clear sky chart

Job 9:9

Job 9:9-10
9 He is the Maker of the Bear and Orion,
the Pleiades and the constellations of the south.
10 He performs wonders that cannot be fathomed,
miracles that cannot be counted.
NIV

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

NGC772, The Nautilus Galaxy

Tried to get a din galaxy, something I havent tried to do in awhile.  These objects typically take a lot of exposures to get them to come out well.  This image however was taken using only 8 frames.  I had clouds move in which cut my session short.

What you see here is a really large spiral galaxy, about twice the size of the Milky Way, but its about 130 million light years away. The light we are seeing left this galaxy during a time when early dinosaurs were roaming the Earth, when the first freshwater turtles appeared on Earth.  The distorted spiral arm was caused by interaction with one of the fuzzy specks to the right of the galaxy, another satellite galaxy.





Sunday, November 6, 2016

Various Objects Taken Under City Light Pollution

This post shows that you dont need to have dark skies in order to take decent astro photos.  The location this was taken, the 2nd magnitude star, Polaris was difficult to see.  Areas to the South were even worse, and most of these objects were taken fairly low to the south.

The most southern object was the helix.  These were taken in white light, with a Astronomik Clip in CLS filter.


Sure, its pretty dim, but with a few extra exposures, it can be had a little brighter.

The next object I tried was the Horsehead.  It too was quite do-able from within city lights.


The Orion Nebula is a bright object and is an easy target from anywhere.




The blue dust surrounding the stars of the Pleiades, although quite faint is still within the city dweller's grasp.








Tuesday, October 4, 2016

The Cygnus Molecular Cloud

A vast area of glowing hydrogen exists in Cygnus.  This image was taken using white light as well as a wideband hydrogen filter.  The small fairly bright nebula in the lower center part of the frame is the Crescent Nebula.

This area of the sky is quite large.  It encompasses the area around the North America Nebula, Pelican Nebula and the Crescent, so this is actually only a small part of the cloud.






Saturday, August 6, 2016

Iris Nebula, NGC7023

The Astro-Tech focal reducer/field flattener that I'm using with my AT-72ED has threads to accept a 2" filter.  I was looking thru Amazon and found a very low cost light pollution filter (in the $35 range).  So I bought one.   It is just enough to get some rather deep images from my moderately light polluted sky.

I have been having a great time taking wide field images, even of small objects that I would normally use a longer focal length.  Take for instance the Iris Nebula.  The bright part is only about 18 arc minutes in diameter, or about 1/3 the size of a full moon.  What surrounds it, however is just as interesting.  This image shows more of the dust that belongs to the Iris, but just isnt lit up like the bright part.

It takes a larger number of exposures to be able to see the unlit dust, as it is extremely faint, but I was able to image it rather well in this composite of 24 - 5 minute frames.

New stars form from within dust clouds, and that is what is lighting up the bright part of the Iris.  You can see the light taper off as you move away from the bright stars in the center of the lit area.




Friday, June 10, 2016

Mars and Saturn

The best Mars image I've ever taken.  I'm shocked at the detail!

The NexImage camera is incredible! I actually had no idea that an 8 inch could pull this much detail out of Mars, and with it being so low in the sky this year, I got lucky with how well the seeing was.

Saturn was also incredible with this camera too, and this image is probably my best Saturn to date.




Sunday, April 17, 2016

New Planetary Imaging Camera

Received a Celestron NexImage 5 camera.  I am quite impressed with the fine detail this camera sees, and I believe it will improve my planetary images substantially.  The first image is the bottom of the moon as seen through the Orion 8" f/5 Newtonian.



Crater Copernicus.



Plato and the Alpine Valley



Jupiter tonight.






Sunday, March 27, 2016

Saturday, February 6, 2016

Catalina C/2013 US10

Not very often that I image a comet, but I caught one tonight!  Stacked on the comet, so the stars are streaking.


Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Jupiter

My favorite planet to image.  Jupiter looks different every year,

This image is the result of combining 14,000 frames.


Tuesday, January 5, 2016

California Nebula and Wide Field Orion

The last few days, I've been trying to image Orion.  So far, I took enough mosaics to show the Orion Nebula and the Horsehead and Flame Nebulas in the same image.


This will be an ongoing project.  The goal will be to attempt to get the entire constellation.

Took a break last night and imaged the California Nebula.  This is a 2-frame mosaic.