NGC 6559 and Surrounding Dark Lanes

NGC 6559 and Surrounding Dark Lanes

NGC 6559 and Surrounding Dark Lanes

Taken from GSSP near Adin, CA on July 6th-7th.
AP130GT
Parsec 8300M
13 x 8 min L, 6 x 8min each RGB 2×2

 

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M83, The Southern Pinwheel Galaxy from the Texas Star Party

M83, The Southern Pinwheel

M83, The Southern Pinwheel

Texas Star Party, May 7th
Celestron EdgeHD 11″ with .7x Reducer Lens
CGEM DX Mount
Nightscape 8300 CCD Camera
15 x 10 minute exposures

 

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M20 from the Texas Star Party

M20, The Trifid Nebula

M20, The Trifid Nebula

Shooting with Celestron gear, we had our first operational night which was mostly clear until sunrise.  I couldn’t miss a minute of it! And the Aquariid Meteor Shower was an added bonus!

 

Celestron EdgeHD 11″ on the CGEM DX
.7x Reducer at f/7
Nightscape 8300
15 x 8 minute exposures
3 darks, 10 sky flats

 

 

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Comet C/2011 L4 PANSTARRS

On March 12th, the comet passed to within about 4º of the Moon, with a phase of less than 1 day old!  Photographers with a wide enough lens were able to capture both comet in Moon in the same shot, along with a landscape background in some cases.

5 x 7 second shots at ISO400 with the Canon 350D. Taken at 7:55PM from Fred Hesse Jr Park in Rancho Palos Verdes.  Vixen 114ED refractor at f/4.4, on the Celestron AVX mount.

C/2011 L4 PANSTARRS on March 12th 2013

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NGC 7331 w/Deer Lick Group and Stephan’s Quintet

Galaxy Field NGC 7331 w/Deer Lick Group & Stephan's Quintet

Just 3 x 15 min L and 2 x 15min each RGB 2×2

Scope : AP130 Gran Turismo
Mount: AP900GTO
Camera: Parsec 8300M
Lazy processing in MaxIm DL and Photoshop.

The faintest of the galaxies in Stephan’s Quintet is mag 14.7. I can detect the 5 galaxies with my SkyQuest XT10.  With a 12″ and up, it’s even more obvious. Cool to observe, cool to image.

NGC 7331 itself will be a great galaxy to capture with more focal length! Perhaps the 10″ f/10 needs to have a go at this one.

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NGC 1333

Taken near Mt Pinos, this was my first full SoCal imaging experience. Atop a mountain over 8,000′ in elevation, surrounded by pine trees, I felt like I was in good-old majestic California again. At dusk, deer hunters came to my camp to warn me of a 400 lb bear just 150 yards away.  As much as I wanted to check out Smokey, I was a little freaked out alone up there. I had no canisters to speak of.. so I just put my dry foods in a Pelican case, and placed the ice chest about 25 yards from the car. No incidents 🙂

NGC 1333 was tough. After attempting to process this LRGB image, I am ready to give PixInsight a try. I want to pull more of that “Rogelio Dust”, the impossibly smooth and prominent wisps of auburn-brown background nebulosity that willingly paints itself on the CCD. It is seen in many astrophotos taken with an STL-11000 and processed with PixInsight – notably by Rogelio Bernal Andreo. It’s a growing trend because better CCD technology combined with better processing have improved the image signal such that almost any location in the sky will reveal background dust and nebulosity.

NGC 1333

Camera: Parsec 8300M
Scope: AP130 Gran Turismo
Mount: AP900GTO

13 x 15 min L, 5 x 15 min 2×2 each of RGB.  It seems I need more exposure for this object at f/6.3 with the AP130 Gran Turismo.  Sure, I could have added more subexposures, but the subexposure length itself should have been sufficient at 15 minutes.  Perhaps the dark nebulae portion of this object is really faint after all.

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California Light Pollution Catch-22

We have some of the worst light pollution in the contiguous 48 states… but also some of the best skies in the western hemisphere!  California’s diverse topography and distant spread of cities, along with steady pacific air provide wonderful dark sky access, as long as you distance yourself from the abundantly bright and ever-growing urban areas.  Dark skies, as you can see in the light pollution map below, still exist in the remote high elevation areas, as well as some of the coastal regions which can potentially yield extraordinary seeing conditions of less than 1 arcsecond of resolution.  That’s good news for astro-imagers and high-power observers with large scopes.

But look closer.. for such a large population, and under terribly light polluted skies, we’re just a couple hours or less from remarkably dark and steady skies. That’s a good news spin on the situation, I think.  It’s one thing to trek out to the middle of Nevada or New Mexico for the purpose of astronomy, but something else to cruise over to magnitude 7 skies a couple of hours from the SF or LA area.  That kind of accessibility to such a large population gives more people a chance to appreciate astronomy and the importance of suppressing light pollution.  Plus, many urban-dwellers are absolutely floored when they see the Milky Way, or their own shadow cast by Jupiter. That fresh awe-factor can make someone moon-eyed for California’s dark skies under moonless nights.

As Tony Hallas has indicated in the April 2012 issue of Astronomy, the Modoc Plateau in northeastern California still has some of the most spectacular skies anywhere. Also, you can’t go wrong with Trinity, Shasta, Siskiyou, Lassen, and Mendocino counties, if you don’t mind the drive. Monterey county has some sleeper locations that are surprisingly good, especially around the Ventana Wilderness and Santa Lucia mountain range. Lake San Antonio is not far from there, and offers some recreational variety for those planning to guise their stargazing trip as a family event on the lakefront.

Of course, there’s still the high Sierra and remote high desert areas like Mojave and Joshua tree – both great places for star gazing and imaging, with an extra dash of unpredictable weather to keep things exciting.

 

California Light Pollution Map

 

Light pollution map data provided by The World Atlas of the Artificial Night Sky Brightness. I drew in the CA state border in red.

 

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Eclipse Animation

An animation has been added showing most of the eclipse. Check it out!

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Annular Solar Eclipse from Northern California

From the Mount Lassen Area taken May 20th, 2012. What a spectacular eclipse! Look closely at the lunar limb along the left side of the annular ring. You can see the profile of the mountains, valleys and craters of the Moon.

Partial Phase with Sunspots

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