AAPOD2 Image Archives

2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

Moon - Copernico

Moon 2020-02-03 Copernicus
Telescope C14 F / 22
Camera Camera 5 II L
Capture Sharcap
Stacking Autostakkert
Processed pshop c6
Altamira J24 Observatory
Fasnia Tenerife Canary Islands

Copyright: Quico Hernandez Cabrera

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

StDr 1

StDr 1 - a possible planetary nebula in the constellation of Taurus, discovered by Xavier Strottner and Marcel Drechsler in November 2019. This is the first time it has been imaged in color. It is extremely faint - and so 1800 second exposures binned 3x3 were necessary.

Astrodon Blue: 17x300"

Astrodon Green: 18x300"

Astrodon Red: 18x300"

Astrodon Lum: 21x300"

Astrodon OIII: 8x1800s bin 3x3

Astrodon Ha: 19x1800s bin 3x3

Total Integration: 20 hours

Captured on my dual rig in Spain.

Scopes: APM TMB LZOS 152 (6" aperture 1200mm focal length)

Copyright: Peter Goodhew

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

The Heart of the Eastern Veil

Telescope: TEC APO140FL

Camera: QHY16200A

Mount: 10micron GM1000HPS

Acquisition data:

Integration: 31 hours

Frames: Astrodon 3nm Ha: 62x900" -20C bin 1x1, Astrodon 3nm OIII: 62x900" -20C bin 1x1

Location: Sammamish, WA, United States

SGPro and PHD2

Aug 2019

Processing: AstroPixelProcessor and PixInsight.

Copyright: Alex Pinkin

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

Sunspots active region and solar granulation

In this mosaic we can see some sunspots active regions and surrounding solar granulation taken before the current low solar activity. Images was taken from Cremona in northern of Italy through a Maksutov Rumak F20 telescope with an F12 focal reducer, Baader Planetarium ASTF280 astrosolar filter and Baader Planetarium Continuum CWL 540nm filter. Cameras used was I.S. DBK41 and Zwo ASI 224MC. Frames stacked with Autostakkert and processed with Wavelets of registax and Photoshop.

Copyright: Francesco Badalotti

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

Southern Milky Way

Mount SkyWatcher Star Adventurer.
Digital Camera Canon 60 Da
Lenses Tamron SP 17-50 mm F/2.8 at 50/2.8

Total exposure: 44’ with integration of n. 19 image

Guider: QHY5L-II-M and Mini Borg ED 45
Adquisition: MaximDL
Imaging Processing by Attilio Bruzzone with PixInsight

Copyright: Antonio Ferretti (Photo Acquisition) from Papamoa (New Zealand) and Attilio Bruzzone (Imaging Processing).

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

The Great Spiral in Triangulum- M33

Image Description and Details : The great spiral galaxy M33 in Triangulum, a favorite among imagers, imaged from my home observatory under suburban Bortle 5 skies, during the month of Oct, early Nov 2019. Stellarvue SVX152T @f8, 1200mm FL on a Paramount MyT. QSI 683 camera using Luminance, Red, Green, Blue, and 5nm Ha filters. 360min Luminance bin 1x1, 300min Red, 290min Green, 280min Blue and 660min Ha bin 2x2. Total of 31.5hrs of exposure time. PixInsight used for processing. Please visit the full size link on the web page above to see individual stars resolved within the galaxy.

Copyright: Jon Talbot

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

The Monkey Head Nebula - NGC2174

The monkey head nebula - ngc2174 is an emission nebula located in the Orion Constellation. It is associated with the stellar cluster ngc2175. It was given this name as you can see well from the photo, the face of a monkey.
I decided to process this photo with the Hubble Palette technique, and therefore, with fake colors to highlight better the emission areas of the various chemical elements that compose the nebula.

Optolong Astronomy Filter
Qhyccd

Technical Information:

Telescope: AIRY APO 130T
Mount: Paramount MyT - Software Bisque
Room: qhy9
Filter: Optolong H-A 7 NM, oiii 6.5 NM, be 6.5 NM
Frames: H-a: 32 x900s -- oiii: 32 x900s -- SII:32x900s
Total Integration: 24 Hours
Software: SGP – TheSkyX – PHD2 – DSS -PixInsight – CS6
Location: Noventa di Piave (Venice) 4 meter above sea level – ITALY

Environment Temperature: About 2°C

Relative Humidity: 88%

Date: 29.12.19 - 30.12.19 - 31.12.19 - 01.01.20

Copyright: Francesco Battistella

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

The Boogie Man Nebula

LDN 1622 "Boogie Man Nebula" in the constellation Orion


Equipment SBIG STT-8300 CCD Camera Takahashi CCA-250, 1,250 mm f/5 Astro-Physics 1200 GTO mount LRHa-RHaGB image, total exposure 1,180 mins (19hr 40 min) From TJ Observatory, Banmi, Lopburi, Thailand

Copyright: Tragoolchitr Jittasaiyapan

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

Orion CoNstellation

Date image was taken: 1/5/2020

Image Title: Orion Costellation

Image Description and Details : Orion Costellation
Sharpstar Optics 76EDPH Artesky
Qhyccd 600 Mono
Filter Optolong Astronomy Filter Narrowband improved version
44 light 600 sec HA
44 Light 300 sec Red
33 Light 300 sec Green
22 Light 300 sec Blu
Software APT - Astro Photography ToolPixinsight Photoshop

Copyright: Andrea Maggi

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

NGC 4565 Galaxy

Imaging telescope or lens:GSO RC12 truss

Imaging camera:ZWO ASI071MC Pro

Mount:SkyWatcher EQ8 Pro

Guiding telescope or lens:GSO RC12 truss

Dates:March 3, 2019

Frames: 20x450"

Integration: 2.5 hours

Avg. Moon phase: 8.75%

Locations: Calar Alto, Almeria, Spain

Copyright: Jose Luis Bedmar

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

SH2-174 - Valentine Rose

Sh2- 174 Planetary Nebula in the cepheo, also known as "Valentine's rose". filming started in April 2018 and finished in October 2019.
Location: San Romualdo - Ravenna
Tecnosky There 130/900
Asa Ddm60pro - Non-guided poses
CCD CCD 520 WSI Cooled-15
RGB the I-SERIES AND NARROWBAND 5 NM
HA-OIII-RGB: H-alpha 43 x10min, OIII 29 x10min, R 26 x5min, G 27 x5min, B 30 x5min
Acquisition: Maximdl5 - calibrated with dark, bias and flat.
Processing: Maximdl5, Astroart6, Paint Shop Pro2020, Plugin Topaz and starspikepro3.

Read More
Jason Matter Jason Matter

MBM 28 and MBM 29 Molecular Nebula

● Object: NGC2633, IFN, MBM28.
● Exposure: 22 x 300s (L) + 10 x 300s (R) + 10x 300s (G) + 10 x 300s (B).
● Processing: PixInsight Core 1.8.
● Telescope: Takahashi FSQ-106EDX3 on EM-200Temma2M. Seletek Armadillo / Focusmax.
● Camera: Andor Apogee U16M / AFW-50-7S ( - 20ºC ). Astrodon E-Series genII filters.
● Guiding: FS-60CSV, QHY-5, PHDguiding.
● Date: 27th of December 2019.

Copyright: Iñaki Lizaso Ibarguren

Read More
2020 Charles Lillo 2020 Charles Lillo

Messier 6 & Surrounding Area

HALPHA: 100 x 180 seconds
LUMINANCE: 40 x 180 seconds
RGB: 20 x 180 (each channel)
Total: 10 hours

Robert Burnham, Jr. describes this beautiful object as follows:
“Charming group whose arrangement suggests the outline of a butterfly with open wings.” Nothing better than a little "poetry" to describe such a prominent object.

In 1654 Italian astronomer Giovanni Battista Hodierna was the first man to record this beautiful star cluster in the scorpion constellation.

In 1764 the French Charles Messier includes in his catalog as Messier 6. Under good conditions, it can be seen with the naked eye, in contrast to the dark regions surrounding the star cluster. It has an apparent magnitude of 4.2 and an estimated age of 100 million years, at a distance of approximately 1600 light years from planet Earth.

The brightest star in the cluster is BM SCORPII. It is cataloged as a yellow / orange supergiant, and is considered a semi-regular variable, as it is of the spectral class K0-K3, its magnitude varies from 5.5 to 7, in periods of 30 to 1100 days. The hot blue stars of the cluster belong to the spectral class B4 and B5.
The cluster to the right of this image is NGC 6404.

The most intense part of the image, which I had the idea from the outset to highlight, is part of an extensive emission nebula called: Sharpless 12.

The information about this object is very scarce, but I will try to put as much information as I can about this object. All ionization occurs due to the O-Star (O7V + O7V) HD 159176 binary star, which is located in cluster NGC 6383 and does not appear in my image.

A fact that caught my attention and that when we talk about astronomy we always go back to the past, most catalogs are hundreds of years old, but Sharpless is not even a century old. Stewart Lane Sharpless (born March 29, 1926 in Milwaukee, January 19, 2013) was an American astronomer who studied the structure of the Milky Way, professor emeritus of the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Rochester. The first edition of its catalog is from the year 1953 (SH1) contained 142 objects. The final version, published in 1959 (SH2), contains 312 objects.
Copyright: Maicon Germiniani

Read More
2020 Monthly Winners, 2020 Charles Lillo 2020 Monthly Winners, 2020 Charles Lillo

NGC 6164

NGC 6164 has an appearance similar to what you would see in a planetary nebula. It has a gaseous shroud that surrounds the central star. These typically have shock-waves, and often highlight where they brighten showing where they are interacting with the interstellar medium.

The extensive outer halo would have to be my favorite part of this image. The outer halo is very dim and certainly proved to be a challenge to reveal it with all the tiny filaments with blue and teal highlights and a bit of red where Ha is present. There is a feature that I initially believed to be a light leak. On the left side of the image, there is what looks like a straight line. After looking through many images, it’s definitely real, and not a light leak.

NGC 6164 is 4,200 light-years away in the constellation of Ara. It is about 21 X 13 arc mins, at magnitude 11. It contains a very bright O-type star about 40 times as massive as our sun. The nebula in the center spans around 4 light-years and has an interesting bipolar symmetry, this is all framed nicely in the larger outer-shell, all set within a beautiful star-field.

Equipment Details: 10 Inch RCOS fl 9.1

Astro Physics AP-900 Mount

SBIG STL 11000m

FLI Filter Wheel

Astrodon Lum, Red, Green, Blue Filters

Baader Planetarium H-alpha 7nm Narrowband-Filter

Baader Planetarium OIII 8.5nm Narrowband-Filter

Baader Planetarium SII 8.0nm Narrowband-Filter

Exposures Details:

Lum 45X900 Bin 1

Red 15X900 Bin 1

Green 14X900 Bin 1

Blue 12X900 Bin 1

Ha 61X1800

OIII 113X1800

Total Time: 108.75 hours

Copyright: Terry Robison

Read More
2020 Jason Matter 2020 Jason Matter

IC348 & LBN749

Imaged in the constellation of Perseus. IC348 and LBN749.

ASA10 '' telescope
Canon 6D Astrodon
Guiding by SW evostar 72ED and ASI120mini
147x300s at 400ISO

Total exposure = 12hrs

Automatic acquisition via Maxpilote (TheSkyX pro, Focusmax).

PixInsight for pre-processing and PixInsight + Photoshop for processing.

Lorraine - FRANCE

DECEMBER, 2019

Copyright: Thomas Lelu

Read More