Star Field in Ursa Major

This is the star field I imaged in Ursa Major last night with the 200mm lenses. It is nothing like it appears on the Sky6 which is a pity.

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Arcturus from Last Night

A beautiful, completely clear, Moonless night last night, and warm as well!

I imaged from 10 p.m. until 1:15 a.m. with the 200mm lenses and 2600MC Pro Cmos cameras.

Two targets:

  1. A star field in Ursa Major.
  2. Arcturus.

The star field in Ursa Major did not look anything like it appeared on the Sky6, so I won’t be showing it here. Arcturus on the other hand with 18 x 250-second subs turned out quite nicely. Last night’s data is shown above and now I will go away and look for all the other Arcturus data taken on the 200mm lenses and see if I can put it all together.

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Picture of the Week

This week we feature a macrophoto of a Morpho Rhetenor butterfly. The irridescent blue colour is not due to pigment, but it is due to STRUCTURE. Acting like a diffraction grating (or a photonic crystal) it is the complex shape of the individual scales on the butterfly’s wings that strongly diffracts blue light (from the incident white light) back to the observer.

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The Markarian Chain Region

Fired up the 2 x 200mm lenses and 2600MC Pro CMOS cameras last night. Started at astronomical darkness (now 10:00 p.m.!!!) and finished when the mount hit the Meridian and also cloud started rolling in from the West at 12:30 a.m.

Only 10 x 15-minute subs in total, but that was enough to give a reasonably noise-free background.

It was clear from last night’s outing that I am on the point of needing to replace all the old computers in the North Dome (that’s 5 of them) which is a bit of a pain, but it’s been on the cards for a while now.

The collimation by the way was PERFECT for both lenses last night, yes I got the magic 0,0,0 on CCDInspector. So all in all I was very pleased with last night’s session.

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Picture of the Week

Last week we showed Jupiter and Mercury taken from Whitemoor Pond. This week Jupiter, Venus and Mercury all feature in this week’s Picture of the Week. Image captured using a Canon 5D MkII DSLR with a 15mm Canon fisheye lens and Bulb setting on the camera.

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Spica – The Brightest, Bluest Star in the Sky

As Spica is well-positioned for imaging this time of year, I thought I’d quickly check out previous data. The above image is a few hours of Sky90 data, and as I am not going to improve on this one too much, I think I’ll leave it here.

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Markarian Chain Data from 2022

As I have completed the Coma Cluster data to my satisfaction, I went back to look at all the Markarian Chain data I took in 2022 and reprocessed that. This is 48 x 4-minute subs on the Hyperstar 4, and it has a pretty good low-noise background. So I will not be taking any more data on this one this year.

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The Coma Galaxy Cluster

Did the Coma Cluster with the HS4 last night, 5 minute subs again, 24 subs in total out of which I chose 17. So together with the data from the 6th that totals 36 x 5-minute subs or 3-hours of total integration time on the HS4 (equivalent to 15-hours of integration time on the Sky90s). The background is MUCH cleaner compared to the single set of data, but it is not glassy smooth like my original 100 subs Hyperstar images. Question is, do I use another night of good imaging just to get a better almost noise-free background, or do I move onto another target like the Markarian Chain to get more data on that one?

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The Coma Galaxy Cluster

I took this data with the Hyperstar on the 6th. I was expecting to get more data last night (7th) but there was tons of thin high cloud. So I cropped the data I got and you can see it above. The only reason I need more data is that the background is a little too noisy. It might be clear tonight in which case you’ll know what I’ll be doing.

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Imaging the Coma Cluster of Galaxies!

A clear Moonless night tonight and I am imaging the Coma Cluster of galaxies (yes that’s the cluster that Zwicky used to infer the existence of Dark Matter way back in the 1930s).

Hyperstar 4 on a C11 with an ASI 2600MC Pro CMOS camera and 5-minute subs. Looks like some thin high cloud on a few of the subs so I hope I get enough to be able to throw those out.

Need to manually rotate the south dome every half hour and on the last venture into the garden I saw a very nice meteor.

Damned computer decided to reboot itself twice before I started the imaging session which slowed things down a bit and I am watching progress on a monitor indoors with bated breath and praying I don’t get another reboot. If I do get another reboot I will call it a night.

I was very fortunate in that the computer didn’t reboot again so I managed to image until 1 a.m. Got 27 x 5-minute subs out of which 19 were good. So as I need a few more subs to get a pretty noise-free background I intend to spend any more imaging nights this month on the same target.

I gave the computer the once over tomorrow, reset the RAM, and it behaved itself all day. So if I get some more clear skies the Coma Cluster it will be.

 

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