Submissions: 2020 April
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- Asternaut
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Re: Submissions: 2020 April
The star Regulus (αLeo) and LEO I
IMG_20200422_170348 by LUIGI DE GIGLIO, su Flickr
Best details:
https://astrob.in/full/thjavw/B/
Image details:
Date: April 2020
Exposure: L:24x300sec RGB:10x300sec
Telescope: Newton ONTC 8" f/4
Camera: Moravian G2 8300
Filters: Astrodon LRGB E-Series Gen 2
Taken from my Home in Monopoli (Bari) Italy
IMG_20200422_170348 by LUIGI DE GIGLIO, su Flickr
Best details:
https://astrob.in/full/thjavw/B/
Image details:
Date: April 2020
Exposure: L:24x300sec RGB:10x300sec
Telescope: Newton ONTC 8" f/4
Camera: Moravian G2 8300
Filters: Astrodon LRGB E-Series Gen 2
Taken from my Home in Monopoli (Bari) Italy
Last edited by luigi.degiglio on Wed Apr 22, 2020 3:58 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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- Asternaut
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Wed Apr 22, 2020 4:48 am
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
Title: 2020 Lyrids meteor shower.
After staying home in quarantine for 5 weeks, I had to go out again and chase stars, I saw that on Saturday weather was clear, so I drove 2 hours away from Montreal and set up a timelapse hoping to capture a shooting star. Lyrids were already active even before the peak.
Info about the photo:
Date taken: 19 April 2020
Location: La patrie, Québec, Canada
URL: https://www.zenderfull.com/Galleries/Ni ... /i-gTHt5bs
Samer Hobeika - Zenderfull
Social:
https://www.zenderfull.com
https://www.instagram.com/zenderfull
https://www.facebook.com/zenderfull
Thank you
After staying home in quarantine for 5 weeks, I had to go out again and chase stars, I saw that on Saturday weather was clear, so I drove 2 hours away from Montreal and set up a timelapse hoping to capture a shooting star. Lyrids were already active even before the peak.
Info about the photo:
Date taken: 19 April 2020
Location: La patrie, Québec, Canada
URL: https://www.zenderfull.com/Galleries/Ni ... /i-gTHt5bs
Samer Hobeika - Zenderfull
Social:
https://www.zenderfull.com
https://www.instagram.com/zenderfull
https://www.facebook.com/zenderfull
Thank you
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- Ensign
- Posts: 70
- Joined: Tue Apr 21, 2020 11:38 am
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
Piedras Rojas is one of the most visited places by tourists visiting the Atacama Desert in Chile. Despite the beautiful scenery that can be enjoyed during the day, it is during the night that the show takes place. Above 4300 meters above sea level and far from any source of light pollution, watching the night sky from there is an unforgettable experience. In this single shot made in April/16, we can identify the planet Saturn, just above the nucleus of the Milky Way. In addition, we can see a beautiful Air Glow ranging from green to red tones giving a special color to the sky of Piedras Rojas.
Single Shot
Canon 6D / EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM
17mm / f:2.8 / 30sec / ISO 6400
Single Shot
Canon 6D / EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM
17mm / f:2.8 / 30sec / ISO 6400
- Robin_Onderka
- Ensign
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Re: Submissions: 2020 April
Satellites and iridium flare
About this photo:
This is my first try photographing meteor shower Lyrids. However, I was unable (and unlucky) to capture any during 3 hours of shooting. I'd still love to share this outcome. We have lots of light pollution in our country, so the best spot for a clear sky is in the mountains, such as this one in Beskydy mountains, Czech Republic. The house is a part of a local forest hotel and the sky includes Cygnus constellation and its nebulae as well as Lyra and its beautiful blue star - Vega (top right corner)
Technique:
I walked around to look for a place with an interesting composition, because I wanted to keep the foreground and sky at exact position as it could be seen that night. Then I took photo of the foreground.
I knew I want to track the sky, so I actually moved more to the right where there weren't any negative elements which would interfere with the sky.
Sky:
A combination of long exposures for the sky (150" f/4 ISO 1600 | 6x stacked for noise reduction) and shorter exposures to capture some of the meteors (20" f/2.8 ISO 6400), both tracked.
I took around 300 photos totally, from which I have chosen few with the trails present and blended them into my processed sky in Photoshop made of previous stacks.
Sadly not a single bolide flew into my frame, but I've seen about 5 that night and it was an amazing enjoyment!
Satellites and iridium flare by Robin Onderka, on Flickr
About this photo:
This is my first try photographing meteor shower Lyrids. However, I was unable (and unlucky) to capture any during 3 hours of shooting. I'd still love to share this outcome. We have lots of light pollution in our country, so the best spot for a clear sky is in the mountains, such as this one in Beskydy mountains, Czech Republic. The house is a part of a local forest hotel and the sky includes Cygnus constellation and its nebulae as well as Lyra and its beautiful blue star - Vega (top right corner)
Technique:
I walked around to look for a place with an interesting composition, because I wanted to keep the foreground and sky at exact position as it could be seen that night. Then I took photo of the foreground.
I knew I want to track the sky, so I actually moved more to the right where there weren't any negative elements which would interfere with the sky.
Sky:
A combination of long exposures for the sky (150" f/4 ISO 1600 | 6x stacked for noise reduction) and shorter exposures to capture some of the meteors (20" f/2.8 ISO 6400), both tracked.
I took around 300 photos totally, from which I have chosen few with the trails present and blended them into my processed sky in Photoshop made of previous stacks.
Sadly not a single bolide flew into my frame, but I've seen about 5 that night and it was an amazing enjoyment!
Satellites and iridium flare by Robin Onderka, on Flickr
Last edited by Robin_Onderka on Wed Apr 22, 2020 7:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
Thank you (and thank you Hubble : ) ). It was really difficult to find the correct palette, but it is a pleasure to process such beautiful objects.Victor Lima wrote: ↑Tue Apr 21, 2020 12:09 pmWhat a incredible view!!! Amazing!!!Bobinius wrote: ↑Sun Apr 19, 2020 2:10 pm Interacting Galaxies in Andromeda: Arp 273 from HST
Credit: NASA/ESA/Hubble
Processing: Bogdan Borz 2020
Full resolution: https://www.astrobin.com/full/5f0vwq/0/?nc=user
Interacting Galaxies in Andromeda: Arp 273 from HST by Bogdan Borz
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Re: Submissions: 2020 April
Fisherman's boats parked on the sands of Mangue Seco at night while the Milky Way and the planets Mars and Jupiter stand out in the January/20 sky. Jupiter appears sparkling below the clouds and lights up the horizon on that tropical night.
Single Shot
Canon 6D / EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II
23mm / f/2.8 / 15sec / ISO 8000
Single Shot
Canon 6D / EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II
23mm / f/2.8 / 15sec / ISO 8000
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- Science Officer
- Posts: 482
- Joined: Thu Oct 12, 2017 6:04 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
THE LEO TRIPLET
For me, the most beautiful set of galaxies in the sky.
Small group of galaxies located in the constellation of Leo, approximately 35 million light years away, whose galaxies are gravitationally linked.
The Lion's Triplet is formed by the galaxies M65 (below, on the left), M66 (above, on the left) and NGC 3628 (on the right, known as the hamburger galaxy).
More details:
https://www.astrobin.com/full/3bvdqi/0/ ... do_Menezes
Equipments:
APo 150mm triplet
Qhy 16200
70 x 300 "LRGB
Jales - SP - Brazil
04/03/2020
Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
Email: Barretosmed@hotmail.com
For me, the most beautiful set of galaxies in the sky.
Small group of galaxies located in the constellation of Leo, approximately 35 million light years away, whose galaxies are gravitationally linked.
The Lion's Triplet is formed by the galaxies M65 (below, on the left), M66 (above, on the left) and NGC 3628 (on the right, known as the hamburger galaxy).
More details:
https://www.astrobin.com/full/3bvdqi/0/ ... do_Menezes
Equipments:
APo 150mm triplet
Qhy 16200
70 x 300 "LRGB
Jales - SP - Brazil
04/03/2020
Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
Email: Barretosmed@hotmail.com
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- Ensign
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Re: Submissions: 2020 April
The Cone Nebula and Christmas Tree Cluster
NGC 2264 describes several objects in the constellation Monoceros lying about 2,700 light-years from Earth.
One is the Christmas Tree star cluster, here lying on its side with the blazing bright blue star S Monocerotis marking its trunk at center left.
There is a diffuse red nebula caused by H-alpha emissions from hydrogen gas stimulated by ultraviolet radiation emitted by S Monocertis and the cluster's other blue stars.
There are two special star forming regions in the red nebula. At lower right, off the tip of the Christmas Tree, is the Cone Nebula, named for its apparent shape sculpted by fierce stellar winds emitted from the stars. It is a dark molecular cloud within which other new stars are forming. Numerous other sculpted swirls of nebulosity are nearby. At upper left is the Fox Fur Nebula, Sharpless 273, named for the rich textured appearance sculpted by stellar winds in that region. In contrast, the blue nebula is a reflection nebula caused by scattered blue light reflecting off residual dust in a region where stars have already formed.
The Cone Nebula is a pillar of gas that spans 7 light-years in length. Within these gases, thousands of new stars are born over time.
This region is very similar to the famous Pillars of Creation, which we photographed in Messier 16.
Camera: Canon EOS Ra
Telescope: ASA10" f/3.6
Mount: Paramount MyT
Guiding: ZWO ASI 120MM Mini and EVOSTAR72ED
Acquisition: TheSkyX pro
Processing: Pixinsight and Photoshop
Total Exposure Time: 14.5 hours
Exposure Time per frame: 5 minutes
LOCATION: TOUL - FRANCE
DATES: March, 2020
Copyright : Thomas LELU
www.astrophotographie-lorraine.com
NGC 2264 describes several objects in the constellation Monoceros lying about 2,700 light-years from Earth.
One is the Christmas Tree star cluster, here lying on its side with the blazing bright blue star S Monocerotis marking its trunk at center left.
There is a diffuse red nebula caused by H-alpha emissions from hydrogen gas stimulated by ultraviolet radiation emitted by S Monocertis and the cluster's other blue stars.
There are two special star forming regions in the red nebula. At lower right, off the tip of the Christmas Tree, is the Cone Nebula, named for its apparent shape sculpted by fierce stellar winds emitted from the stars. It is a dark molecular cloud within which other new stars are forming. Numerous other sculpted swirls of nebulosity are nearby. At upper left is the Fox Fur Nebula, Sharpless 273, named for the rich textured appearance sculpted by stellar winds in that region. In contrast, the blue nebula is a reflection nebula caused by scattered blue light reflecting off residual dust in a region where stars have already formed.
The Cone Nebula is a pillar of gas that spans 7 light-years in length. Within these gases, thousands of new stars are born over time.
This region is very similar to the famous Pillars of Creation, which we photographed in Messier 16.
Camera: Canon EOS Ra
Telescope: ASA10" f/3.6
Mount: Paramount MyT
Guiding: ZWO ASI 120MM Mini and EVOSTAR72ED
Acquisition: TheSkyX pro
Processing: Pixinsight and Photoshop
Total Exposure Time: 14.5 hours
Exposure Time per frame: 5 minutes
LOCATION: TOUL - FRANCE
DATES: March, 2020
Copyright : Thomas LELU
www.astrophotographie-lorraine.com
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- Science Officer
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Re: Submissions: 2020 April
MOON....
More details
https://www.astrobin.com/full/k1dd5j/0/ ... do_Menezes
*Equipments*
Meade LX 200 10 "
Asi 290mc
Filter Moon baader
Sao Paulo-SP-Brazil
04/10/2020 00:43
Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
email: Barretosmed@hotmail.com
More details
https://www.astrobin.com/full/k1dd5j/0/ ... do_Menezes
*Equipments*
Meade LX 200 10 "
Asi 290mc
Filter Moon baader
Sao Paulo-SP-Brazil
04/10/2020 00:43
Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
email: Barretosmed@hotmail.com
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Messier 104 - Sombrero Galaxy
https://astrob.in/zl3061/0/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Messier 104 - Sombrero Galaxy
https://astrob.in/zl3061/0/
Last edited by starbasewalden on Thu Apr 23, 2020 9:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Eastern Veil Nebula and Pickering's Triangle
https://astrob.in/olthet/B/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Eastern Veil Nebula and Pickering's Triangle
https://astrob.in/olthet/B/
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
NGC 3521
https://astrob.in/y42got/B/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
NGC 3521
https://astrob.in/y42got/B/
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Messier 63
https://astrob.in/7kkrrr/0/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Messier 63
https://astrob.in/7kkrrr/0/
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
SH2-240 - Spaghetti Nebula Mosaic
https://astrob.in/0bg2oz/B/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
SH2-240 - Spaghetti Nebula Mosaic
https://astrob.in/0bg2oz/B/
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Messier 81 and 82
https://astrob.in/wxe6im/0/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Messier 81 and 82
https://astrob.in/wxe6im/0/
Last edited by starbasewalden on Thu Apr 23, 2020 9:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Horsehead and Flame Nebula
https://astrob.in/lmfgvx/0/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Horsehead and Flame Nebula
https://astrob.in/lmfgvx/0/
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
NGC 1579
https://astrob.in/whwdm9/0/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
NGC 1579
https://astrob.in/whwdm9/0/
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
I was unable to finish this before the Orion season ended.
Horsehead to Orion Mosaic
https://astrob.in/d80vkx/B/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
I was unable to finish this before the Orion season ended.
Horsehead to Orion Mosaic
https://astrob.in/d80vkx/B/
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
This is the first image I made with my new QHY 600. The classic Andromeda.
https://astrob.in/yxj7kw/0/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
This is the first image I made with my new QHY 600. The classic Andromeda.
https://astrob.in/yxj7kw/0/
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Jellyfish Nebula
https://astrob.in/ggbxb6/0/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Jellyfish Nebula
https://astrob.in/ggbxb6/0/
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- Ensign
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2020 2:55 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I image from my home observatory in Virginia, Starbase Walden. an 11' Polydome with homemade pier mounted with a Mesu 200 Mk2 guiding an Esprit 150 and imaging with the superb QHY 600. I capture with NINA and process with Astro Pixel Processor and Photoshop.
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Cone, Christmas Tree and Fox Fur Nebula
https://astrob.in/7zxhs9/0/
Full image details are in the Astrobin.
Thank you.
Cone, Christmas Tree and Fox Fur Nebula
https://astrob.in/7zxhs9/0/
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- Asternaut
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Sun Mar 29, 2020 9:23 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
Imaging details -
Sky-Watcher EQ6R-pro mount, Orion Telescopes & Binoculars ED80TCF telescope, Nikon D750 unmodded camera and Astronomik filters CLS clip on filter.
Lights - 4 hr 20 min data in 5 minute subs guided using PHD2 and programmed using APT.
15 darks, 40 flats and bias
Bortle 2/3 skies
Sky-Watcher EQ6R-pro mount, Orion Telescopes & Binoculars ED80TCF telescope, Nikon D750 unmodded camera and Astronomik filters CLS clip on filter.
Lights - 4 hr 20 min data in 5 minute subs guided using PHD2 and programmed using APT.
15 darks, 40 flats and bias
Bortle 2/3 skies
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- Ensign
- Posts: 67
- Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2012 11:45 pm
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
Fly over: SpaceX Starlink 6-stack appeared close to Venus over the horizon seen from my location in France on April 23, 2020.
For this shot I used my Nikon D800 and a fisheye lens.
Did you see this impressive appearance of the new Starlinks 6?
Fascinating but very bad for astronomers and our natural heritage (the nightsky).
Cheers and Clear Skies!
Sebastian
____________________
sebastian@voltmer.de
www.astrofilm.com
www.instagram.com/sebastianvoltmer
For this shot I used my Nikon D800 and a fisheye lens.
Did you see this impressive appearance of the new Starlinks 6?
Fascinating but very bad for astronomers and our natural heritage (the nightsky).
Cheers and Clear Skies!
Sebastian
____________________
sebastian@voltmer.de
www.astrofilm.com
www.instagram.com/sebastianvoltmer
Last edited by Sebastian Voltmer on Fri Apr 24, 2020 5:34 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
FlameHorse by Scotty Bishop, on Flickr
This was only 30x 180s with my modded Pentax K5, TMB92SS with an Astrotech ATFF2 flattener, guiding and dithering by MGEN II and Astromania 50mm guidescope on an iOptron CEM25EC from my Bortle 4 yard. Stacked in DSS, processed in Photoshop.
I have APP and PI, but it seems like I love to do them quick and dirty so I use my old standby stuff due to the amount of actions and plugins I have, some actions developed by me!
This was only 30x 180s with my modded Pentax K5, TMB92SS with an Astrotech ATFF2 flattener, guiding and dithering by MGEN II and Astromania 50mm guidescope on an iOptron CEM25EC from my Bortle 4 yard. Stacked in DSS, processed in Photoshop.
I have APP and PI, but it seems like I love to do them quick and dirty so I use my old standby stuff due to the amount of actions and plugins I have, some actions developed by me!
Re: Submissions: 2020 April
I suppose I can toss another one up. Here's M78, probably the deepest I've went on anything, but hey, I was on vacation in dark skies. https://www.astrobin.com/f00ukk/B/?nc=user <--there's the details on this one.
Yeah, I do DSLR cameras and stand alone guiders and use the hand controller. Seems I'm a rare breed!
M78 by Scotty Bishop, on Flickr
Yeah, I do DSLR cameras and stand alone guiders and use the hand controller. Seems I'm a rare breed!
M78 by Scotty Bishop, on Flickr