Monday, October 8, 2012

8th October 2012 AstroPhoMo (Astro Photo Month)

This image is the upshot of my attempts to align the telescope mount to the south celestial pole by imaging and adjusting as I went.   After about an hour or so I managed to get the pole within reason near the center of the image.  The adjustments are very fine so any further attempts might just make it worse not better.  As the Orthopaedic Surgeons at my work say "Better is the enemy of good!". 

 This is the final image I took and was taken in the wee hours of this morning and is 40 minutes continuous exposure. 


Sunday, October 7, 2012

7th October AstroPhoMo (Astro Photography Month)

Just on the dead knock.   A 2 minute star trail of the south celestial pole. Taken thought the 80mm Refractor when parked.  Took a little while of adjustment to get the south celestial pole as central as I could.

And the masterpiece of the night is this.  Although I did not process it with a dark frame.  Too impatient I guess. Taken with my Canon 300D and 11-16mm wide angle lens.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

6th October 2012 AstroPhoMo (Astro Photo Month)

When considering I had to work this evening and the rain is apparently on its way too, at the stroke of midnight almost immediately after posting for the 5th I took a couple of shot in the wee hours but not what you might be expecting.

The first is a 30 second  wide angle shot of the telescope and the southern sky along with a light trail of headlight as I moved in and out of the frame as the camera was exposing. If you look closely you can see the Southern Cross and Pointers just above the tree line center right. At this stage after midnight the sky was illuminated by the rising moon off to the left out of the frame and some cloud cover (reflective).


Finally as I parked the telescope which technically should be pointing straight at the south celestial pole ( the point at which the sky pivots) I wondered even though I had drift aligned my mount for accurate tracking of the sky whether or not it was completely aligned 100 percent accurately.   So I took a star trail shot hoping to see nice concentric cirlces radiating out from the center of the shot.  This is what I got.


So next session I will be adjusting the mount and hopefully I will post some nice concentric star trail circles along with some more accurately tracked short exposures shots of some of the brighter deep sky objects.
If I get time I might start the trouble shoot the autoguiding.

Friday, October 5, 2012

5th October 2012 AstroPhoMo (Astro Photo Month)

Unfortunately my auto-guiding and PC aided image capture has gone to the dogs so despite bringing out the big gun tonight, i.e the Canon 350D I has to restrict myself to short exposures.
following is the Large Magellanic Cloud and Tarantula Nebula.  This made from a stack of 5x5 second exposures  and of course unguided.
If it weren't for my month long commitment I might have thrown in the towel with the auto-guiding not working but its interesting how a deadline changes your attitude to at least have a go and get something imaged and posted..

And by sheer dumb luck I managed to snap three 30 second shots of the lagoon.  What a difference more exposure can make.

Adjusted the hue here to a more yellowy colour.
All pre and post processing done in Nebulosity.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

4th October 2012 AstroPhoMo (Astro Photo Month)

Spent the evening chasing an asteroid to no avail.  With little time to spare with the midnight deadline approaching a slewed to NGC104 or 47 Tucane, a bright globular cluster and compiled this shot from 3 x 1 minute exposures unguided with my Meade DSI colour. Now that's a bit of a walk down memory lane in Astro-photography terms.  There's even for nostalgia's sake a bit of amp glow.




Wednesday, October 3, 2012

3rd October 2012 AstroPhoMo (Astro Photo Month)

More solar images today.  I managed to catch the full rim using an Olympus 5 MP Compact digital.

The two pics here are at different filter settings.  The first is adjusted to enhance the granularity and surface detail on the sun including sunspots and filaments.

The second is adjusted to enhance activity on the limb showing solar flare activity.  You can just make out some activity at the bottom at 5 and 7 o'clock.




Tuesday, October 2, 2012

October 2nd AstroPhoMo (Astro Photo Month)

Today's effort is a cloudy Sun take through an ED80 Refractor with the Canon 350D.


I also managed to grab some (also very cloudy) frames with a Meade DSI ccd  through a Coronado PST. You can just see some solar flares/prominence around the limb at approximately 10 and 2 o'clock respectively.


 Here's the telescope setup for today. The two standard refractors have special solar filters in order to view the sun without causing damage to person or equipment.  NEVER LOOK DIRECTLY AT THE SUN WITHOUT PROPER EQUIPMENT!!!








Monday, October 1, 2012

October 2012 AstroPhoMo (Astro Photo Month)

The goal is one Astrophoto or Night Sky Picture taken and posted per day for at least a month.

Clouds pretty much ruined the sky for an Astrophoto but still got Night Sky shot with the the Canon 350D and Tokina 11-16mm WA Lens as a plane coming into land at Launceston Airport flew by.




Monday, September 3, 2012

Lake Eppalock DSLR Camera Wide Field Shots


Flight of the Emu.  30 Sec frame. Plane flew across frame. Canon 350D 11-16mm WA lens.

Stack of a few 30 second frames somewhere of the Milky Way in Scorpius.  Tracked with Vixen Polaire. Canon 350D and 50 -200 zoom lens. Post Processed in Nebulosity.


Northern Horizon Star Trail. 17 min exp. Canon 300D. Post processed in Nebulosity



South Western Star Trail.  17 min exp. Canon 300D

South Eastern Star Trail. 17 Min Exp. Canon 300D

Eta Carinae.  A number of 30 second exposures stacked. Canon 350D. 50-200mm zoom lens on Vixen Polaire.

The Emu once again.  A series of 30 second exposures stacked in Nebulosity.  Tracked on Vixen Polaire.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Roland's View Deviot Tasmania.

Enjoy this sequence of time-lapse and stills set to music composed by my son Thieron Booth



For a better resolution version go to https://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=10151039303141094&saved

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Night Sky Photography at Lake Eppalock Victoria August 2012

Three day and night sky photography workshop with Phil Hart and Neil Creek.

 Daytime Shots








Night time shots.

First series.  Neil Creek with steel wool in an egg whisk suspended on the end of a chain.





30 second full aperture wide view  of the Milky Way.  Aboriginals referred to this site as The Emu.



Nightscape by the lake.  

2 hour time lapse at lake side.  169 30 second exposures.




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