MotoH
- 51
- 2
I took this one last night:
Chronos said:Thanks a lot, guys, I just purchased new scope, ccd, and accessories. Only spent twice as much as planned [and still short a few extras]. I won't be ordering out for pizza in the foreseeable future. I will, however, be able to take beautiful close up shots of neighbors' pizza ... putting up sign next to scope - 1 slice per observer.
I'm not really sure how it works with DSLRs, but the math on that works out to 6x zoom. That's marginal, but should be OK for a start.MikeyW said:Thanks Russ. Is 200mm long enough? I really only have a choice between a 55-200mm and a 70-300mm in my price range. The former would be much more useful in other areas, and it has VR.
Plus the camera has 1.6 crop factor.
russ_watters said:You're welcome!
The camera part is dangerous - once you rip the lens off a webcam and slap it onto the back of your telescope, there is no going back!
Sorry: Venus.MikeyW said:Hi all again.
Was just wondering what this object is in the night sky.
Please tell me it's Mars!
I'm not sure what you mean - could you rephrase?Also I think it might be interesting to note the "sunstars" that I got out of the camera from the road lights are not also present on this object- why?
adyarbakery said:hi,
I took these photos of the sky from Yosemite.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/adyarbakery/4827577169/"
I found that there were streaks on the image - which could be a planet, comet or a meteor. I know it is not a planet (I checked on stellarium for that). However I can not figure out if it is a comet or a planet. These are 8 second exposures. Any idea if it is a comet or a meteor?
I tend to gravitate towards it being a comet, since it was in the sky for an extended period of time (photographs taken after 5 minutes later also showed the streak).
Any ideas how to figure out?
thanks,
ab
Not sure where you live or when that makes "last night", but Europa made a transit from 10:30PM EDT on 8/19 to 1:00 AM EDT on 8/20 and Io made a transit from 2-4PM EDT on 8/18.Stanwyck66 said:Could it be possible I saw the shadow of one of Jupiter's moons to the bottom left?
russ_watters said:Jupiter, my new personal best!
The two other objects in the photo are Ganymede and Io.baywax said:I understand the nearest object to the left in your photo is Neptune, is this correct?
russ_watters said:Thanks, guys.
The two other objects in the photo are Ganymede and Io.
Redbelly98 said:I got some photos of the lunar eclipse Tuesday morning.
I used a Nikon Coolpix 4500, with a Kenko 8x32mm monocular mounted to it. All photos were later resized to 40%.
Here's a shot of the full moon Monday night, a few hours before the start of the eclipse. I was mainly setting up the focus of the monocular + camera, so that I wouldn't have to use the autofocus feature later on.
You're talking about my Jupiter pic? It's something like 1500 stacked of each color for Jupiter, 200 each color for the moons, at different exposures. I've used Photoshop for overall brightness and contrast, but the gradient towards the limb is real. The outer planets don't have full phases like the inner ones, but unless it is exactly at opposition, one side will be a little darker than the other.Chronos said:Nice shoot, Russ. The limb darkening is striking. Is this a result of image processing? Is this a single shot, or stacked? I would probably need half a dozen stacked images to get one this bright using my Meade 8" ACF. I should probably try using my 'big' 10" SN scope, but, the little SC is easier to set up - no tube wrestling, counter weights, or polar alignment to mess with. I like bells and whistles when it's 10 degrees outside.
DLuckyE said:I took this one a while back
http://www.flickr.com/photos/doggettx/5264801104/
I tried it as a single shot at first but couldn't get detail on both the moon and Jupiter at the same time, so did 2 shots and combined them.
Redbelly98 said:Nice! Any idea what the faint spot is, to the right of Jupiter and slightly out of the plane of the moons' orbits? (Easier to see in the http://www.flickr.com/photos/doggettx/5264801104/sizes/o/in/photostream/" .)
DLuckyE said:I took this one a while back
http://www.flickr.com/photos/doggettx/5264801104/
I tried it as a single shot at first but couldn't get detail on both the moon and Jupiter at the same time, so did 2 shots and combined them.