Quote:
Originally Posted by Astroman
Well done Chris, wow!
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Thanks Andrew - glad you like it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by scagman
Yes Chris, as Andrew say "WOW". I think thats actually very awesome.
Cheers.
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Thanks John. What's awesome is the distance involved. Makes one start to appreciate how far away the 'average'(?) star is.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shiraz
 very neat. maybe it might be interesting to look it up in some of the published survey images to see the motion over longer periods?
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Thanks Ray. Must have a look to see what's available. I recall seeing one image last year (don't know when it was taken) that showed Prox miles away, so given how little it's moved in 12 months, I can only guess that it was taken maybe 20 years or more ago.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Screwdriverone
That is very cool Chris,
It is fun to flick between them and try and check to see if other stars have moved too.
Why not make an animated gif of the two shots and transition on say, 3 secs?
I haven't seen too many star position experiments like this, so hats off to you for the effort and idea, it is extremely interesting to see the motion first hand and not just in print.
Cheers
Chris
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Thanks Chris. Pretty sure I've seen another animation some time ago, but I must say that I was impressed with the registration achieved in PI. First time I've done that. The greatest effort occurred trying to identify which star was Prox Cent after I took the first image last year. Now it's easy to find!
Cheers
Chris