Thursday, March 31, 2016

The moon, Saturn, and Venus visiting Scorpio

Luckily the sky cleared a bit on Tuesday morning (3/29) in order to get conjunction. The Dog was a big help too as it was during her morning walk.





Canon EOS REBEL T3i
f/4
3.2 sec.
ISO-400
24 mm

Also shown is a photo that of the Moon that Spencer Beddington took with his iphone through the Orion 90mm Mak-Cass telescope during class on that same day. There are two pictures because I cropped the image and cleaned the edges in Photoshop.




Tuesday, March 29, 2016

The Molecules are Back!

My room is overtaken with molecules again.  This is the time of year when the students learn about and apply all they know about bonding and molecular shapes, hopefully something!  I only had three chemistry classes this year so it is a bit less.  













Sunday, March 13, 2016

M44, a.k.a. the Beehive Cluster or Praesepe

This cluster does not look much like a beehive to me, but it is pleasant to look at especially with binoculars.  It is an open cluster approximately 577 ly in the constellation Cancer and is visible to the naked eye in dark locations.  This represents the 22nd Messier object on my quest to image all 110 Messier Objects with the Orion ED80.  I was finally able to get PHD2 autoguiding to work by changing some of the settings such as the pixel size to match my QHY-5L-II-M guide camera.  I went through a tutorial PHD Basics Part #1 by Matthew Dixon on You Tube to get the settings which work for my setup.  I highly recommend this video for getting started with PHD2 autoguiding!  As a side note, I would have been able to get more images but the dithering function was on in PHD2.  I have never used dithering before and am sure what it does exactly so I will try to turn it of next time as it adds time between imaging.  Also, I learned that the Sirius EQ Mount tracks at least a half hour after crossing the meridian and on that same note, when it does the meridian flip, the camera must be rotated 180 degrees in order to keep the image in the same orientation as it was prior to the flip.

Image 1 - M44_Master_LR3


Image 2 - M44_Master_LR3_PS_crop_LR

M44
Location: Monroe, CT
Date/Time: 3/11/16 10:17 pm
Camera: Canon EOS Rebel T3i
Filter: none
Telescope: Orion ED80 80mm f/7.5 Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Focal Length: 600mm
f/7.5
Mount: Orion Sirius EQ-G GoTo Telescope Mount
Autoguiding: QHY-5L-II-M attached to and Orion Short Tube 80mm
Exposure: 40-90s(1 hr)
ISO: 800
Post Processing: Photoshop, Lightroom, DSS, Backyard EOS

Saturday, March 5, 2016

M78, M48, and Jupiter

Imaging M78 proved to be much more challenging than I than anticipated.  Winter in New England always makes it difficult, however, there were some additional issues.  M78 is a reflection nebula in the constellation of Orion some 1600 light years from us.  This object (magnitude 8.3) is not visible with the naked eye and certainly not under the light polluted sky of southern Connecticut.  Even with my telescope, the Orion ED 80, I could not see it which made it especially difficult. It did not become visible until I set the time exposure to 30 seconds using a light pollution filter (Astronomik CLS).

M78 - Diffuse Nebula
Difficulties:
Day1 - I hoped to get 2.5 hrs, manged to get 1.25 hrs!
1) Could not find nebula as the goto was not dead on.  Tried to locate for 15 minutes and I actually gave up.
2) Tried to locate other objects like the Horsehead nebula when I realized the goto was not tracking well and the stars were streaking a bit.
3) Realigned the mount and went back to M78.  I was about to give up again as I saw nothing with the finderscope but took a 30 s exposure anyway.  At first I did not see anything but kept looking and saw a faint white spot in the center.  I was dead on. YAY!
4) Tried to use PHD2 for autoguiding but once again it gave me an error.  Something about not finding the declination...Thank goodness for PHD the original.

Day2 - I hoped to get 1.5 hr, managed to get 30 min of usable images!
1) Was able to locate the nebula, however, it was a little breezy and the stars were streaking too much.
2) Got everything re-aligned, perfect tracking tripped over the power cord and did not think anything was wrong as it appeared to be plugged in.  Connected the autoguider and noticed stars moving through the view.  I was scared as I thought my mount was broke. The problem was the cigarette connection came loose when I tripped over it.
3) Re-aligned again (I'm getting good at this)and was dead on.  FINALLY!

Results:
Image 1 - DSS_PS_LR_neutralized_cropped

Image 2 - DSS_PS_LR_neutralized

Image 3 - DSS_PS_LR

Image 4 - DSS_PS

M78
Location: Monroe, CT
Date/Time: Day 1: 2/28/16 10:17 pm, Day 2: 2/29/16 10:17 pm
Camera: Canon EOS Rebel T3i
Filter: Astronomik CLS 2"
Telescope: Orion ED80 80mm f/7.5 Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Focal Length: 600mm
f/7.5
Mount: Orion Sirius EQ-G GoTo Telescope Mount
Autoguiding: QHY-5L-II-M attached to and Orion Short Tube 80mm
Exposure: Day 1: 16-300s,1-163s (`1 hr 22 min), Day 2: 4-300s, 3-180s, 1-45, 1-30s (`30 min)
ISO: 800
Post Processing: Photoshop, Lightroom, DSS, Backyard EOS

The images do show the central core well but not the entire complex seen on other images. You can there is a slight haze around the image but I could bring it out with anymore processing.  The long and short of it is, I need more data for a better image, however, I am happy with what I got and this will have to do for now.

M48 - Open Cluster
After M78 set behind the trees, I moved to the open cluster M48 1,500 light years away in the Hydra constellation.  M48 was much easier to image compared to M78.  For one, you can see this with a pair of binoculars and with the telescope so you know when your on it. Also, you don't need a filter for star clusters and shorter sub exposures are fine, in fact you autoguiding is not necessary if the alignment is good.  I thought I was done at this point, however, then Jupiter came up.

Image 1 - DSS_PS_LR

Image 2 - DSS_PS_crop_LR

Image 3 - DSS_PS_crop_LR_crop


M48
Location: Monroe, CT
Date/Time: 2/28/16 11:25 pm
Camera: Canon EOS Rebel T3i
Filter: none
Telescope: Orion ED80 80mm f/7.5 Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Focal Length: 600mm
f/7.5
Mount: Orion Sirius EQ-G GoTo Telescope Mount
Autoguiding: QHY-5L-II-M attached to and Orion Short Tube 80mm
Exposure: 21-90s
ISO: 800
Post Processing: Photoshop, DSS, Backyard EOS


Jupiter and Moons
After the session and partially breaking down I noticed Jupiter rising over the trees of my backyard so I went ahead and took some quick photos.  I already put my computer and camera away but went back for the camera.  The image is actually a combination of a short exposure (1/500s) image for Jupiter and a longer exposure (1/10s) image for the moons.  This turned out to be really neat as all of the moons are on one side which is not that common...




Jupiter
Location: Monroe, CT
Date/Time: 2/29/16 0:38 am
Camera: Canon EOS Rebel T3i
Filter: none
Telescope: Orion ED80 80mm f/7.5 Apochromatic Refractor Telescope
Mount: Orion Sirius EQ-G GoTo Telescope Mount
Autoguiding: none
Focal Length: 600mm
f/7.5
Exposure: 1-1/500s, 1-1/10s
ISO: 800
Post Processing: Photoshop, Lightroom, Backyard EOS, Google Drawing (Labels)