Just over 1hr of only Lum, this one really surprised me! I just find interesting targets and shoot as I go and am happy to revisit this with a new camera, more time and color!!!!
Tuesday, April 22, 2025
Saturday, April 19, 2025
Sunflower Galaxy
Just searching for targets and this came up by name, a target I've already hit, in M63. Just practice for the most part. No asteroids or comets nearby and the guiding didn't lock for half of the planned time! :(
Enjoy
Monday, March 17, 2025
Neat interacting galaxy pair
I often do my planning on the fly as I am usually to busy during the day or on cloudy nights to do it ahead of time. This is also a bit self serving as I have an off-axis guider and need to validate in the field that I'm actually hitting the guide star I need. I picked up NGC2444 only to discover later it's NGC2444 and NGC2445, which as an interacting pair is ARP 143.
Per Wikipedia they, "NGC 2444 is a peculiar lenticular galaxy in the constellation Lynx. The galaxy lies about 135 million light years away from Earth, which means, given its apparent dimensions, that NGC 2444 is approximately 50,000 light years across.... NGC 2444 has collided with another galaxy, NGC 2445. As a result of the collision, a bridge of young blue stars has formed between the two galaxies.... NGC 2445 and NGC 2444 (which lies about one arcminute away) form a pair, known as Arp 143"
Here's MY nova astrometry solve - https://nova.astrometry.net/user_images/12166075#annotated
Wednesday, March 5, 2025
Wednesday, February 12, 2025
Triple planet night
I don't often get time and clear enough skies for 3x planets at once, but this night I was lucky enough to be home just in time for Venus to be above the trees after sunset.
Seeing wasn't great this night but it's been a week of rain since, so I'll take what I can get!
Monday, January 20, 2025
Early New Years Eve Martian clouds
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
Most recent Mars amidst a big backlog
I love fall for astronomy and while I thought my automation scripts were ready for a big planet season of Jupiter, Saturn and Mars they're still in need of tweaking - Michael A. Phillips' Astro Blog: Overview of Fully Automated Planetary Processing
Going back to the most recent Mars as it's my favorites I was happy to see the North Polar Hood and a prominent, dark Olympus Mons! Here's a derotation of 4x 90s RGB's
And the whole set's animation that was partially lost due to, checks notes, "dog helped me tear down again, lost time due to FC not guiding well"
Just a foster, but Rosita from the Wake SPCA was a great dog and we wish here a good home, despite ruining our drywall and moulding!