Submissions: 2021 June
Submissions: 2021 June
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
Please post your images here.
Please see this thread before posting images; posting images demonstrates your agreement with
the possible uses for your image.
If hotlinking to an image, please ensure it is under 500K.
Hotlinks to images over 500K slow down the thread too much and will be disabled.
Thank you!
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
<- Previous submissions
Please post your images here.
Please see this thread before posting images; posting images demonstrates your agreement with
the possible uses for your image.
If hotlinking to an image, please ensure it is under 500K.
Hotlinks to images over 500K slow down the thread too much and will be disabled.
Thank you!
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
<- Previous submissions
Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
https://www.astrobin.com/6cr8a6/B
Abell 35 (Sh2-313)
What a strange looking nebula it is! Apart from the bow shock effect which gives its peculiar appearance, the use of a dynamic narrowband combination and a few hours of processing of Ha-Oiii-Sii has brought a more dramatic and colorful view of this magnificent star breath!
Astrodon Ha 50mm 5nm: 60x600" (10h) (gain: 26.00) bin 1x1
Astrodon O3 50mm 5nm: 80x600" (13h 20') (gain: 26.00) bin 1x1
Astrodon S2 50mm 5nm: 40x600" (6h 40') (gain: 26.00) bin 1x1
Astronomik LRGB IIc lrgb: 60x300" (5h) (gain: 26.00) bin 1x1
Total: 35h
AG Optical 12.5" iHW / QHY600 remotely from rom Chile
Abell 35 (Sh2-313)
What a strange looking nebula it is! Apart from the bow shock effect which gives its peculiar appearance, the use of a dynamic narrowband combination and a few hours of processing of Ha-Oiii-Sii has brought a more dramatic and colorful view of this magnificent star breath!
Astrodon Ha 50mm 5nm: 60x600" (10h) (gain: 26.00) bin 1x1
Astrodon O3 50mm 5nm: 80x600" (13h 20') (gain: 26.00) bin 1x1
Astrodon S2 50mm 5nm: 40x600" (6h 40') (gain: 26.00) bin 1x1
Astronomik LRGB IIc lrgb: 60x300" (5h) (gain: 26.00) bin 1x1
Total: 35h
AG Optical 12.5" iHW / QHY600 remotely from rom Chile
-
- Science Officer
- Posts: 143
- Joined: Fri Apr 12, 2013 7:46 am
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
May of Mercury
Copyright: György Soponyai
This photo presents the evening visibility of the innermost planet of our Solar System on the Western Sky captured near Mogyoród, Hungary. The pictures were taken at the time when the Sun was located exactly ten degrees below the horizon.
I slightly had to enhance the brightness of some later planetary "dots" in order to make it more prominent.
The previous weeks I was thinking a lot about how to add the words "Deacon" and "Taylor" to the photo title: Mercury/May/Deacon/Taylor -- the whole Queen band, but that would be a dummy joke..
2021.05.02. - 2021.05.28.
Mogyoród, Hungary
Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Canon EF 100/2.8 macro
0.3 sec, f/3.5, ISO 500
Copyright: György Soponyai
This photo presents the evening visibility of the innermost planet of our Solar System on the Western Sky captured near Mogyoród, Hungary. The pictures were taken at the time when the Sun was located exactly ten degrees below the horizon.
I slightly had to enhance the brightness of some later planetary "dots" in order to make it more prominent.
The previous weeks I was thinking a lot about how to add the words "Deacon" and "Taylor" to the photo title: Mercury/May/Deacon/Taylor -- the whole Queen band, but that would be a dummy joke..
2021.05.02. - 2021.05.28.
Mogyoród, Hungary
Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Canon EF 100/2.8 macro
0.3 sec, f/3.5, ISO 500
- Sergio
- Friendly Neighborhood Astrophotographer
- Posts: 100
- Joined: Mon Aug 29, 2011 5:26 pm
- Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina
- Contact:
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
STARBURST GALAXY IN COLUMBA
NGC 1808 is barred spiral galaxy located in the southern constellation of Columba. It was discovered by Scottish astronomer James Dunlop from Australia, who described it as a "faint nebula". It is a barred spiral with marked similarities to our home Milky Way Galaxy. NGC 1808 is distinguished by a peculiar nucleus, an unusually warped disk, and strange flows of hydrogen gas out from the central regions. Amidst all of this, because NGC 1808 is undergoing with intense star formation activity it has been deemed a starburst galaxy. NGC 1808 is relatively close to our Milky Way, and spans in about 35,000 light-years.
Some faint galaxies from the PCG catalogue were captured in the image
Best regards
Sergio
More info at
http://www.baskies.com.ar/PHOTOS/NGC%201808%20LRGB.htm
NGC 1808 is barred spiral galaxy located in the southern constellation of Columba. It was discovered by Scottish astronomer James Dunlop from Australia, who described it as a "faint nebula". It is a barred spiral with marked similarities to our home Milky Way Galaxy. NGC 1808 is distinguished by a peculiar nucleus, an unusually warped disk, and strange flows of hydrogen gas out from the central regions. Amidst all of this, because NGC 1808 is undergoing with intense star formation activity it has been deemed a starburst galaxy. NGC 1808 is relatively close to our Milky Way, and spans in about 35,000 light-years.
Some faint galaxies from the PCG catalogue were captured in the image
Best regards
Sergio
More info at
http://www.baskies.com.ar/PHOTOS/NGC%201808%20LRGB.htm
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
The Bubble Nebula by Tal Akerman, on Flickr
The Bubble Nebula
53 Hours of SHO and RGB Stars !
This project was in my bucket list for a long time, mainly because the Bubble was the reason I started with astrophotography.
Took to complete about 3 month mostly because of the weather, and oh boy I'm happy with this final version
Astrodon Ha 3nm - 80x900s (20 hours)
Astrodon Oiii 3nm - 60x900s (15 hours)
Astrodon Sii 3nm - 60x900s (15 hours)
Chroma Red - 60x60s
Chroma Green - 60x60s
Chroma Blue - 60x60s
Telescope - GSO RC 8" Carbon Tube
Mount iOptron CEM70
Camera - ZWO ASI 1600mm Pro
Guide Camera - OAG + ZWO ASI174mm Mini
The Bubble Nebula
53 Hours of SHO and RGB Stars !
This project was in my bucket list for a long time, mainly because the Bubble was the reason I started with astrophotography.
Took to complete about 3 month mostly because of the weather, and oh boy I'm happy with this final version
Astrodon Ha 3nm - 80x900s (20 hours)
Astrodon Oiii 3nm - 60x900s (15 hours)
Astrodon Sii 3nm - 60x900s (15 hours)
Chroma Red - 60x60s
Chroma Green - 60x60s
Chroma Blue - 60x60s
Telescope - GSO RC 8" Carbon Tube
Mount iOptron CEM70
Camera - ZWO ASI 1600mm Pro
Guide Camera - OAG + ZWO ASI174mm Mini
- AlessandroCantarelli
- Ensign
- Posts: 21
- Joined: Fri May 05, 2017 8:41 am
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
"Nox Atacama"
360° panoramic view of Toconao Canyon in the Atacama Desert. 18 shots at 14mm f2.8 for 30 seconds each. September 2019.
From the left, the Clouds of Magellan, the Milky Way with Jupiter near the center of the core, my figure, the town of San Pedro of Atacama in the middle of the desert (it is not sea, it is desert).
Well, well, here there is not so much to say eh ... In the sense, this is the best sky in the world, I could close the story here. That night was completely improvised among other things...
We found ourselves in this rocky area while we were aiming to reach the lagoons of the south of the Salar de Atacama; the roads, believe me, are endless down there. Here in Europe if you see a mountain far away you know it can be 50-100km maximum, when you see a mountain of 5000 meters in a desert with 5% humidity it is a 7 hour drive.
When we explored these canyons I realized that I could combine something good, the big problem was the heights: the side embankments (shooting from inside, on the river bed) were very high, the Great Magellanic Cloud rose exactly when Antares set...
In the end I preferred to sacrifice a bit Antares to have Magellan completely out of the horizon. It was a bit difficult choice, but being on the other side of the world I thought well, when it happens again.
The night was spectacular, zero humidity (around 7%), no clouds, and a powerful red airglow that invaded the entire lower part of the sky, an incredible spectacle.
______________________________________________________
"MOAB"
From the left: the Tre Cime di Lavaredo (unfortunately covered by the mountain on the right side, even if it looks like a cut, it's a precise 360 degrees and the rock covered right there), Mount Sorapis, the Moon in conjunction with Venus, a strong Zodiacal Light, Auronzo di Cadore, myself, the Cadini di Misurina, the Galactic Arc with Orion and the Pleiades on the bottom and a tide, but really a tide of Airglow.
4 shots of 30 seconds at 5000 ISO at f/4 (yes, f4)
360° panoramic view of Toconao Canyon in the Atacama Desert. 18 shots at 14mm f2.8 for 30 seconds each. September 2019.
From the left, the Clouds of Magellan, the Milky Way with Jupiter near the center of the core, my figure, the town of San Pedro of Atacama in the middle of the desert (it is not sea, it is desert).
Well, well, here there is not so much to say eh ... In the sense, this is the best sky in the world, I could close the story here. That night was completely improvised among other things...
We found ourselves in this rocky area while we were aiming to reach the lagoons of the south of the Salar de Atacama; the roads, believe me, are endless down there. Here in Europe if you see a mountain far away you know it can be 50-100km maximum, when you see a mountain of 5000 meters in a desert with 5% humidity it is a 7 hour drive.
When we explored these canyons I realized that I could combine something good, the big problem was the heights: the side embankments (shooting from inside, on the river bed) were very high, the Great Magellanic Cloud rose exactly when Antares set...
In the end I preferred to sacrifice a bit Antares to have Magellan completely out of the horizon. It was a bit difficult choice, but being on the other side of the world I thought well, when it happens again.
The night was spectacular, zero humidity (around 7%), no clouds, and a powerful red airglow that invaded the entire lower part of the sky, an incredible spectacle.
______________________________________________________
"MOAB"
From the left: the Tre Cime di Lavaredo (unfortunately covered by the mountain on the right side, even if it looks like a cut, it's a precise 360 degrees and the rock covered right there), Mount Sorapis, the Moon in conjunction with Venus, a strong Zodiacal Light, Auronzo di Cadore, myself, the Cadini di Misurina, the Galactic Arc with Orion and the Pleiades on the bottom and a tide, but really a tide of Airglow.
4 shots of 30 seconds at 5000 ISO at f/4 (yes, f4)
Alessandro Cantarelli - Extreme Panoramic Landscapes
https://alexwides.com/ - https://www.instagram.com/alexwidesphotography/ - https://www.facebook.com/AlessandroCantarelliPhoto - +39 3923277373
https://alexwides.com/ - https://www.instagram.com/alexwidesphotography/ - https://www.facebook.com/AlessandroCantarelliPhoto - +39 3923277373
-
- Ensign
- Posts: 21
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2021 2:56 pm
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
Lobster Claw & Bubble Nebula
https://www.astrobin.com/users/YovinRY/
Copyright: Yovin Yahathugoda
Full quality version here: https://cdn.astrobin.com/images/86236/2 ... 46db6f.png
Telescope - Takahashi FSQ-106ED
Camera - FLI PL16803
Filters - Astrodon Ha 3nm, Astrodon OIII 3nm, Astrodon SII 3nm
Software - Photoshop 2020, PixInsight & Topaz Denoise AI
Location - IC Astronomy Observatory, Spain
Lum - Synthetic Luminance
Halpha - 11x300s
OIII - 13x450s
SII - 12x450s
Total Exposure time - 4 hours
Full acquisition details at https://www.astrobin.com/exox07/0/
https://www.astrobin.com/users/YovinRY/
Copyright: Yovin Yahathugoda
Full quality version here: https://cdn.astrobin.com/images/86236/2 ... 46db6f.png
Telescope - Takahashi FSQ-106ED
Camera - FLI PL16803
Filters - Astrodon Ha 3nm, Astrodon OIII 3nm, Astrodon SII 3nm
Software - Photoshop 2020, PixInsight & Topaz Denoise AI
Location - IC Astronomy Observatory, Spain
Lum - Synthetic Luminance
Halpha - 11x300s
OIII - 13x450s
SII - 12x450s
Total Exposure time - 4 hours
Full acquisition details at https://www.astrobin.com/exox07/0/
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
Hello Folks,here the Blue Horse Head Nebula,has been a challenge to imaging this one,PHD2 only had 4 o5 star to choose for guiding and the post processing quite challenging,hope you guys like it
Telescope: SharpStar 150 f2,8
Guide Scope:Evoguide
Mount : Skywatcher HEQ5
Imaging camera: ZWO 2600MC
Guiding camera: ZWO 290 MC
Filters: Lpro
Plate solving: SGpro
Imaging software: Sgpro
Guiding software: PHD2
Processing software: Pixinsight
Lpro 150x120s exposure@100 Gain
Integration: 5 hrs
Copyright:Davide Mancini
BlueHorseHead by Davide Mancini, on Flickr
Telescope: SharpStar 150 f2,8
Guide Scope:Evoguide
Mount : Skywatcher HEQ5
Imaging camera: ZWO 2600MC
Guiding camera: ZWO 290 MC
Filters: Lpro
Plate solving: SGpro
Imaging software: Sgpro
Guiding software: PHD2
Processing software: Pixinsight
Lpro 150x120s exposure@100 Gain
Integration: 5 hrs
Copyright:Davide Mancini
BlueHorseHead by Davide Mancini, on Flickr
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
Star guardian
Copyright: Marcelo Maturana Rodríguez (@matuutex)
Location: Polincay - Chile
Copyright: Marcelo Maturana Rodríguez (@matuutex)
Location: Polincay - Chile
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
Pussyfooting around in Space.
NGC6334 The Cat's Paw Nebula
Pussyfooting around in Space by Logan Carpenter, on Flickr
SHO 7.6hrs Total integration
Credit: Logan Carpenter
Location: Auckland, New Zealand (Backyard)
Dates: Imaged over several nights from 28/5/21 to 5/6/21
Telescope: Skywatcher Esprit 120ED
Camera: ASI1600mmPro
Filters: Optolong HA, OIII, SII
Processing: AstroPixel Processor, Pixinsight and Photoshop
NGC6334 The Cat's Paw Nebula
Pussyfooting around in Space by Logan Carpenter, on Flickr
SHO 7.6hrs Total integration
Credit: Logan Carpenter
Location: Auckland, New Zealand (Backyard)
Dates: Imaged over several nights from 28/5/21 to 5/6/21
Telescope: Skywatcher Esprit 120ED
Camera: ASI1600mmPro
Filters: Optolong HA, OIII, SII
Processing: AstroPixel Processor, Pixinsight and Photoshop
-
- Science Officer
- Posts: 482
- Joined: Thu Oct 12, 2017 6:04 pm
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
DAY MOON
BEST DETAILS
https://www.astrobin.com/full/a9qdjy/B/?nc=user
EQUIPMENT:
ZWO ASI 6200MC PRO COLED
ESpirit 150mm
DATE: . 06/03/2021
Location: São Paulo - SP - Brazil
Processing and capture:
Photoshop CS6, SharpCap V3.0 and Registax 6.
Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
Email: Barretosmed@hotmail.com
BEST DETAILS
https://www.astrobin.com/full/a9qdjy/B/?nc=user
EQUIPMENT:
ZWO ASI 6200MC PRO COLED
ESpirit 150mm
DATE: . 06/03/2021
Location: São Paulo - SP - Brazil
Processing and capture:
Photoshop CS6, SharpCap V3.0 and Registax 6.
Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
Email: Barretosmed@hotmail.com
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
The Heart Nebula
https://i.imgur.com/Iquk6Cb.jpg
Higher Resolution on Flickr
Copyright: Brent Newton
This is a 2-panel mosaic of the Heart shot in Hα/RGB/Oiii from Nov-Dec of 2019. Never got around to properly processing it until recently. 90 hours across both panels shot in Hα, Oiii, and RGB
~456x300" 7nm Hα | ~411x300" 7nm Oiii | ~187x120" ea/RGB
William Optics Star71-II APO (344mm f4.9) and a ZWO ASI1600MM-P
Annotations available via this page on Astrobin
https://i.imgur.com/Iquk6Cb.jpg
Higher Resolution on Flickr
Copyright: Brent Newton
This is a 2-panel mosaic of the Heart shot in Hα/RGB/Oiii from Nov-Dec of 2019. Never got around to properly processing it until recently. 90 hours across both panels shot in Hα, Oiii, and RGB
~456x300" 7nm Hα | ~411x300" 7nm Oiii | ~187x120" ea/RGB
William Optics Star71-II APO (344mm f4.9) and a ZWO ASI1600MM-P
Annotations available via this page on Astrobin
Last edited by bystander on Mon Jun 07, 2021 3:52 am, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Please, no hot links to images > 500 kb
Reason: Please, no hot links to images > 500 kb
- Robin_Onderka
- Ensign
- Posts: 47
- Joined: Sat Mar 07, 2020 6:54 pm
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
Milky Way and airglow from Czech Republic
Copyright: Robin Onderka | www.instagram.com/robin_onderka | Dark Sky Beskydy
Category: Single shots, Panorama
Location: Staré Hamry, Czech Republic
—
After observing the night sky for the public, which takes place throughout the year in our Dark Sky Beskydy - Dark Sky Park in the Czech Republic, for which I work, I went to a nearby meadow and photographed this panorama. Already in the preview in the camera, I saw signs of airglow, but only during the subsequent processing did a lot of airglow come out and this is my first major experience with this phenomenon.
Although there is no astronomical night at this time, the sky was beautiful, the night was calm and windless.
—
Canon 6Da, Samyang 24 mm f/1.4
13“ f/2.8 ISO 6400 per shot, panorama made of 48 shots
Milky Way and airglow by Robin Onderka, on Flickr
Copyright: Robin Onderka | www.instagram.com/robin_onderka | Dark Sky Beskydy
Category: Single shots, Panorama
Location: Staré Hamry, Czech Republic
—
After observing the night sky for the public, which takes place throughout the year in our Dark Sky Beskydy - Dark Sky Park in the Czech Republic, for which I work, I went to a nearby meadow and photographed this panorama. Already in the preview in the camera, I saw signs of airglow, but only during the subsequent processing did a lot of airglow come out and this is my first major experience with this phenomenon.
Although there is no astronomical night at this time, the sky was beautiful, the night was calm and windless.
—
Canon 6Da, Samyang 24 mm f/1.4
13“ f/2.8 ISO 6400 per shot, panorama made of 48 shots
Milky Way and airglow by Robin Onderka, on Flickr
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
Milky Way from Monoceros to Gemini
A 21°x42° view of the of the Milky Way in constellation Monoceros, Orion and Gemini was calculated with a resolution of 10 arcsec/pixel. Full views below are down scaled by factor 19, larger version can be loaded by clicking on the image, full resolution pictures (using a Javascript viewer), selected details and further information can be found on my homepage
H-alpha is mapped to red, blue continuum is mapped to green and red continuum is mapped to blue. Stars in the continuum channels are partly subtracted. That region does not contain much reflection nebule. Compared to the pictures from the Orion region I posted two weeks ago it looks quite boring.
A false color image from H-alpha data.
A true color view where red component shows red continuum including some (but reduced) H-alpha, green continuum is mapped to green and blue continuum is mapped to blue. Stars are not subtracted such that dark nebula become visible (as dark nebulae. In the first mage it can be seen that many of them are not truly dark)
A 21°x42° view of the of the Milky Way in constellation Monoceros, Orion and Gemini was calculated with a resolution of 10 arcsec/pixel. Full views below are down scaled by factor 19, larger version can be loaded by clicking on the image, full resolution pictures (using a Javascript viewer), selected details and further information can be found on my homepage
H-alpha is mapped to red, blue continuum is mapped to green and red continuum is mapped to blue. Stars in the continuum channels are partly subtracted. That region does not contain much reflection nebule. Compared to the pictures from the Orion region I posted two weeks ago it looks quite boring.
A false color image from H-alpha data.
A true color view where red component shows red continuum including some (but reduced) H-alpha, green continuum is mapped to green and blue continuum is mapped to blue. Stars are not subtracted such that dark nebula become visible (as dark nebulae. In the first mage it can be seen that many of them are not truly dark)
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
M106 and friends
HaLRGB Combination, last one for this amazing galaxy season
M106 by Tal Akerman, on Flickr
60s x 360 - Luminanace
180s x 120 - Luminance
60s x 120 For each RGB filter
900s x 40 - H-Alpha
Total of 28 hours
Imaging telescopes or lenses: GSO RC8"
Imaging cameras: ZWO ASI1600MM Pro
Mounts: iOptron CEM70
Guiding telescopes or lenses: GSO RC8"
Guiding cameras: ZWO ASI174MM mini
Focal reducers: Astro Physics CCDT67 CCDT67
Software: PHD2 PHD 2 · N.I.N.A. Nighttime Imaging 'N' Astronomy · PixInsight
Filters: Chroma Blue · Astrodon Ha 3nm · Chroma Green · Chroma Red · Chroma Luminance
Accessory: OAG · ZWO EAF · Feathertouch Focuser
HaLRGB Combination, last one for this amazing galaxy season
M106 by Tal Akerman, on Flickr
60s x 360 - Luminanace
180s x 120 - Luminance
60s x 120 For each RGB filter
900s x 40 - H-Alpha
Total of 28 hours
Imaging telescopes or lenses: GSO RC8"
Imaging cameras: ZWO ASI1600MM Pro
Mounts: iOptron CEM70
Guiding telescopes or lenses: GSO RC8"
Guiding cameras: ZWO ASI174MM mini
Focal reducers: Astro Physics CCDT67 CCDT67
Software: PHD2 PHD 2 · N.I.N.A. Nighttime Imaging 'N' Astronomy · PixInsight
Filters: Chroma Blue · Astrodon Ha 3nm · Chroma Green · Chroma Red · Chroma Luminance
Accessory: OAG · ZWO EAF · Feathertouch Focuser
-
- Ensign
- Posts: 24
- Joined: Wed Sep 19, 2018 11:47 am
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
Greetings all,
Attached are recently completed images for your consideration;
NGC 2903 - a barred spiral in Leo
NGC 4038/9 - The antenna galaxies in Corvus Messier 51 - the classic whirlpool in Canes Venatici
All images are copyright Casey Good/Steve Timmons, acquired from our remote observatory in Fort Davis, Texas with a Planewave CDK14/Stellarvue 130.
Thanks for Viewing!
Attached are recently completed images for your consideration;
NGC 2903 - a barred spiral in Leo
NGC 4038/9 - The antenna galaxies in Corvus Messier 51 - the classic whirlpool in Canes Venatici
All images are copyright Casey Good/Steve Timmons, acquired from our remote observatory in Fort Davis, Texas with a Planewave CDK14/Stellarvue 130.
Thanks for Viewing!
-
- Ensign
- Posts: 24
- Joined: Wed Sep 19, 2018 11:47 am
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
Greetings all,
Attached are recently completed images for your consideration;
Hickson 44 galaxy group in Leo IC4604 - the colorful inner part of Rho Ophiuchus cloud complex All images are copyright Casey Good/Steve Timmons, acquired from our remote observatory in Fort Davis, Texas with a Planewave CDK14/Stellarvue 130.
Thanks for Viewing!
Attached are recently completed images for your consideration;
Hickson 44 galaxy group in Leo IC4604 - the colorful inner part of Rho Ophiuchus cloud complex All images are copyright Casey Good/Steve Timmons, acquired from our remote observatory in Fort Davis, Texas with a Planewave CDK14/Stellarvue 130.
Thanks for Viewing!
-
- Ensign
- Posts: 24
- Joined: Wed Sep 19, 2018 11:47 am
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
A few more submissions from me...
These are copyright Casey Good/Greg Turgeon, from a CDK17 in El Sauce, Chile. Thanks for viewing!
The Running Chicken Nebula NGC 1365 in Fornax NGC 3521 in Leo
These are copyright Casey Good/Greg Turgeon, from a CDK17 in El Sauce, Chile. Thanks for viewing!
The Running Chicken Nebula NGC 1365 in Fornax NGC 3521 in Leo
-
- Ensign
- Posts: 24
- Joined: Wed Sep 19, 2018 11:47 am
Re: Submissions: 2021 June
And two final ones for today, thanks again!
NGC 2237 - the Leopard in the Rose The Cone and Fox Fur Nebulae
NGC 2237 - the Leopard in the Rose The Cone and Fox Fur Nebulae