward drift then continues until the December solstice (22nd of December), when the sun sets considerably south of due west. After the December solstice, the sun's path drifts northward, returning to the celestial equator by the March equinox 20th of March 2024.The maximum angular distance between two sunsets is the angle between the two solstices. This angle changes with the latitude of the place. It is minimum at the equator and after that increases according to the absolute value of the latitude until it causes the midnight Sun in the polar area. In my location at "Mokattam" hills at latitude 30º 00´ 05´´ N the Sun sets in :
Summer solstice 21st June @297.9º in 19:59 pm
Winter solstice 22nd December @243.2º in 17:00 pm

So the maximum drift distance is 54.7 degrees. As I started from April and ended on March the sun drift looks like a snake in the sky :lol2:
Equipment: Canon 200 D18-55 mm canon lens, Each image is a 5-panel mosaic @18mm, each panel is HDR image with bracket shooting.
Settings : ISO 100, 1/20 seconds, F8. This may differ a little due to different lighting conditions along the 6 months.
Date : 21 th (±2) of each month from April 2023 to March 2024.
All images are taken from same place along the 12 months.
Choosing the location was so difficult in a very crowded city like Cairo as I wanted to have a wide view of the city and at the same time from a location not altered by crowd or civil works so I spent too much time searching for this place. The place was above “Mokattam” hills so I have to climb a little up to be in the right spot and facing the sun along its journey during the 12 months and put marks on the ground to help me get back to the exact same spot every month .
Location : Cairo/EGYPT.
Credit: Wael Omar WO/ https://www.instagram.com/waelomar_astrophotography/

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by astronajar » Fri Mar 22, 2024 6:01 am

2024 Bode (M81) ánd Cigarro (M82) galaxies neighborhood

Author: Fermin Jiménez Najar
Best quality in the link
https://astro.najar.ca/en/gallery/deep- ... rhood.html

Lowres linked image
20240308_m81m82_finalv4_apodlowres[1].jpg
https://astro.najar.ca/images/astrofoto ... lowres.jpg

This image was taken in 1 night from Poncitlán, Jalisco, Mexico, near the Chapala's Lake Riviera.
https://www.google.com.mx/maps/place/Ce ... BJ6BAhNEAg

March 9th, 2024
2 hours 50 min exposure,

Technical Data
Gain: 0 Offset: 50 Temp. Sensor: -10 C
Exposure: 34 shots x 5 min (2 h. 50 min)
Aperture: f/2.0
Camera: ZWO ASI 2600 MC PRO
Lens: Samyang 135 mm
Mount: Celestron AVX
March 9th, 2024.
Pocitlán, Jalisco, Mexico

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by PatrickWinkler » Fri Mar 22, 2024 5:47 am

NGC 247
NGC247_web.png
(c) Patrick Winkler

Re: Submissions: 2024 March

by PatrickWinkler » Fri Mar 22, 2024 5:46 am

NGC 253
NGC253_web.png
(c) Patrick Winkler

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