
Photography of "far away things" - space, but I may also want to include anything in our atmosphere or just nice landscape shots.
Sunday, 29 March 2009
The Green Owl

Thursday, 19 March 2009
Venus sweeps inside Earth's orbit

On approach to 'inferior conjunction' Venus is now a large, thin crescent, oriented horizontally - a rather strange angle for such northern latitudes and disappearing rapidly into the twilight. I dashed out to a local field with my brother and got about 40 very rapid snaps straight down my 8" SCT using a 2x barlow lens (f.l. ~ 3.9m). It's amazing how bright it still was considering how thin the crescent phase was, which by the way was easily seen in 10x binoculars and not quite by eye. I could see a fine backlit lower edge to the globe at 200x, seething in the low atmospheric turbulence and its brilliant white colour was dispersed into a near perfect spectrum. I stacked the best 17 of the 1/500" pictures (ISO 1600) and got a beautifully smooth rainbow crescent. Whilst this looked wonderful I had to use the RGB realign tool in Registax to shift the blue down and red up by 8 pixels to get a much sharper white crescent. Here's the final imaged cropped to a 500x500 bitmap.
Sunday, 15 March 2009
Lulin encounters the Eskimo


Tuesday, 3 March 2009
The butterfly nebula in the constellation of the unicorn

I pushed the processing of this little planetary nebula (NGC 2346) until I could just see the wing shapes around it, that give it the name of the butterfly nebula. It was not obvious to see visually, although there was definately a bluish haze around the central star. This star is a spectroscopic binary, and is variable - possibly due to dust orbiting around the pair every 16 days. The dust could also explain the infra-red emission. I thought I'd give you a wide field shot; 20' x 30' is the raw field from the 20" scope and I took 8 x 15 second pictures at ISO 1600 on the Canon EOS 350D.