Photo Gallery:
Note: All images in this gallery are copyrighted by the photographers and may not be
reused in any form without their permission.
Celestial Scenes
PhotographerMatija PozojevicLocationPetrova Gora (Croatia)DateNovember 12th, 2007EquipmentCelestron C10-N, Canon 300d, 12x420sec @ ISO800 Guiding: manually with Maksutov 90/1250 + Microguide EP 12.5mm Mount: EQ6 Vis Proccessing softweare: DeepSkyStacker, PixInsight 1.0, Photoshop CS2DescriptionThe Horsehead Nebula (also known as Barnard 33 in bright nebula IC 434) is a dark nebula in the Orion constellation. The nebula is located just below Alnitak, the easternmost star of Orion's Belt, and is part of the much larger Orion Molecular Cloud Complex. Left bottom nebula is the Flame nebula |
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PhotographerTAKACS ANDRASLocationGyor-HUNGARYDate10.05.07.Equipment155EDT starfire apo, Fornax100 mount with Pulsar, Sbig st-4 autoguider, Canon Eos400d with Baader deepsky filter.DescriptionMessier33 in Triangulum. 25x5min iso1600, I used this softwares: IRIS, REGISTAR, PS cs3, NEATimage! |
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PhotographerAlessandro GambaroLocationPromiod (Ao), ItalyDate2 Nov - 18:49EquipmentCanon 350D, Sigma 20mm 1.8, Equatorial MountDescriptionLower in NE sky after sunset I shot this picture of large field with Holmes and 2 Iridium flare (in 29 second) in Cassiopea. Canon 350D with Sigma 20 mm, f/3.5, 800 iso, 100 seconds on equatorial mount. |
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PhotographerMichel LaframboiseLocationGatineauDateNov 13 2007 at 8:45pmEquipmentCanon 20D - Canon 50mm Manfrotto mini mountDescriptionComet Holmes in my backward. |
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PhotographerP. Battaglia, F. RiccioLocationPasso del GiovĂ , Apennine Mountains, ItalyDateNovember 2nd, 2007EquipmentVixen R200SS on a EQ6 (Sky Scan) mount with a Canon EOS 20Da.DescriptionThe photo shows the Great Orion Nebula, including the blue reflection nebulae NGC 1973, 1975 and 1977. The image is the result of a combination of 5 images: 2 at 800 ISO (5 minutes each), 1 at 100 ISO (5 min.), 1 at 100 ISO (60 sec.) and 1 at 100 ISO (15 sec.). |
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PhotographerWilliam HurstLocationNEWMAN CA.Date10/30/07 10:38PMEquipmentMEADE ETX90AT with MEADE DSI PROII monochrom ccd digital camera with PC interface, single frame exposure at .0008 secondsDescriptionCraters on the moon with star expansion. |
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PhotographerEric JacobLocationSanta Barbara CADateNovember 2007EquipmentCelestron C102 refractor (500mm f/5). CG5 mount. Unmodified Canon XTI @ ISO 1600 with broadband filter. TC80N3 timer.DescriptionAn emission nebula in Auriga. 161 unguided exposures of 2 minutes each. Dark subtracted and stacked in Nebulosity. Processed in Photoshop CS. |
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PhotographerJohn StetsonLocationFalmouth, MaineDateNovember 9, 2007Equipmenth-alpha scope and a webcamDescriptionThe ISS, approx. 27 arcsec. in size, transited the sun this morning. |
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PhotographerBryan TobiasLocationMcDonald Observatory, Fort Davis, TexasDate06/22/2007 @ 22:00 PM approximatelyEquipmentNikon D200 camera on a tripod Mount using Tokina 12mm to 24 mm lens. ISO 200, 55 seconds, 12mm at F4.DescriptionWaited for a pass of the ISS while visiting the McDonald Observatory. Have larger more detailed photo should you need it. |
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PhotographerJohn PowellLocationSt. Cloud, FloridaDateNovember 6, 2007EquipmentTakahashi TSA102 / EM11 Temma Mount SBIG ST-10DescriptionM78 is a part of the Orion Molecular Cloud Complex (famous for M42, The Great Orion Nebula). M78 is a Reflection Nebula and it happens to hold the distinction of being the brightest of these very dim nebulae. It's the "Brightest Dim Nebula!" Captured with my Takahashi TSA102 Refractor and SBIG ST-10 CCD camera, it was necessairy to expose for 30 minutes at a time (subs) due to the faintness of the target. Total exposure time, LRG&B over a 2 day period was 7 1/2 hours. |
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