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Any astronomy lovers around?

Started by barman, March 13, 2012, 08:37 PM

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barman

Yay for luck :D The sky has cleared up about 40 minutes before the end of transit.

Here's a pic I snapped. You can see some sunspots as well.
My WA compilation videos: 2007 2013
My photography work

Quote from: Statikbarman's fails are best

Ramone

gj barman, vns! Which scope and camera have U used for this shot?
We had bl here, it was cloudy all the time :/

barman

Quote from: Ramone on June 06, 2012, 08:43 AM
gj barman, vns! Which scope and camera have U used for this shot?
We had bl here, it was cloudy all the time :/
Thanks 8)

My setup consisted of a Nikon D5100 plus a Nikkor 55-300 telephoto lens with a homemade mylar filter:
My WA compilation videos: 2007 2013
My photography work

Quote from: Statikbarman's fails are best

barman

Here's a photo that won me a nice pair of binoculars for the first place in the astrophoto contest during a star party I attended last week 8)
startrails.JPG

And here are all the prizes and gifts I got in various contests, quizzes and events in the last 4 days
nagrody.JPG
My WA compilation videos: 2007 2013
My photography work

Quote from: Statikbarman's fails are best

Alien

really nice photo barman.
how did you do that, rotating the camera ?

Kaleu

amazing but I can't understand the photo :D



Dulek

Quote from: Alien on August 27, 2012, 11:36 AM
really nice photo barman.
how did you do that, rotating the camera ?

Long exposure time I guess.

Quote from: barman on August 27, 2012, 11:24 AM
Here's a photo that won me a nice pair of binoculars for the first place in the astrophoto contest during a star party I attended last week 8)

Fss, so you prefered to make pictures instead of meeting me, shame on you! ;) Great photo btw.

barman

The camera is not rotating, the sky is! I took 120 pics, each with an exposure time of 30 seconds and then stacked them together in Gimp with a "Lighten" blending mode. This way, you can see the paths of the stars during a 1 hour period :)
My WA compilation videos: 2007 2013
My photography work

Quote from: Statikbarman's fails are best

Free

That pic is sick!

Put it on my background.

MonkeyIsland

barman that pic is impressive. It got even more impressive when you explained how you did it :o
Due to massive misunderstandings: MonkeyIsland refers to an island not a monkey. I would be a monkey, if my name was IslandMonkey meaning a monkey who is or lives on an island. MonkeyIsland is an island which is related to monkeys. Also there's been a legend around saying MonkeyIsland is a game. So please, think of me as an island or a game.

TheKomodo

Yeah that's incredible barman very good work, my Brother is doing some Astronomy courses at University, he's spent so many thousands on equipment over the last few years you should see this moving mobile hut thing he's building lol, i'll get some pictures or something soon !

Casso

This is really fantastic :O compliment !

Ramone

Quote from: barman on August 27, 2012, 11:55 AM
The camera is not rotating, the sky is!
....

The sky is not rotating, the earth is!!!  ;)

Vns barman! It looks like it's a pretty wide angle, can U tell me what lens have U used?

Here's my startrails from few months ago with 18mm lens, I don't have a remote shutter yet so U can see a little pause between series of 10 photos... It's a stack of 220 photos, 30 sec each (also). Stacked in http://www.startrails.de/html/software.html - cool free application, U can make timelapse videos with it also..



Statik

nice, and I would say... everything is rotating relative to something :D


dt`wreckz: zooks are effected my win

barman

Good photo there, don't hestitate to bump up the ISO sensitivity in order to record more stars, the noise becomes less apparent after you stack a lot of images.

Quote from: Ramone on August 27, 2012, 04:31 PM
Vns barman! It looks like it's a pretty wide angle, can U tell me what lens have U used?
Samyang 8mm fisheye, stopped down to f/4.8. ISO 6400.
This lens is extremely wide angle indeed, about 180 degrees across the diagonal of the frame.

More pics:

Andromeda Galaxy - Samyang 85mm f/1.4, stack of 32 exposures 6 seconds each, ISO 6400
andromeda-1024.jpg

The North America Nebula in Cygnus - same as above
cygnus-1024.jpg

The constellation of Lyra - Samyang 85mm f/1.4, single 8 second exposure, ISO 6400
lyra-1024.jpg

All of these photographs were taken with the camera mounted on a tripod, without any compensation of the daily rotation of the sky Earth. This limits my exposures to about 6-8 seconds, any longer times make the images of the stars spread out into little streaks. I'm going to buy some tracking device really soon, this will allow me to enter a whole new level of possibilities :D
My WA compilation videos: 2007 2013
My photography work

Quote from: Statikbarman's fails are best