Thursday, July 31, 2008

Sunday, July 27, 2008

The Moon 27th July 2008 - 04:48 BST

Jumped out of bed this morning at 4:30am to see if the Moon was visible... it was, so I dashed down to setup and take some hi-res Moon images. But the seeing wasn't that good. So I took a mosaic with the DMK camera and a few colour shots with the Canon 400D. I've merged them into this composite using Photoshop:-

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Midnight Sun on Mars

This panorama mosaic of images was taken by the Surface Stereo Imager on board NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander. This mosaic documents the midnight sun during several days of the mission.

Credit

Thursday, July 24, 2008

M57 24th July 2008

20 x 2min Frames.

Mare Imbrium 24th July 2008

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Pink clouds 22nd July 2008

Jupiter & moons

Wow it's clear!, well a bit.
Jupiter was very low on the horizon, but at prime focus I was able to image it and get some sort of result. Like looking through jelly. The moons looked good though.

I also spent the rest of the night imaging M57 with a 2x barlow, but they didn't turn out too well. I think this was down to the transparency, or lack of it! ;-(

Friday, July 18, 2008

Japan's JAXA/SELENE satellite Tycho fly-by.

This is incredible. A computer generated fly-by of the Crater Tycho taken by Japan's JAXA/SELENE satellite.

Click on image for the video link.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Wet Environments on Ancient Mars.

A colour-enhanced image of the delta in Jezero Crater, which once held a lake. Ancient rivers ferried clay-like minerals (shown in green) into the lake, forming the delta. Clays tend to trap and preserve organic matter, making the delta a good place to look for signs of ancient life.
Credit text: NASA

Image credit: NASA/JPL/JHUAPL/MSSS/Brown University.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

The Hale Telescope.

The Hale Telescope... I don't have any excuse for showing this image... apart from the fact that it's one of my favourite telescopes, and it's still cloudy out there ;-)

Credit: Palomar Skies Blog

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Joke time.


Credit

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

M57 taken through guider scope.

Here's an interesting one. It's not supposed to be clear tonight, but it is so I thought I'd practice with guidescope setups and alike. This time I used the C9.25 as the guidescope and my guidescope lens as the capturing device. Here is 7 x 65 second frames from the DMK camera trained on M57. Processed in Registax, no flats, darks or bias.

Wide enough field for ya?

Time to batten down the hatches... we're supposed to be getting 40mm of rain tonight :-/

Happy birthday Gemma.

Saturday, July 05, 2008

M31... work in progress

... I need more subs ;-)
Had a quick gander at M31 before packing up on the 4th. This is 11 x 1600ISO frames at 2 minutes each.
The galaxy was very low in the sky, so the FWHM value was quite high.

Cosmic Quest - This is great.

Heather Couper continues her narrative history of the cosmos and our place within it.

Dumbbell 4th July 2007

Here's another M27 taken on 4th July, (Happy Birthday Leanne).
This is a DSS combination of the previous set of images taken on the 01/07/08 and a set of 28 x 2minute 1600ISO images taken on the 4th. I polar aligned the scope before taking the images, and therefore I didn't use DEC control in PHD. But there was a very small amount of trailing that I could detect, which had to be removed in PS using layering. Because of this the results are not quite as good as I hoped (the stars look like squashed eggs).
Still you live and learn.
The two set of images were quite a bit out of registration, but DSS matched them up perfectly.


Removing star trails:-
Using PS in layers duplicate the image (called a background copy), next change the background copies blending mode to darken,
with background copy highlighted, select the offset tool in filters
Filters>Other>Offset
(zoom in 500% on the image "Ctrl +") and adjust the horizontal/vertical pixels
(undefined areas set to wrap around).
For the full size picture I used Horizontal of "1" and Vertical of "2"...this will vary depending on the size of the trails and what direction they are heading....i.e. up and down...on a 45....sideways.... etc. ....play with the two settings until the trails are diminished or eliminated....you can use negative numbers.
Once you have the star shape where you want it, zoom back out, then flatten the image and save.
If the filter takes it a tad too far, go to the ..... Edit>Fade filter function and this will decrease the amount. (this must be done before you flattern)....play with it a couple of times.
Credit FWHM IMAGING FORUMS

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Opportunity at Cape Verde (simulated)

An artist's impression of Opportunity exploring Cape Verde.
Credit: NASA / JPL / Cornell / Texas A & M / Rover model by D. Ellison / simulated view by Astro0

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Dumbbell Nebula 1st July 2008


The image at the bottom is a single RAW frame that has been reduced in size and cropped.

Dumbbell capturing.

Here's a screen dump from one of my computer screens (running dual monitors you know, it's the only way to go with all these programs running at once).
This shows the PHD guiding window and graph, on the right is the DSLR shutter program.
The HC Buttons are a handy little scope controller that comes with PHD.

Question: Why that star on the left?
Answer: That's what you're supposed to do, pick a star off centre that isn't too bright. ;-)