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Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Mon May 04, 2020 12:09 pm
by lup974
SWAN COMET
https://www.lucperrot.fr/
Copyright: Luc Perrot
444_AST_9757.jpg
Hello,
I share with you 2 photos of the new SWAN comet. They were made on Sunday morning on Reunion Island before sunrise.
The first photo shows the comet but also a shooting star from the Eta Aquarids meteor shower.
The second photo shows the comet near the zodiacal light. The lights below come from a small village in the Cirque of Mafate, La Nouvelle.
Best,

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Mon May 04, 2020 8:00 pm
by Bobinius
Nebula Wars: The Dragons of ARA in Hubble Palette

Copyright: Bogdan Borz 2020

Imaged with the 500mm ASA Newtonian from Chilescope

Full resolution and technical details: https://www.astrobin.com/full/jf73lo/0/

ImageNebula Wars: The Dragons of ARA in Hubble Palette by Bogdan Borz, on Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Mon May 04, 2020 8:57 pm
by jimstar
Subject:IC1805
Copyrights: James Collins
Image
Larger image URL:
http://jimstar11.com/IC1805an.jpg
Web Site: Meadow View Observatory
http://jimstar11.com/

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Mon May 04, 2020 11:11 pm
by lizarranet
CARINA NEBULA

Taken from www.Deepskychile.com

An LHaRGB image of this huge nebula. One of the queens of the southern skies

Details: https://fotoastro.blogspot.com/2020/05/ ... treno.html

Autors: Mikel Martínez & Cedric Thomas

ImageEta Carinae nebula. LHaRGB version by Mikel Martínez, en Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Tue May 05, 2020 12:29 am
by barretosmed
CLAVIUS CRATER

Huge and ancient crater of the Moon, in a rugged and mountainous region, riddled with ancient impact craters. Its internal walls are irregular, presenting deformations and a great slope.

More details
https://www.astrobin.com/full/0trw8d/B/?nc=user

EQUIPMENT:
MEADE LX200 10 "
ZWO ASI 1600MM COLED
FILTER L BAADER


05/03/2020 20:30
SAO PAULO-SP-BRAZIL

Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
Click to view full size image

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Tue May 05, 2020 7:03 am
by IO_12
The Great Nebula in Orion: M42 (NGC 1976, LBN 974, Messier 42) and M43 (NGC 1982, Messier 43, de Mairan's Nebula)

Copyright: [url=mailto://info@irida-observatory.org]Velimir Popov, Emil Ivanov[/url]

Detailed view of the central part of The Great Nebula in Orion one of the most imaged celestial object. The Orion Nebula is located about 1500 light years away in the same spiral arm of our Galaxy as the Sun.
M42_HLRGB_1200px[1].jpg
http://www.irida-observatory.org/CCD/M4 ... 1200px.jpg

Higher resolution: М 42

The Orion Nebula contains a very young open cluster The Trapezium. In normal observing conditions can be resolved four stars but two of these stars are binary systems giving a total of six stars to the asterism. The stars of the Trapezium, along with many other stars, are still in their early years. The Trapezium is a component of the much larger Orion Nebula Cluster, an association of about 2800 stars within a diameter of 20 light years.
Click to view full size image
Different exposures time was used to produce HDR combination and to be able to resolve the bright and dark regions.
Frames were taken with RC 12” astrograph, f/5 in HaLRGB, Bin 1:
Ha: 45 x 5 sec;
Ha: 50 x 30 sec;
Ha: 17 x 300 sec;
Ha: 6 x 600 sec;
LRGB: 10:10:10:10 x 1 sec
LRGB: 3:3:3:3 x 300 sec
Total exp. time 210 min (3.5 hrs)

Thank you for looking ...

http://www.irida-observatory.org

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Tue May 05, 2020 2:22 pm
by KuriousGeorge
M82 (Pure, Deep and Final). KG Observatory, Julian, CA.

My 5th attempt at M82 this year...

PURE because I use a Lighten blend of Ha over RGB. I believe this preserves the RGB much more than a screen blend.
DEEP because I use 20 hours of Ha in a 21.3 SQM sky.
FINAL because I promise this is the last version – at least for 2020. (-:
The layering technique used here is...

Ha(Screen)L Ha(Lighten)RGB.

More technical details here...

https://www.astrobin.com/4mlr3x/

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Tue May 05, 2020 2:58 pm
by PatrickWinkler
M 13

larger: https://www.celestialobjects.net/m13_rc.html
M13_Winkler_small.png

(c) Patrick Winkler

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Tue May 05, 2020 2:59 pm
by PatrickWinkler
M 51

larger: https://www.celestialobjects.net/m51.html
M51_Winkler_small.png
(c) Patrick Winkler

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Tue May 05, 2020 6:57 pm
by vanamonde81
Analemma of the Moon
Copyright: György Soponyai

If we observe the Sun the from day to day the same time (e.g.: 8 AM. or at noon or 4 PM.) we may spot it nearly the same direction. However its position in Winter is lower in the sky, in Summer it's higher and there are some periodic movements towards West and East because the Earth is orbiting around the Sun in elliptical orbit. If we capture the phenomena and overlay these photos, our Sun slowly draws the famous Celestial Number Eight in a year. The recent years analemma photo projects have become very popular amongst amateur astronomers and photographers, there are completed photos published almost every months including analemma-curves behind wonderful foregrounds.

Our Moon needs 1.035028 days (24 hours 50 minutes 29 seconds) in average to reach the same point in the sky to consecutive times. We might say this is the length of the "Moon-day". In case the weather and the clouds allow and we photograph the Moon 50 minutes and 29 seconds later on successive days, we may capture an analemma-like curve in 27 days. But (unlike the Sun's analemma) this is an open curve that looks different from month to month.

Capturing Lunar analemmas is still in its infancy: only three photos have been published so far (the third one was taken by myself in 2014). Due to the quarantine of the actual COVID-19 epidemic and to the promising weather forecasts let me try to take a new Lunar analemma photo. The small meadow 400 meters away from my home near Mogyoród, Hungary have an excellent outlook towards Southwestern direction with the lights of Mogyoród and the M3 highway in the foreground and with the lights of Budapest in the distance. From 26th of March to 18th of April I walked here daily and captured the Moon (except one rainy and cloudy morning) and overlaid these Lunar crescents and disks to the background photo taken on 27th of March.
Image

I also made a short Youtube video -- the first "real" YT video of my life.. :) It may be quite lame but I think it's very informative and may inspire others to photograph this beautiful celestial phenomena. Just remember: all Solar analemmas look like the same but all Lunar analemmas would be different and unique.. ;-)
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
Photo details:
2020.03.26. - 2020.04.18. Mogyoród, Hungary
Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Samyang 24/1.4 + Tamron EF 150/600 @ 600mm

Carina nebula in narrow band

Posted: Tue May 05, 2020 9:15 pm
by aldomottino
Hi all, images in RGB resulted from combination of Ha with OIII (HOO).
Thanks for looking!
Aldo
Copyright: Aldo Mottino, Rosario, Argentina.

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Wed May 06, 2020 12:13 am
by nick.astrophotography

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Wed May 06, 2020 2:27 am
by barretosmed
PLATO

PLATO

BEST DETAILS
https://www.astrobin.com/full/8u8jwz/B/?nc=user


EQUIPMENT:
MEADE LX200 10 "
ZWO ASI 1600MM COLED
FILTER L BAADER

03/05/2020
SAO PAULO-SP-BRAZIL

Copyright: Fernando Oliveira de Menezes
Click to view full size image

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Wed May 06, 2020 9:55 am
by astro.virus
Cat's Eye Nebula: Halo - Rings - Core

My goal was to combine the very bright and very dim parts of the nebula, while maintaining visibility of the evenly spaced, concentric rings around the central bright structure. While the HST image of NGC 6543 clearly shows these rings, I was only able to find a couple amateur images that show them as well. The data was acquired during April 2020 from my Bortle 7 backyard in Herent, Belgium. The base layer consists of short and long LRGB exposures, while the faint outer halo was enhanced with H-alpha and OIII data.

Main equipment:
Telescope: TS 8″ f/4 Newtonian
Camera: ZWO ASI1600MM-C
Filters: Astrodon 1.25" LRGB E-series Gen 2, Ha 3nm, OIII 3nm
Mount: Skywatcher EQ6-R
Guide camera: ZWO ASI120MM
Accessories: ZWO EFW-8, ZWO OAG Gen2, TS GPU coma corrector
Software: PixInsight, GIMP, Sequence Generator Pro, PHD2 guiding

Total exposure: 31.3 hours 
RGB: 24x30" each
RGB: 12x300" each
Lum: 71x180"
Halpha: 182x300"
OIII: 108x300"

Click to view full size image
Full details: https://astrob.in/b92n4v/0/

Copyright: Victor Van Puyenbroeck
astrovirusblog.wordpress.com

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Thu May 07, 2020 12:33 pm
by xuranus
IC 342
IC342_800px_q8.jpg
Copyright : Byoungjun Jeong

Full resolution
https://astrob.in/owscnj/0/

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Thu May 07, 2020 12:37 pm
by xuranus
M78 and Boogie man
M78andBoogieman_LHaRGB_800px_q9.jpg
Copyright : Byoungjun Jeong

Full resolution
https://astrob.in/z4tmpi/0/

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Thu May 07, 2020 1:21 pm
by barretosmed
The rose of space: I present the rosette nebula in HOO

The petals of this cosmic rose are actually a nursery of stars.
What characterizes this image is the sculpture drawn by the globules of dark dust.
The stars emit ultraviolet radiation that ionizes the surrounding hydrogen cloud, which gives the image a red color.

More details:
https://www.astrobin.com/full/zdceh3/0/?nc=user

EQUIPMENT:
APO TS 80MM
ASI 1600MM coled
ASIAIR
APO TS 80MM
15 X 200 BIN1 HALPHA
15 X 200 BIN1 OIII
MOUNT: CEM60-EC

LOCATION: JALES - SP - BRAZIL

DATES: DECEMBER 23 - 27, 2019

Processing and capture:
Software: @PIxinsigh, Adobe Photoshop, APT, PHD, Polemaster, SharpCap

Copyright: FERNANDO OLIVEIRA DE MENEZES
rosetaHOO_ABEmenor.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Fri May 08, 2020 3:25 pm
by barretosmed
Moon 99.8%


BETTER DETAILS
https://www.astrobin.com/full/62qh6b/B/?nc=user

EQUIPMENT:
APO 150MM TRIPLET
ZWO ASI 1600MM COLED
FILTER L BAADER
MOUNT CEM60


05/07/2020
SAO PAULO-SP-BRAZIL

Copyright: FERNANDO OLIVEIRA DE MENEZES
LUAMENOR.jpg

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Fri May 08, 2020 10:28 pm
by CBonafilia
Crescent Nebula and Soap Bubble, imaged over several days from my backyard in San Diego.

Within our Milky Way in the constellation Cygnus lies clouds of gas and dust drifting through rich star fields. Within the image view are the Soap Bubble (lower right) and the Crescent Nebula (upper left). Both were formed during the final phase in the life of a star. NGC 6888, also known as the Crescent was shaped as its bright, central massive Wolf-Rayet star, WR 136, shed its outer envelope in a strong stellar wind. Burning through fuel at an accelerated rate, WR 136 is near the end of a short life that should finish in a spectacular supernova explosion. The recent discovered (2007) Soap Bubble Nebula is likely a planetary nebula, the final shroud of a lower mass, long-lived, sun-like star destined to become a slowly cooling white dwarf. While both are some 5,000 light-years or so distant, the larger Crescent Nebula is around 25 light-years across.

Full Res:
Image
Copyright: Charles Bonafilia

Imaged in HOO Palette
Ha 80 x 300"
OII 160 x 300"
Esprit 120ED

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Sat May 09, 2020 11:06 am
by Tamas Abraham
Morning Sun Halo
http://www.vadakcsillaga.hu/
Copyright: Tamas Abraham
sunhalo_200509_abraham_1200.jpg
Thanks for watching,
Tamas

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Sat May 09, 2020 1:06 pm
by remidone
NGC 3576 - Statue of Liberty Nebula close up

Click to view full size image
Copyright: Moretti Luca

by Remidone, su Flickr

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Sat May 09, 2020 4:24 pm
by astrosirius
JUNO P22 - JUPITER

The Wide Field Coverage for Juno (WFCJ) program is synchronized with perijove passes of the NASA Juno mission. "Perijove" is the close-approach atmospheric overflight of Juno during its highly eccentric 53-day orbit. The Juno spacecraft orbit is very eccentric, allowing microwave and infrared scans of the atmosphere from a vantage point inside the planet's intense radiation belts. Although Juno is equipped with a visible wavelength public-outreach camera (JunoCam), the proximity to Jupiter during the perijove passes means that Juno itself cannot obtain regional-scale or global-scale imaging data to provide context for its own observations. The WFCJ program fills this gap with WFC3/UVIS imaging data.


Access Data: MAST-NASA-JUNO-HUBBLE (Firts Observation Date by Juno on 2019-09-12)
Perijove Number: 22
Primary Investigator: Michael H. Wong

hlsp_wfcj_hst_wfc3_uvis_jupiter_2019_pj22_f631n_v1_0912ut0804_nav_SCI (as channel R)
hlsp_wfcj_hst_wfc3_uvis_jupiter_2019_pj22_f395n_v1_0912ut0819_nav_SCI (as channel G)
hlsp_wfcj_hst_wfc3_uvis_jupiter_2019_pj22_f502n_v1_0912ut0822_nav_SCI (as channel B)


Processing by: Lluís Romero

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Sun May 10, 2020 10:01 am
by nvc123
9-10 May-2020. The M61 Galaxy with visible supernova SN AT2020jfo
www.astro-hp.dk
Copyright: Niels V. Christensen
Click to view full size image

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Sun May 10, 2020 10:19 am
by AlbertoP
Plains and Summits in the Lagoon Nebula

I have spent a few hours enjoying the processing of this magnificent image obtained by the Hubble Space Telescope, I am fascinated by the appearance of the clouds of gas and dust that are seen in the image, since I began to process it I cannot remove from my head the impression that I am observing the surface of Mars.

Credits and Copyrights: Hubble Legacy Archive, NASA, STScI; Processing by Alberto Pisabarro 2020.
Heart of M8
Heart of M8
Full Resolution:
Plains and Summits in the Lagoon Nebula (HST)

Camera: WFC3/UVIS, Filters: F502N (O III) , F658N (N II) , F656N (H-alpha)

Re: Submissions: 2020 May

Posted: Sun May 10, 2020 5:46 pm
by akjuvekar1
Supernova SN 2020jfo in M61 galaxy
URL of website, https://www.facebook.com/groups/zwoasiu ... 994335714/
Copyright: Abhijit Juvekar
Click to view full size image
Original post link viewtopic.php?f=8&t=40555