Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
_____________________________________________________________________________
Please post your images here for November 19-22.
If you need instructions on posting images, please see this thread.
Thank you!
_____________________________________________________________________________
<- Previous submissions
NGC 2070: The Tarantula Nebula
Credit: George Ionas, data; Emanuele Colognato, post-processing
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/1427295/NGC2070_Full.jpg
[attachment=5]NGC2070_small.jpg[/attachment][/i]
NGC 2170 in Monoceros
Copyright: Louie Atalasidis
[attachment=4]NGC-2170.jpg[/attachment][/i]
NGC1499 in Ha(HaR)GB
http://www.pbase.com/djrlx90/image/130367153/original
Copyright: David Rosenthal
[attachment=0]NGC1499_Rosenthal.jpg[/attachment][/i]
IC 410: Emission Nebula in Aurgia
http://imagingtheheavens.com/
Copyrght: Mike Sherick
[attachment=3]ic410-NB-11-15-10b.jpg[/attachment][/i]
NGC 7635: The Bubble Nebula
http://www.azastronomy.com
Copyright: Richard Jacobs
[attachment=2]NGC 7635 BubbleLtBucketsColor.jpg[/attachment][/i]
M45: Floating in the Vastness
http://fotografiaastronomica.com/index.php
Copyright: Ferran Bosch
[attachment=1]M45W_APOD.jpg[/attachment][/i]
The Horsehead Nebula (Barnard 33) Flame Nebula (NGC 2024) Wide Field
http://www.flickr.com/photos/terryhanco ... /lightbox/
Copyright: Terry Hancock
<- Previous submissions
Please post your images here for November 19-22.
If you need instructions on posting images, please see this thread.
Thank you!
_____________________________________________________________________________
<- Previous submissions
NGC 2070: The Tarantula Nebula
Credit: George Ionas, data; Emanuele Colognato, post-processing
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/1427295/NGC2070_Full.jpg
[attachment=5]NGC2070_small.jpg[/attachment][/i]
NGC 2170 in Monoceros
Copyright: Louie Atalasidis
[attachment=4]NGC-2170.jpg[/attachment][/i]
NGC1499 in Ha(HaR)GB
http://www.pbase.com/djrlx90/image/130367153/original
Copyright: David Rosenthal
[attachment=0]NGC1499_Rosenthal.jpg[/attachment][/i]
IC 410: Emission Nebula in Aurgia
http://imagingtheheavens.com/
Copyrght: Mike Sherick
[attachment=3]ic410-NB-11-15-10b.jpg[/attachment][/i]
NGC 7635: The Bubble Nebula
http://www.azastronomy.com
Copyright: Richard Jacobs
[attachment=2]NGC 7635 BubbleLtBucketsColor.jpg[/attachment][/i]
M45: Floating in the Vastness
http://fotografiaastronomica.com/index.php
Copyright: Ferran Bosch
[attachment=1]M45W_APOD.jpg[/attachment][/i]
The Horsehead Nebula (Barnard 33) Flame Nebula (NGC 2024) Wide Field
http://www.flickr.com/photos/terryhanco ... /lightbox/
Copyright: Terry Hancock
<- Previous submissions
- Attachments
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Hmm, that's a very nice image of the Pleiades, Ferran Bosch. Very blue, too. But considering it's so popular to chase down every last photon of red hydrogen alpha emission and paint skyscapes all red, why not chase down the blue reflection nebulosity photons with a similar diligence?
Ann
Ann
Color Commentator
- Matteo Morino
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Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
IC1318 Mosaic...You're smoking?
http://www.skytoa.it/nebulose_ic1318mos ... rande.html
Copyright: Matteo Morino
http://www.skytoa.it/nebulose_ic1318mos ... rande.html
Copyright: Matteo Morino
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Hello,
I have to share my experience and a result from doing astrophotography at 4100 meters above sea level. Once, I dreamed of doing something else than just pretty picture (wanted to try something more scientifical). This image is EVERYTHING BUT PRETTY picture. The interesting thing is the band spectra of light from 820nm (used Astrodon's Sloan z' filter) to some 1um where the spectral response of CCD sensor Sony ICX285AL reaches zero. I used dithering to get rid of cosmics rays. I had big trouble doing flats. The image is noisy, but what can one expect from amateur equipment in NIR photography. The top image is monochrome only, as it's NIR luminance only. The bottom image is a pseudo-false colored monochromatic data.
best regards
Pavel
M42 - The Great Nebula in Orion, near infrared (NIR) light
http://astrofotky.cz/gallery.php?show=. ... 017180.jpg
Copyright: Pavel Pech
[attachment=0]M42_Pech.jpg[/attachment][/i]
I have to share my experience and a result from doing astrophotography at 4100 meters above sea level. Once, I dreamed of doing something else than just pretty picture (wanted to try something more scientifical). This image is EVERYTHING BUT PRETTY picture. The interesting thing is the band spectra of light from 820nm (used Astrodon's Sloan z' filter) to some 1um where the spectral response of CCD sensor Sony ICX285AL reaches zero. I used dithering to get rid of cosmics rays. I had big trouble doing flats. The image is noisy, but what can one expect from amateur equipment in NIR photography. The top image is monochrome only, as it's NIR luminance only. The bottom image is a pseudo-false colored monochromatic data.
best regards
Pavel
M42 - The Great Nebula in Orion, near infrared (NIR) light
http://astrofotky.cz/gallery.php?show=. ... 017180.jpg
Copyright: Pavel Pech
[attachment=0]M42_Pech.jpg[/attachment][/i]
Last edited by pablo22 on Tue Aug 30, 2011 3:35 am, edited 2 times in total.
Reason: Attached larger image for better viewing
Reason: Attached larger image for better viewing
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Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
The Flaming Star Nebula IC405 and The Tadpoles of IC410
http://www.zonalunar.com/
Copyright: Alfonso Carreño From the terrace of my house and my Canon 1000D..............a greeting.
http://www.zonalunar.com/
Copyright: Alfonso Carreño From the terrace of my house and my Canon 1000D..............a greeting.
Last edited by zonalunar on Fri Nov 19, 2010 1:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
A highlight of the winter sky
http://www.skytrip.de
Copyright: Mario Weigand
[attachment=0]M42_Weigand.jpg[/attachment][/i]
http://www.skytrip.de/temp/m42_a.jpg
bigger one:
http://www.skytrip.de/temp/m42_b.jpg
- Taunus / Gemany
- STL-11k
- Pentax 105/670 SDP
greets
Mario
http://www.skytrip.de
Copyright: Mario Weigand
[attachment=0]M42_Weigand.jpg[/attachment][/i]
http://www.skytrip.de/temp/m42_a.jpg
bigger one:
http://www.skytrip.de/temp/m42_b.jpg
- Taunus / Gemany
- STL-11k
- Pentax 105/670 SDP
greets
Mario
Last edited by marioweigand on Fri Nov 19, 2010 5:13 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
¿Too blue? is a reflection nebula, young stars, and no trace of Ha... ¿still too blue?Ann wrote:Hmm, that's a very nice image of the Pleiades, Ferran Bosch. Very blue, too. But considering it's so popular to chase down every last photon of red hydrogen alpha emission and paint skyscapes all red, why not chase down the blue reflection nebulosity photons with a similar diligence?
Ann
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
I meant that there is scattered blue light over almost the entire field, and images of the Pleiades and their surroundings don't usually look like that.caliu wrote:¿Too blue? is a reflection nebula, young stars, and no trace of Ha... ¿still too blue?Ann wrote:Hmm, that's a very nice image of the Pleiades, Ferran Bosch. Very blue, too. But considering it's so popular to chase down every last photon of red hydrogen alpha emission and paint skyscapes all red, why not chase down the blue reflection nebulosity photons with a similar diligence?
Ann
But I didn't say that the picture was too blue, rather that astroimager Ferran Bosch had done a good job chasing down the blue photons here. I meant that as praise!
Ann
Color Commentator
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Oh Ann, excuse my bad and poor english
Regards
Regards
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Divided Disk: NGC 7814
http://www.caelumobservatory.com/gallery/n7814.shtml
Copyright: Adam Block/Mount Lemmon SkyCenter/University of Arizona
http://www.caelumobservatory.com/gallery/n7814.shtml
Copyright: Adam Block/Mount Lemmon SkyCenter/University of Arizona
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Nine and a quarter: NGC 925
http://www.caelumobservatory.com/gallery/n925.shtml
Copyright: Adam Block/Mount Lemmon SkyCenter/University of Arizona full resolution: http://www.caelumobservatory.com/mlsc/n925.jpg
http://www.caelumobservatory.com/gallery/n925.shtml
Copyright: Adam Block/Mount Lemmon SkyCenter/University of Arizona full resolution: http://www.caelumobservatory.com/mlsc/n925.jpg
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Thanks for the galaxies, Adam! NGC 7814 looks really good. It is fun to see how tendrils of dust rise from the otherwise perfectly straight main dust lane. Also, it is fun to see how the stars in the disk on the right appear to take on a slightly "bluer" color - of course their color is not blue, but perhaps whitish. In this galaxy made up of old star, the stars on the right in the disk may possibly be merely middle-aged.
Of course I like your picture of NGC 925 even better. The blue color of the disk, the many clusters and condensations and all the pink emission nebulae: all appeal to me very much. Recently I had 925 posts, and I realized that the number 925 rang a bell. I googled "NGC 925" and got pictures that were good enough to show me that NGC 925 was indeed a nice starforming galaxy, but the pictures were badly resolved and had bad color balancies. Your picture is the one I would have wanted to find when I was trying to make myself "NGC 925" for a day!
Ann
Of course I like your picture of NGC 925 even better. The blue color of the disk, the many clusters and condensations and all the pink emission nebulae: all appeal to me very much. Recently I had 925 posts, and I realized that the number 925 rang a bell. I googled "NGC 925" and got pictures that were good enough to show me that NGC 925 was indeed a nice starforming galaxy, but the pictures were badly resolved and had bad color balancies. Your picture is the one I would have wanted to find when I was trying to make myself "NGC 925" for a day!
Ann
Color Commentator
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Alfonso Carreño, your picture of IC 405 and IC 410 is interesting. The picture is really well resolved. The color is interesting and probably not what most people would expect. But when I look at the little asterism of stars "swimming" between these two nebula, an asterism called "The Leaping Minnow", I find that the colors here are subtle, but true. The topmost star is the yellowest - check, because it is a K giant. The star on the middle right is the bluest - check, because it is a favorite star of mine, IQ Aurigae, which is remarkably blue for its spectral class. The other stars take on intermediate hues, which is perfectly correct, too. So based on how you portray the star colors here, I'd say that you are doing the nebulae justice, too. This is probably what nebulae look like if you are photographing without making an effort to coax the red color out of them.
Interesting! Thank you for this "new view" of emission nebulae!
Ann
Interesting! Thank you for this "new view" of emission nebulae!
Ann
Color Commentator
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Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Waiting for the Blue Moon
http://ofpink.wordpress.com/
Copyright: Stefano De Rosa This month the Moon will be full on the 21st and, according to an old definition, it will also be “Blue“ being the third of four full moons in the same season. Considering that weather is forecasted bad for the next few days, I anticipated the shot on November 19 when our natural satellite was not Full, not Blue but looked great anyway as rising alongside the Superga church while another wonder from the sky was joining the scene.
http://ofpink.wordpress.com/
Copyright: Stefano De Rosa This month the Moon will be full on the 21st and, according to an old definition, it will also be “Blue“ being the third of four full moons in the same season. Considering that weather is forecasted bad for the next few days, I anticipated the shot on November 19 when our natural satellite was not Full, not Blue but looked great anyway as rising alongside the Superga church while another wonder from the sky was joining the scene.
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Great picture, for more on the blue moon see: http://asterisk.apod.com/vie ... 55#p137155StefanoDeRosa wrote:Waiting for the Blue Moon
http://ofpink.wordpress.com/
Copyright: Stefano De Rosa
http://ofpink.files.wordpress.com/2010/ ... uperga.jpg
This month the Moon will be full on the 21st and, according to an old definition, it will also be “Blue“ being the third of four full moons in the same season. Considering that weather is forecasted bad for the next few days, I anticipated the shot on November 19 when our natural satellite was not Full, not Blue but looked great anyway as rising alongside the Superga church while another wonder from the sky was joining the scene.
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: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Find the star!
Moon and 119 Piscium
http://www.astrokraai.nl
Copyright: Emil Kraaikamp
Moon and 119 Piscium
http://www.astrokraai.nl
Copyright: Emil Kraaikamp
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
NGC 1672: Spiral Galaxy in Dorado
http://www.robgendlerastropics.com/NGC1 ... ndler.html
Credit: Hubble Legacy Archive, data; Robert Gendler, processing Galaxy Core
http://www.robgendlerastropics.com/NGC1 ... -Core.html
Credit: Hubble Legacy Archive, data; Robert Gendler, processing
http://www.robgendlerastropics.com/NGC1 ... ndler.html
Credit: Hubble Legacy Archive, data; Robert Gendler, processing Galaxy Core
http://www.robgendlerastropics.com/NGC1 ... -Core.html
Credit: Hubble Legacy Archive, data; Robert Gendler, processing
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
North Celestial Pole, Polaris and Surrounding Galactic Cirrus
Copyright: Rogelio Bernal Andreo Full-sized image available here: http://deepskycolors.com/astro/2010/11/ ... NCP_3k.jpg
Copyright: Rogelio Bernal Andreo Full-sized image available here: http://deepskycolors.com/astro/2010/11/ ... NCP_3k.jpg
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
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Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Ann, thanks for your visit and comment, you are right when they comment that my intention is to have a "new view" of these nebulae.Ann wrote:Alfonso Carreño, your picture of IC 405 and IC 410 is interesting. The picture is really well resolved. The color is interesting and probably not what most people would expect. But when I look at the little asterism of stars "swimming" between these two nebula, an asterism called "The Leaping Minnow", I find that the colors here are subtle, but true. The topmost star is the yellowest - check, because it is a K giant. The star on the middle right is the bluest - check, because it is a favorite star of mine, IQ Aurigae, which is remarkably blue for its spectral class. The other stars take on intermediate hues, which is perfectly correct, too. So based on how you portray the star colors here, I'd say that you are doing the nebulae justice, too. This is probably what nebulae look like if you are photographing without making an effort to coax the red color out of them.
Interesting! Thank you for this "new view" of emission nebulae!
Ann
Sorry if my English is not correct.
A greeting from Alfonso Carreño .-)
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Winter Milky Way
Copyright: Tunç Tezel
[attachment=0]RasLanufHartley2Leonid.jpg[/attachment][/i]
Copyright: Tunç Tezel
[attachment=0]RasLanufHartley2Leonid.jpg[/attachment][/i]
A closed mouth gathers no foot.
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Stefano de Rosa, that is a truly magical picture. The Moon looks as insubstantial and lightweight as a balloon as it floats behind that magnificent building.
And I really like that seeming encounter between two striped and apparently similarly sized objects in space, the ISS and Jupiter!
Robert Gendler, that is a very handsome image of beautiful spiral galaxy NGC 1672. I know that the galaxy looks even better on your own homepage, where we can see the galaxy at a larger size. As for the closeup of the nucleus, I guess those blue and bluish knots are large clusters, aren't they?
Rogelio Bernal Andreo, you know that I am one of your diehard fans! Your image of the region around Polaris is very very beuatiful and delightfully detailed. It is certainly fascinating to see all that galactic cirrus. However, as a color commentator, I've got to say something... Polaris isn't blue! It has a color index of +0.636, which makes it marginally yellower than the Sun. Okay, but when I look at that picture again, it looks a little bit as if that blue light surrounding Polaris might be a reflection nebula, in which case the blue color would certainly be all right. And there sure is a lot of cirrus around Polaris, but is the cirrus at the same distance from us as Polaris? I have never heard that Polaris would be immersed in a reflection nebula, and my software says that the famous star is unreddened. So I doubt that the color is really right here, but the picture is definitely delightful!
Ann
And I really like that seeming encounter between two striped and apparently similarly sized objects in space, the ISS and Jupiter!
Robert Gendler, that is a very handsome image of beautiful spiral galaxy NGC 1672. I know that the galaxy looks even better on your own homepage, where we can see the galaxy at a larger size. As for the closeup of the nucleus, I guess those blue and bluish knots are large clusters, aren't they?
Rogelio Bernal Andreo, you know that I am one of your diehard fans! Your image of the region around Polaris is very very beuatiful and delightfully detailed. It is certainly fascinating to see all that galactic cirrus. However, as a color commentator, I've got to say something... Polaris isn't blue! It has a color index of +0.636, which makes it marginally yellower than the Sun. Okay, but when I look at that picture again, it looks a little bit as if that blue light surrounding Polaris might be a reflection nebula, in which case the blue color would certainly be all right. And there sure is a lot of cirrus around Polaris, but is the cirrus at the same distance from us as Polaris? I have never heard that Polaris would be immersed in a reflection nebula, and my software says that the famous star is unreddened. So I doubt that the color is really right here, but the picture is definitely delightful!
Ann
Color Commentator
Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
Hi Ann,
I know Polaris isn't blue but the whole image was color-balanced without any kind of masks (meaning there has been no selective color adjustments anywhere in the image), and the spectra type and B-V of other stars seem correct, always understanding that saturation will always be dialed up or down to the preferences of the person processing the image (saturation, not color balance). I do not know the explanation as of why all that blue around a F7 type star, but that's how it came out, it's not an artistic license of any kind. I would love to hear an explanation that would make sense, but so far, all the comments I've got simply point out the obvious, that the star isn't blue Well, whatever the cause, there is a lot of blue the way it came out of my scope
Thanks!
Rogelio
I know Polaris isn't blue but the whole image was color-balanced without any kind of masks (meaning there has been no selective color adjustments anywhere in the image), and the spectra type and B-V of other stars seem correct, always understanding that saturation will always be dialed up or down to the preferences of the person processing the image (saturation, not color balance). I do not know the explanation as of why all that blue around a F7 type star, but that's how it came out, it's not an artistic license of any kind. I would love to hear an explanation that would make sense, but so far, all the comments I've got simply point out the obvious, that the star isn't blue Well, whatever the cause, there is a lot of blue the way it came out of my scope
Thanks!
Rogelio
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Re: Recent Submissions: 2010 November 19-22
bystander and Ann, many thanks for your kind comments
Stefano
Stefano