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Photo Gallery:

Our Solar System

Note: All images in this gallery are copyrighted by the photographers and may not be reused in any form without their permission.

Photographer

Doug Zubenel

E-mail

nzubenel@kc.rr.com

Location

Johnson Co., Kansas, USA.

Date

July 9, 2007, 05:29 UT

Equipment

This is a 6 minute exposure with a Canon Rebel XTi and a 300mm Nikkor lens @ f/4.5, ISO 200.

Description

The light pollution from downtown Kansas City, MO, was no match for Comet Linear (C/2006 VZ). It could just be detected with a 7X35 binocular
 

Photographer

Ramiro Hernández

E-mail

ramirohb@itesm.mx

Location

Saltillo,México

Date

june 24, 23:30 CT

Equipment

Celestron 8" SC telescope, eyepiece projection. DMK 21AF04 b&w camera. 2000 avi frames stacked with Registax
 

Photographer

Miguel Claro

E-mail

miguelclaro@sapo.pt

Location

Corroios -Portugal

Date

22-06-2007- 22:29:34

Equipment

Material: ETX90ec + Web Cam Philips Tou Cam Pro + 0.5X Focal reducer.Alt: 33º Azimuth: 225º SW Iss altitude: 597 km

Description

The pursuing of the ISS was made manually. I recorded an AVI of hundreds of frames, however only one frame it was used successfully for each photograph. All the images are the result of the same AVI file. I made a 200% resize in the final image.I used the forecast of the site CalSky and Heavens Above to get these "ISS Crosser" You can see more images and the real video in this link: http://www.astrosurf.com/astroarte/autostar_e_iss.htm
 

Photographer

Doug Zubenel

E-mail

nzubenel@kc.rr.com

Location

Linn Co., Kansas, USA.

Date

March 20, 1995

Equipment

This is a 20 minute exposure with a 16mm Nikkor fisheye lens @ f/4 on Fuji Super G 400 film.

Description

When I began the exposure for this portrait of the Zodiacal light it was winter. Twenty minutes later when I closed the shutter, it was spring!
 

Photographer

Leo Evans

E-mail

evansleo@gmail.com

Location

Vieux Fort,St.lucia

Date

Monday June 18th 2007 8.28 pm

Equipment

Sony Cybershot dsc-h2

Description

Image of Saturn,The Moon and Venus inconjunction
 

Photographer

Michael Karrer

E-mail

mkarrer@gmx.at

Location

St. Radegund/Austria

Date

2007-06-09, 07:50 UT

Equipment

175/1400 TMB Refractor, Coronado PST

Description

Good seeing conditions brought good detail. Aperture stopped down to 140mm.
 

Photographer

John Stetson

E-mail

jstetson@maine.rr.com

Location

Falmouth, Maine

Date

8:55 EDT June, 15, 2007

Equipment

4" refractor and a DSLR camera

Description

When this image was taken, the sun was 4.6 degrees below the horizon and the moon was 5.8 degrees above the horizon. 1% of the moon was illuminated.
 

Photographer

Doug Zubenel

E-mail

nzubenel@kc.rr.com

Location

Jefferson Co., Kansas, USA.

Date

June 17, 2007, 9:52 pm CDT

Equipment

This is a 15 second exposure with a 135mm Nikkor lens @ f/5.6 on a Canon Rebel XTi body at ISO 100.

Description

In spite of high clouds, I was able to image the Beehive Cluster (Messier 44 in Cancer) between Venus and the waxing crescent moon.
 

Photographer

Doug Zubenel

E-mail

nzubenel@kc.rr.com

Location

Jefferson Co., Kansas, USA.

Date

June 17, 2007, 9:56 pm, CDT.

Equipment

This is a 30 second exposure with a 135mm Nikkor lens @ f/5.6 on a Canon Rebel XTi body at ISO 100.

Description

The high clouds gave up nice halos around the moon and Venus.
 

Photographer

Kiran Chakravarti

Location

England, United Kingdom

Date

Unknown

Equipment

Meade ETX 90-EC, Phillips Toucam Pro webcam, stack of 200 frames.

Description

This photo shows the crater Langrenus. Also visible are the two messeir craters. Note the ray system emanating from langrenus. Langrenus is 132km in diameter and 2.7km deep.
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