Hi
Did my deepest image of the Corona Australis area tonight with the mighty 300mm f2.8 flourite lens from Bert. Never before have I done such a long imaging run with such a fast lens, 90 mins, consisting of 5 minute subs
18x5 mins ISO400. 2 inch LPS filter in back of lens, modded 350D camera. Guided with Q guider on the cheap Orion 80mm shorttube guidescope. Done with object transiting, best possible position for imaging. It was quite easy sitting back in a chair manually guiding on the notebook pc with guidestar on a virtual recticle, greatly magnified.
The small scale image does not do it justice, so heres a 1 mb version. Even that is slightly downsized.
Of course from a dark sky site deeper images can be obtained, but from a site where the LMC is only just naked eye, its not too bad
Scott
Thanks all. This is why I love doing astro imaging, I can look up to a milky grey sky, with only the brighter parts of the milky way visible, yet go deep enough to show dark nebulae like brown smoke across the stars
Scott
Thanks
I just now performed a fairly strong star size reduction on it. It makes some stars look un naturally coloured but gee it brings out the dust. With such a starry background the dust is lost among them, but reduce the stars and the dust stands out, the lower right looks almost like a bow shock. Does this nebula qualify as a Cometary Globule, streaming back under stellar winds from the core of our galaxy?
What could this 300mm lens do under a dark sky and three hours of data
Thanks
I just now performed a fairly strong star size reduction on it. It makes some stars look un naturally coloured but gee it brings out the dust.
Very cool shot. I like the first one though coz the stars are so bright so the dust looks real dark against it. Maybe if you blend in the two pics you'll get the best of both. Loads of dust on top of bright stars.
Excellent, excellent. This could easily rival data acquired from a dedicated astro cam. I'm amazed how well the dusty neb has come out - good processing. Very well done Scott. Keep up the fantastic work.