Experiencing the Southern Hemisphere night skies was unreal! For many years I dreamed about seeing the Milky Way from down under. This dream finally came true in June when our group of astronomy educators were accepted into the ACEAP ambassador program to Chile. I was so excited waiting as the sun set behind the mountain, just thinking in a few minutes I am about to witness something incredible. I knew that night would be ingrained into my memory for the rest of my life, so I am glad the skies stayed clear to capture a few photos! I setup my gear as our ACEAP group was given a great presentation and private tour of this public observatory outside Santiago. Chile holds so many beautiful star gazing spots and I was blown away at how bright the Milky Way was for only being 30 minutes outside Santiago.
The ghostly remains of an fireball meteor that lit up the surrounding landscape. Ionized gas glows brightly in this image near the famous beehive cluster M44 in cancer.
The meteor was probably a leonid fireball.
Taken on the morning of November 17th
Antalya,Turkey. http://www.flickr.com/photos/143381894@N04/38456026012/
Re: Submissions: 2017 November
Posted: Sat Nov 18, 2017 7:13 am
by astrosirius
Detail of NGC7331
NGC 7331 (also known as Caldwell 30) is a spiral galaxy about 40 million light-years (12 Mpc) away in the constellation Pegasus. It was discovered by William Herschel in 1784.NGC 7331 is the brightest member of the NGC 7331 Group of galaxies.
The galaxy is similar in size and structure to the galaxy we inhabit, and is often referred to as "the Milky Way's twin", although recent discoveries regarding the structure of the Milky Way may call this similarity into doubt.
Location: Àger-Lleida-Spain
Average SQM : 21.5
Dates: Several days betwen July and August 2016 made by remote control
Telescope: GSO RC14" Truss f/8 df:2848 mm
Mount: DDM85
Camera: Moravian G3-11000
Flattener: TS 2"
Exposures: L:41x600 sec bin1 // RGB: 35x600 sec bin2
Software: CCDStack + Pixinsight + Photoshop CC 2015
[ENGLISH] (google translate)
On November 19, 2017, a fireball exploded in Earth's atmosphere. A group of astrophotographers and astronomers were shooting the last shots of the night when suddenly .... zassss !! Leonida tremendous fireball crossed from east to west across the foot of the giant Orion.
The dust trail lasts at least 40 minutes since the last shot of the sequence was at 3h05min CEST.
Location: Mirador estelar de las Tablillas (A Veiga, Ourense, Galicia, Spain). Starlight tourist destination.
Latitude: 42.171844 | Length: -6.943037
Altitude: 1518 meters
Time: 2h25min CEST, 1h25min UTC
[SPANISH]
El 19 de noviembre de 2017 un bólido estalló en atmósfera de la Tierra. Un grupo de astrofotógrafos y astrónomos estábamos disparando las últimas tomas de la noche cuando de repente……. zassss!! Un tremendo bólido de leónida cruzó de Este a Oeste atravesando los pies del gigante Orión.
La estela de polvo dura al menos unos 40 minutos ya que la última toma de la secuencia fue a las 3h05min CEST.
Ubicación: Mirador estelar de las Tablillas (A Veiga, Ourense, Galicia, España). Destino turístico Starlight.
Latitud: 42.171844 | Longitud: -6.943037
Altitud: 1518 metros
Hora: 2h25min CEST, 1h25min UTC
This 4deg X 4deg field frames a significant amount of the Large Magellanic Cloud, including the giant Tarantula nebula region and showcases the plethora of other weird and wonderfully shaped emission areas as well as many open and globular star clusters
The area around the star forming region IC348 in Perseus taken with a 70mm refractor. 15hrs of RGB and 10 hrs of Ha.
You can view the full webpage here:http://www.starscapeimaging.com/page215/index.html
Re: Submissions: 2017 November
Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2017 9:10 am
by Adrien Mauduit
Red sprites, lightning, zodiacal lights, milky way and orange airglow on La Palma
Credits: Adrien Mauduit
In the night of November 21st-22nd (last night), I was out shooting a time-lapse of the milky way On La Palma in the Canary Islands when some clouds rolled in along with thunderstorm that developed on the Atlantic ocean (west). At first nothing major, but as I played back my time-lapse on the LCD screen of my Canon 6D camera, what a surprise I had when I saw the 'red dots' on the very right-hand side of the frame. Red dots, because I was shooting with a 14mm lens. As I zoomed in to only confirm my suspicions, I could not contain my excitement: I had caught my very first red sprites. Not only that, but with a very cool combination of events: Fall milky way and zodiacal lights (as I shot around 20:00, a bit more than an hour after LT sunset), orange airglow (barely visible here on the horizon but more visible earlier in the time-lapse, and of course lightning and sprites. I had been waiting years to capture this elusive phenomenon, and tried countless times in vain. What a surprise and a memory of a lifetime!
Canon 6D Baader modded + Sigma 14mm f/1.4 Art, @ ISO 6400, f/2, 15'', single shot, no tracking.