Eastern Veil Nebula (NGC 6992 )
Took this over the past week. This was my second attempt at this target and I am quite happy with the result and the fine detail captured. This is a narrowband image. Taking with a WO FTL 132 and an ASI6200MM using a WO ZS 61 as the guide scope.
The Pleiades (Messier 45)
Taken from the backyard. I love this target. I keep adding more integration time to it to bring out further details.
Isn't it a little close to the fence? When I built my "astronomy deck", I built it up so that I could see above the fences.
I would love to join you moderating this sub!
Q: Guide scope for a 132mm aperture/927mm focal length refractor?
I have a William Optics Fluroustar 132 refractor. I have an off-axis guider right now and I am tracking with 0.35 to 0.5" accuracy. But the OAG is interfering with my full frame camera sensor. As such I would like to switch to a dedicated guide scope.
Nice work! Have you tried star removal yet? It would be awesome on this image.
A lot unfortunately. I've got just under $20K Canadian invested. Many of the most expensive pieces (the big scope and the big mount) I was able to buy at a discount used on FB marketplace, so that saved a lot.
This was infinitely better than my first attempt at astrophotography.
You have the horsehead nebula in the upper middle/leff as well! Nice capture! This is a great start.
Crab Nebula (Messier 1) in Narrowband
Captured in January 2023 using a William Optics 132 refractor on a Sky Watcher EQ6R-Pro with a ASI 533MM Pro camera. I struggled a bit as my telescope pinched the stars a bit in the cold weather. This was 15hr of integration time over three nights.
That is excellent for an unguided capture with a non-astrophotography camera! Great work!
Yeah, I find the worse is astrobin, where you can see the pic of the day and they used a 24" PlaneWave OTA. Yikes. https://planewave.com/product/cdk24-ota/
Nice work!I want to use Siril more for processing.
my signup because this all probably is going to China.
China is sophisticated enough that it can vacuum up all the information it wants about without any involvement of a Lemmy.lm admin.
I was trying to match the color palette of this beautiful image I saw from the Very Large Telescope project: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dumbbell_Nebula#/media/File:M27_-_Dumbbell_Nebula.jpg
Dumbbell Planetary Nebula (Messier 27)
Often you will see this in significant more muted colors, but I took this one in narrowband SHO. Taken from the backyard last summer using a Celestron C8 on an Advanced VX mount via ASI AIR+. I love the internal detail this image captured. It is a planetary nebula, which means this is a shell of stellar material shed from the central dying star.
I can not post to this group. I tried a bunch of times and it failed.
Thank you!
William Optics Flourostar 132mm refractor on a Sky Watcher EQ6R-Pro. It is a large and heavy scope I picked up used from FB marketplace.
Ring Planetary Nebula (Messier 57)
Captured this over the past month as a final target after doing my main targets. This took a lot of processing to bring out the details as it is a relatively small target. I also played with the hur and color curves in order to achieve this color scheme.
Iris Reflection Nebula (NGC 7023)
I took this over the last two nights using a William Optics 132 refractor. It is RGB but captured in monochrome and re-colored.
More details on the reflection nebula: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iris_Nebula
Bode's galaxy. Nice! Can you control how long you integrate for on the Vespara? How long was this integration?
Crescent Nebula in HOO captured from backyard.
I captured this over 2 nights in narrowband using H and O filters. This was done using a Celestron C8 on a Sky Watcher EQ6R-Pro with an ZWO EAF, EFW and a ASI533MM Pro (Cooled) camera.
Not bad for a simple DSLR + star tracker setup. That setup is just hard to manage. I started there too.
Tonight’s dual telescope setup
I have two William optics scopes here, a 61 and a 132. I love refractors. I am targeting the eastern veil nebula with the 61 and the iris nebula with the 132.
Waxing Crescent Moon
I took this photo in late May 2023. I used a William Optics Fluorostar 132 refractor with a ASI 6200MM Pro camera. It was a series of 100 photos which I picked the top 10%. Its the highest quality moon shot I've taken so far.