Leo Triplet with satellites pollution. A dire image of the night sky doomed to become far worse in the future. What can we do? Humans have been able to look up and connect with the night sky throughout their evolution. For the last 300 years it is no longer a part of their lives.
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I will post the final image when i have time to process it but thanks for the comment.
The Leo Triplet taken last night with a SeeStar 50 from Newtongrange, Scotland. This image is from the iPhone and as yet, unprocessed. I counted 9 satellite trails which is sadly par for the course for Leo. π
A trip to Aberfoyle to see the Red Squirrels this morning. Always a delight
Nice sunset in Callander on Thursday evening
Last night in Callander we had a glimpse of aurora.
I help organise a Star Party on Tuesday evening in support of a Midlothian Library initiative. We had around 300 adults and children looking through the scopes and getting wowed by the sights of the night sky. Great support from the members of the ASE. The public appetite is always there.
I saw the sun today for nearly 5 mins! Summer is coming π
Combining data over three evenings of SeeStar 50 10sec exposures. This image of M42 has more structure and depth than the individual sessions. Taken in Newtongrange, Scotland
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Yes it does. The SeStar never fails to impress me.
I managed just over 90 mins with the SeeStar on M42 last night. The results off the phone look good. Will look to see what Siril processing will do today.
That looks exciting
M33 taken 3.1.26 from Newtongrange. SeeStar50 83 mins of 10sec exposures. Bright full moon gave large gradient across the image. Used Siril, ceramic, DeNoise and Lightroom. Some 2.9m light years away and the third largest galaxy in the local group.
I invited people from the local area to come and see the moon and Jupiter through a telescope. Two colleagues from the Astro Soc of Edinburgh, joined me. We had approx 15 adults and children despite the freezing temperatures. From the comments I think we made quite an impression.
Given recent news and events I am reminded of those people who wore billboards proclaiming βThe End in Nighβ.
Last nights Wolf moon from my garden in Midlothian. Taken with the SeeStar 50
Quick shots of the moon. Hand held iPhone through 10β dobsonian eyepiece.
My first go at processing a SeeStar mosaic using Siril and the DSA script. Needed more data than the 84mins used.
M31 taken from Newtongrange, Midlothian, Scotland.
M45 taken last night using a SeeStar50 over 77 mins from Midlothian, Scotland
Always a great sight. No Geminids spotted last night. π
Re processed last nights M42 to get more detail out of the 24 mins of exposure time.
A brief gap in the clouds for 30mins last night allowed the opportunity to capture the Orion Nebula. Needs more exposure time but the clouds look to dominate the night sky till Christmas
As it was a long time since I saw it last I took a quick image of the sun this afternoon with the SeeStar. The enormous sunspots show up well. Might get a big flare soon.
If it is clear you can easily find Uranus. I took this picture with the iPhone. I have indicated which is Uranus to make it easy but binoculars are required unless it very dark.
If it is clear where you are Uranus is easy to see with binoculars. Here it is on this iPhone picture taken just now.
Done!
90 mins on the North American Nebula last night. SeeStar 50
Managed 6mins of 10sec exposures on the SeeStar 50 last night in EQ mode targeting the Pelican Nebula. Amazing what this wee scope can do.
The Pelican Nebula in Cygnus Taken tonight with a SeeStar 50. Just 60 mins of 10sec exposures.
Interstellar comet 3i/ ATLAS taken from my back garden this morning through. Its age is estimated at 7 - 11 billion years so billions of years older than the Solar System. Currently it is about 170 million mile away from us. Worth getting up at 5.30 to see! The SeeStar 50 captured this after 6 min