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iceman
10-06-2008, 02:53 PM
Hi guys

This avi was sitting on my hard-drive since the 25th May and I finally got around to processing it. The pairing of Ganymede and Europa were too far away from Jupiter to be imaged or composited together, but they made a fine target on their own.

12" newt, 5x powermate, DMK21AU04, 15fps (1/15s exposure), 1 minute each channel in RGB.

Thanks for looking.

madtuna
10-06-2008, 02:57 PM
awesome detail on Ganymede

Lester
10-06-2008, 04:21 PM
Good shootin Mike, like the images.

Could you find a comparison of Europa also, there is some darkening near the centre on your image.

bird
10-06-2008, 05:54 PM
Nice work Mike. Maybe one day it'll stop raining :-)

Bird

Matty P
10-06-2008, 06:46 PM
Simply amazing Mike!

The detail on Ganymede is awesome.

:2thumbs:

spearo
10-06-2008, 09:34 PM
WOAH!!!!
You have got to be kidding!
That's amazing! I had no idea this was possible!
well done !
I'm seriously gobsmacked!
frank

Ric
10-06-2008, 09:49 PM
Wow, seriously amazing image Mike.

Top stuff

Deeno
10-06-2008, 10:09 PM
Amazing result!!!

AlexN
10-06-2008, 11:36 PM
its so small... and such a hell of a long way away... I didnt think it would be possible to get any kind of detail... But once again, Mike comes through with the goods!

iceman
11-06-2008, 04:54 AM
Thanks guys.
Just to clarify in-case I unintentionally misled anyone, the bottom (larger) ganymede is a simulation from the NASA JPL Solar System Simulator.

Europa is out to the right.

Robert_T
11-06-2008, 09:47 AM
Mike, this is excellent. How big is Ganymede in arc seconds. If you can pull detail on it then you should be able to follow Mars with decent detail right through it's 2 year cycle... barring seeing and troublesome Sun-type stars:D

iceman
11-06-2008, 09:50 AM
Rob, Ganymede is 1.6" (arcseconds) in diameter. And yeh, it would be great to be able to follow Mars through the full cycle but the pesky Sun and low altitude combine to hamper that effort :)