Submissions: 2017 July
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- Science Officer
- Posts: 196
- Joined: Tue Jul 09, 2013 2:11 pm
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- Science Officer
- Posts: 196
- Joined: Tue Jul 09, 2013 2:11 pm
- Contact:
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- Science Officer
- Posts: 196
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- Contact:
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Saturn - July 11th, 03:44ut.
Saturn - on July 11th, 03:44ut. Equipment: LX200ACF 12 in OTA, CGE Mount, ASI290mm, PowerMate 2.5x Barlows, Custom Scientific RGB Filters.
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- Ensign
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IC 10 - Irregular Starburst Galaxy
Hello,
The Local Group irregular starburst galaxy IC 10. I like the way the HII gas almost overwhelms the blue star burst regions. Data acquired by Phil Massey in 2001 with the Kitt Peak 4.0 meter telescope and made public but him at ftp://ftp.lowell.edu/pub/massey/lgsurve ... ease/IC10/. I’ve reprocessed the data and contacted Phil Massey of Lowell Observatory and asked if I could submit this image to APOD. He said I am welcome to process the data and use as I wish. All image processing from FITS files was done by me in PixInsight 1.8 and Photoshop 2015.0.1.
Blue: 60 seconds
Green: 60 seconds
Red: 50 seconds
HA: 300 seconds (combined as usual with Red to create a single layer)
If you choose to use, please give both of us credit:
Data Acquisition: Phil Massey
Image Processing: Douglas Gardner
http://www.remote-astrophotography.com/ ... C%2010.jpg
Full resolution tiff:
http://www.remote-astrophotography.com/ ... -Full.tiff
The Local Group irregular starburst galaxy IC 10. I like the way the HII gas almost overwhelms the blue star burst regions. Data acquired by Phil Massey in 2001 with the Kitt Peak 4.0 meter telescope and made public but him at ftp://ftp.lowell.edu/pub/massey/lgsurve ... ease/IC10/. I’ve reprocessed the data and contacted Phil Massey of Lowell Observatory and asked if I could submit this image to APOD. He said I am welcome to process the data and use as I wish. All image processing from FITS files was done by me in PixInsight 1.8 and Photoshop 2015.0.1.
Blue: 60 seconds
Green: 60 seconds
Red: 50 seconds
HA: 300 seconds (combined as usual with Red to create a single layer)
If you choose to use, please give both of us credit:
Data Acquisition: Phil Massey
Image Processing: Douglas Gardner
http://www.remote-astrophotography.com/ ... C%2010.jpg
Full resolution tiff:
http://www.remote-astrophotography.com/ ... -Full.tiff
Last edited by bystander on Sun Jul 16, 2017 1:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Please, no hotlinks to images > 500Kb. Uploaded as an attachment.
Reason: Please, no hotlinks to images > 500Kb. Uploaded as an attachment.
Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Milky Way over Namibia with Planets Mars & Saturn, Sept. 03 2016
http://www.sternklar.ch/images-webpages ... ept-16.htm
Exposure data:
Carl Zeiss Distagon T* 25 mm f/2.0 ZE @ f/4.0 with Canon EOS 6Da. Exposure time: 38 x 3 minutes @ 800 Asa.
Copyright: Manuel Jung, http://www.sternklar.ch
http://www.sternklar.ch/images-webpages ... ept-16.htm
Exposure data:
Carl Zeiss Distagon T* 25 mm f/2.0 ZE @ f/4.0 with Canon EOS 6Da. Exposure time: 38 x 3 minutes @ 800 Asa.
Copyright: Manuel Jung, http://www.sternklar.ch
- AlexMaragos
- Ensign
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Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Mammatus clouds forming earlier today after a summer rain over the Gulf of Corinth in Phocis, Central Greece.
https://alexandrosmaragos.com
Copyright: Alexandros Maragos
Mammatus over Greece by Alexandros Maragos, on Flickr
https://alexandrosmaragos.com
Copyright: Alexandros Maragos
Mammatus over Greece by Alexandros Maragos, on Flickr
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- Asternaut
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Mon Jul 17, 2017 8:26 am
Saturn close to the 2017 opposition
The Lord of the rings captured from Palermo, Sicily - Italy - on the night of June, 13/14 2017, through a Celestron C14 Scope under good seeing conditions.
Visit the page @ link http://www.carmelozannelli.com/site/?p=1755 for more informations and technical data.
Thanks for your attention...
Carmelo "Mel" Zannelli
Visit the page @ link http://www.carmelozannelli.com/site/?p=1755 for more informations and technical data.
Thanks for your attention...
Carmelo "Mel" Zannelli
Last edited by Carmelo Zannelli on Mon Jul 17, 2017 10:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- Science Officer
- Posts: 143
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Re: Submissions: 2017 July
The Puszta at Night
Copyright: György Soponyai
That night was an ideal one for some wide field astrophotography. The New Moon, the crystal-clear skies and the moderate light pollution led me out to this well near Kiskörös at the border of Kiskunság National Park. This kind of old draw well is the symbol of the Hungarian Plain, the Puszta.
2014.03.01. Kiskörös
Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Carl Zeiss Distagon 28/F2.8
20 sec, F2.8, ISO3200
Well..
This was the original story. I discovered that wonderful well more than three years ago and took the picture above on the night of discovery. Since then I have been roaming there many times: a silhouette as a perfect, strong foreground with low light pollution. However on my last trip I just realized that the owner of the area had demolished the well and cut down the tree!
By recutting and desaturating the photo I just would like this place not to be forgotten.
Copyright: György Soponyai
That night was an ideal one for some wide field astrophotography. The New Moon, the crystal-clear skies and the moderate light pollution led me out to this well near Kiskörös at the border of Kiskunság National Park. This kind of old draw well is the symbol of the Hungarian Plain, the Puszta.
2014.03.01. Kiskörös
Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Carl Zeiss Distagon 28/F2.8
20 sec, F2.8, ISO3200
Well..
This was the original story. I discovered that wonderful well more than three years ago and took the picture above on the night of discovery. Since then I have been roaming there many times: a silhouette as a perfect, strong foreground with low light pollution. However on my last trip I just realized that the owner of the area had demolished the well and cut down the tree!
By recutting and desaturating the photo I just would like this place not to be forgotten.
- AlexMaragos
- Ensign
- Posts: 83
- Joined: Tue Jan 04, 2011 4:02 pm
- AKA: Alexandros Maragos
- Location: In transit
- Contact:
Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Mammatus over Greece
Beautiful, strange, rare, Mammatus clouds over the Gulf of Corinth in Phocis, Central Greece, two days ago after a severe summer storm.
https://alexandrosmaragos.com
Copyright: Alexandros Maragos
Beautiful, strange, rare, Mammatus clouds over the Gulf of Corinth in Phocis, Central Greece, two days ago after a severe summer storm.
https://alexandrosmaragos.com
Copyright: Alexandros Maragos
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- Ensign
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Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Copyright: Patrick Winkler
M 8
http://www.celestialobjects.net/m8.html
NGC 6188 - 4 panel mosaic
http://www.celestialobjects.net/ngc6188_4panel.html
Barnard 312
http://www.celestialobjects.net/b312.html
M 8
http://www.celestialobjects.net/m8.html
NGC 6188 - 4 panel mosaic
http://www.celestialobjects.net/ngc6188_4panel.html
Barnard 312
http://www.celestialobjects.net/b312.html
Re: Submissions: 2017 July
NGC 6715 / Messier 54
NGC 6715 / Messier 54 by Terry Robison, on Flickr
This dense and faint group of stars was the first extragalactic cluster ever discovered. It was given the name of M54 by the famous astronomer Charles Messier in 1778. It was also observed on Jun 2, 1826 by James Dunlop, and by John Herschel on July 31, 1834. This cluster is fairly easy to locate with a modest instrument. It can be observed with either binoculars or a small telescope. Expect to see a round and hazy patch of light. Even larger amateur telescopes cannot resolve it into individual stars. The best time of year to observe the cluster is during the months of June, July and August.
It is estimated to be around 90,000 light-years away. This is more than three times as far from Earth is to the galactic centre. It covers an area of 12 arc minutes, and has a true radius of 153 light years. It is also one of the denser globular clusters known, and has a density classification III.
In 1994, an exciting discovery was made that M54 was probably not a member of our Milky Way at all. It was a newly discovered dwarf galaxy. This galaxy is now called SagDEG, for Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy, and is one of the most recently discovered Local Group galaxies.
Currently, this globular cluster is now understood to lie outside the Milky Way, but it may actually become part of it in the future. The strong gravitational pull of our galaxy is slowly consuming the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy. In the end, it will eventually merge with the Milky Way, creating a much larger galaxy.
Blue hook stars were another interesting discovery within M54. They belong to a rare class of horizontal branch stars (stars with masses similar to the Sun’s in the stage of evolution immediately following the red giant branch) that go beyond the lower limit of the envelope mass of canonical horizontal-branch hot stars. Blue hook stars have been detected in very few galactic globulars. They have been observed in Omega Centauri, NGC 6273, NGC 2808 and NGC 6388.
Center (RA, Dec): (283.765, -30.481)
Center (RA, hms): 18h 55m 03.714s
Center (Dec, dms): -30° 28' 50.898"
Size: 45.3 x 30.1 arcmin
Radius: 0.460 deg
Pixel scale: 0.804 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: Up is 110 degrees E of N
Thanks for looking,
Terry
NGC 6715 / Messier 54 by Terry Robison, on Flickr
This dense and faint group of stars was the first extragalactic cluster ever discovered. It was given the name of M54 by the famous astronomer Charles Messier in 1778. It was also observed on Jun 2, 1826 by James Dunlop, and by John Herschel on July 31, 1834. This cluster is fairly easy to locate with a modest instrument. It can be observed with either binoculars or a small telescope. Expect to see a round and hazy patch of light. Even larger amateur telescopes cannot resolve it into individual stars. The best time of year to observe the cluster is during the months of June, July and August.
It is estimated to be around 90,000 light-years away. This is more than three times as far from Earth is to the galactic centre. It covers an area of 12 arc minutes, and has a true radius of 153 light years. It is also one of the denser globular clusters known, and has a density classification III.
In 1994, an exciting discovery was made that M54 was probably not a member of our Milky Way at all. It was a newly discovered dwarf galaxy. This galaxy is now called SagDEG, for Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy, and is one of the most recently discovered Local Group galaxies.
Currently, this globular cluster is now understood to lie outside the Milky Way, but it may actually become part of it in the future. The strong gravitational pull of our galaxy is slowly consuming the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy. In the end, it will eventually merge with the Milky Way, creating a much larger galaxy.
Blue hook stars were another interesting discovery within M54. They belong to a rare class of horizontal branch stars (stars with masses similar to the Sun’s in the stage of evolution immediately following the red giant branch) that go beyond the lower limit of the envelope mass of canonical horizontal-branch hot stars. Blue hook stars have been detected in very few galactic globulars. They have been observed in Omega Centauri, NGC 6273, NGC 2808 and NGC 6388.
Center (RA, Dec): (283.765, -30.481)
Center (RA, hms): 18h 55m 03.714s
Center (Dec, dms): -30° 28' 50.898"
Size: 45.3 x 30.1 arcmin
Radius: 0.460 deg
Pixel scale: 0.804 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: Up is 110 degrees E of N
Thanks for looking,
Terry
Collecting Photons.....
Images Gallery
https://www.astrobin.com/users/trobison/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/97807083@ ... 6565068452
Images Gallery
https://www.astrobin.com/users/trobison/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/97807083@ ... 6565068452
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- Science Officer
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- Location: San Diego, CA
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Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Dumbbell Nebula. Copyright KG Observatory.
Imaging telescope or lens: Celestron 8" EdgeHD
Imaging camera: QSI 660 WSG
Guiding camera: Starlight Xpress Ultrastar
Focal reducer: Celestron 0.7X
Software: PHD Guiding 2, PixInsight 1.8, Neat Image V7, Photoshop CS3, Sequence Generator Pro, Maxim DL6
Filters: Astrodon 1.25" 3nm OIII, Astrodon 1.25" 5nm Ha
Accessories: Innovations Foresight ONAG SC, Optec FocusLock, Starizona MicroTouch Autofocuser
Resolution: 2133x2692
Dates: June 26, 2017, July 10, 2017
Frames:
Astrodon 1.25" 3nm OIII: 16x900" -15C bin 1x1
Astrodon 1.25" 5nm Ha: 12x900" -15C bin 1x1
Integration: 7.0 hours
Darks: ~20
Flats: ~40
Flat darks: ~40
Bias: ~20
Avg. Moon age: 8.85 days
Avg. Moon phase: 52.31%
Mean SQM: 19.75
Astrometry.net job: 1657084
RA center: 299.898 degrees
DEC center: 22.723 degrees
Pixel scale: 0.643 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: -0.804 degrees
Field radius: 0.307 degrees
Locations: Home, Rancho Santa Fe, California, United States
Imaging telescope or lens: Celestron 8" EdgeHD
Imaging camera: QSI 660 WSG
Guiding camera: Starlight Xpress Ultrastar
Focal reducer: Celestron 0.7X
Software: PHD Guiding 2, PixInsight 1.8, Neat Image V7, Photoshop CS3, Sequence Generator Pro, Maxim DL6
Filters: Astrodon 1.25" 3nm OIII, Astrodon 1.25" 5nm Ha
Accessories: Innovations Foresight ONAG SC, Optec FocusLock, Starizona MicroTouch Autofocuser
Resolution: 2133x2692
Dates: June 26, 2017, July 10, 2017
Frames:
Astrodon 1.25" 3nm OIII: 16x900" -15C bin 1x1
Astrodon 1.25" 5nm Ha: 12x900" -15C bin 1x1
Integration: 7.0 hours
Darks: ~20
Flats: ~40
Flat darks: ~40
Bias: ~20
Avg. Moon age: 8.85 days
Avg. Moon phase: 52.31%
Mean SQM: 19.75
Astrometry.net job: 1657084
RA center: 299.898 degrees
DEC center: 22.723 degrees
Pixel scale: 0.643 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: -0.804 degrees
Field radius: 0.307 degrees
Locations: Home, Rancho Santa Fe, California, United States
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- Science Officer
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Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Crescent Nebula. Copyright KG Observatory.
Imaging telescope or lens: Celestron 8" EdgeHD
Mount: Losmandy G-11
Guiding camera: Starlight Xpress Ultrastar
Focal reducer: Celestron 0.7X
Software: PHD Guiding 2, PixInsight 1.8, Neat Image V7, Photoshop CS3, Sequence Generator Pro, Maxim DL6
Filters: Astrodon 1.25" 3nm OIII, Astrodon 1.25" 5nm Ha
Accessories: Innovations Foresight ONAG SC, Optec FocusLock, Starizona MicroTouch Autofocuser
Resolution: 2724x2174
Dates: July 16, 2017, July 17, 2017
Frames:
Astrodon 1.25" 3nm OIII: 16x900" -15C bin 1x1
Astrodon 1.25" 5nm Ha: 16x900" -15C bin 1x1
Integration: 8.0 hours
Darks: ~20
Flats: ~40
Flat darks: ~40
Bias: ~20
Avg. Moon age: 21.83 days
Avg. Moon phase: 53.32%
Mean SQM: 19.75
Astrometry.net job: 1655796
RA center: 303.026 degrees
DEC center: 38.355 degrees
Pixel scale: 0.641 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: 89.323 degrees
Field radius: 0.311 degrees
Locations: Home, Rancho Santa Fe, California, United States
Imaging telescope or lens: Celestron 8" EdgeHD
Mount: Losmandy G-11
Guiding camera: Starlight Xpress Ultrastar
Focal reducer: Celestron 0.7X
Software: PHD Guiding 2, PixInsight 1.8, Neat Image V7, Photoshop CS3, Sequence Generator Pro, Maxim DL6
Filters: Astrodon 1.25" 3nm OIII, Astrodon 1.25" 5nm Ha
Accessories: Innovations Foresight ONAG SC, Optec FocusLock, Starizona MicroTouch Autofocuser
Resolution: 2724x2174
Dates: July 16, 2017, July 17, 2017
Frames:
Astrodon 1.25" 3nm OIII: 16x900" -15C bin 1x1
Astrodon 1.25" 5nm Ha: 16x900" -15C bin 1x1
Integration: 8.0 hours
Darks: ~20
Flats: ~40
Flat darks: ~40
Bias: ~20
Avg. Moon age: 21.83 days
Avg. Moon phase: 53.32%
Mean SQM: 19.75
Astrometry.net job: 1655796
RA center: 303.026 degrees
DEC center: 38.355 degrees
Pixel scale: 0.641 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: 89.323 degrees
Field radius: 0.311 degrees
Locations: Home, Rancho Santa Fe, California, United States
Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Propeller Nebula - DWB 111
Ha/OIII bi-color
Larger image and info:
http://www.astrobin.com/303872/0/?nc=user
Nick Pavelchak
Altamont, NY
Ha/OIII bi-color
Larger image and info:
http://www.astrobin.com/303872/0/?nc=user
Nick Pavelchak
Altamont, NY
- AlexMaragos
- Ensign
- Posts: 83
- Joined: Tue Jan 04, 2011 4:02 pm
- AKA: Alexandros Maragos
- Location: In transit
- Contact:
Re: Submissions: 2017 July
The Galactic Center of the Milky Way over the villages of North Peloponnese, West Greece.
https://alexandrosmaragos.com
Copyright: Alexandros Maragos
The Milky Way over West Greece by Alexandros Maragos, on Flickr
https://alexandrosmaragos.com
Copyright: Alexandros Maragos
The Milky Way over West Greece by Alexandros Maragos, on Flickr
Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Mosaic of NGC7000 & IC 5070 (North America Nebula & Pelican Nebula)
Original image: http://0101010101.com/temp/img/ngc7000_high.jpg
Copyright: Jiyong Youn (https://blog.0101010101.com)
Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Milky Way from 40,000 ft
Copyrights: Matt Dieterich Clouds and landscape from a plane
Copyrights: James Britt Milky Way
Copyrights: Guillermo Spiers Startrails at Hármashatár-hegy (HHH)
Copyrights: György Soponyai Our Incredible Sun Sol
Copyrights: John Chumack LBN 258, GM 2-41
Copyrights: Antonio Fernandez
Larger size: http://afesan.es/Deepspace/slides/LBN%2 ... us%29.html Milky Way from São Paulo, Brazil
Copyrights: Carlos Motta Pillars of Creation (M16) Eagle Nebula
Copyrights: Tommaso Massimo Stella Souhern Cross from Danish 1,54m dome
Copyrights: Zdenek Bardon Center of NGC6302
Copyrights: Rafael Rodríguez Morales Exceptional display of NLC's in the Netherlands
Copyrights: Mentor Depret NLC over Paris
Copyrights: Bertrand Kulik NLC from Huddersfield, UK
Copyrights: Gain Lee The Hearth Nebula
Copyrights: Israel Tejera Falcón Rho Ophiuchi "Fireworks from our Milky Way"
Copyrights: Terry Hancock
Larger size: https://www.flickr.com/photos/terryhanc ... otostream/ Milky Way over Roque de los Muchachos
Copyrights: Ondrej Kralik Velos (Veil)
Copyrights: Javier Santoni Small Planet, Huge Mushrooms
Copyrights: Jiajie Zhang M20
Copyrights: Luciano Gomes M51 - Whirlpool Galaxy
Copyrights: Luciano Gomes VdB152
Copyrights: Daniele Malleo Rho Ophiuchi, Milky Way and the Pipe Nebula meeting Saturn
Copyrights: Carlos Eduardo Fairbairn IC4592
Copyrights: Manel Martín Folch The Shadow of Earth and Belt of Venus above Alqueva
Copyrights: Miguel Claro Barnard 173&174
Copyrights: Jose Jimenez Priego Jupiter from Pic du Midi on June 11th
Copyrights: Damian Peach
Copyrights: Matt Dieterich Clouds and landscape from a plane
Copyrights: James Britt Milky Way
Copyrights: Guillermo Spiers Startrails at Hármashatár-hegy (HHH)
Copyrights: György Soponyai Our Incredible Sun Sol
Copyrights: John Chumack LBN 258, GM 2-41
Copyrights: Antonio Fernandez
Larger size: http://afesan.es/Deepspace/slides/LBN%2 ... us%29.html Milky Way from São Paulo, Brazil
Copyrights: Carlos Motta Pillars of Creation (M16) Eagle Nebula
Copyrights: Tommaso Massimo Stella Souhern Cross from Danish 1,54m dome
Copyrights: Zdenek Bardon Center of NGC6302
Copyrights: Rafael Rodríguez Morales Exceptional display of NLC's in the Netherlands
Copyrights: Mentor Depret NLC over Paris
Copyrights: Bertrand Kulik NLC from Huddersfield, UK
Copyrights: Gain Lee The Hearth Nebula
Copyrights: Israel Tejera Falcón Rho Ophiuchi "Fireworks from our Milky Way"
Copyrights: Terry Hancock
Larger size: https://www.flickr.com/photos/terryhanc ... otostream/ Milky Way over Roque de los Muchachos
Copyrights: Ondrej Kralik Velos (Veil)
Copyrights: Javier Santoni Small Planet, Huge Mushrooms
Copyrights: Jiajie Zhang M20
Copyrights: Luciano Gomes M51 - Whirlpool Galaxy
Copyrights: Luciano Gomes VdB152
Copyrights: Daniele Malleo Rho Ophiuchi, Milky Way and the Pipe Nebula meeting Saturn
Copyrights: Carlos Eduardo Fairbairn IC4592
Copyrights: Manel Martín Folch The Shadow of Earth and Belt of Venus above Alqueva
Copyrights: Miguel Claro Barnard 173&174
Copyrights: Jose Jimenez Priego Jupiter from Pic du Midi on June 11th
Copyrights: Damian Peach
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- Science Officer
- Posts: 196
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- Contact:
Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Parting AR2665
More of the series here with camera settings.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/92681330@N06/
Copyright: Daniel Pasternak
More of the series here with camera settings.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/92681330@N06/
Copyright: Daniel Pasternak
The Double Cluster and Stock 2
Copyright: Prof. Greg Parker 2017
Double Cluster & Stock 2 region in Perseus.
Double Cluster & Stock 2 region in Perseus.
- moonrocks
- Science Officer
- Posts: 119
- Joined: Tue Jun 30, 2015 6:50 pm
- Location: spain, valencia
- Contact:
Re: Submissions: 2017 July
Weiburger's classic Planetary Nebular.
URL of website and Full image here http://moonrocksastro.com/wp-content/up ... B-star.jpg
Copyright: Paul C. Swift
Weiburger's clasic Planetary Nebular. by Paul C. Swift, on Flickr
URL of website and Full image here http://moonrocksastro.com/wp-content/up ... B-star.jpg
Copyright: Paul C. Swift
Weiburger's clasic Planetary Nebular. by Paul C. Swift, on Flickr
Last edited by bystander on Fri Jul 21, 2017 1:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Please, no hotlinks to images > 500Kb.
Reason: Please, no hotlinks to images > 500Kb.
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- Ensign
- Posts: 39
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- Contact: