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Old 01-04-2014, 10:31 PM
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codemonkey (Lee)
Lee "Wormsy" Borsboom

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Easiest targets for a beginner?

What are some of the easiest targets for a beginner, near Brisbane, at the moment?

I've got an ED80 with no guide scope so I'm looking for bright, easy to find stuff that... well, looks cool.
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Old 02-04-2014, 12:20 AM
raymo
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This is the ideal time to look at the new moon and follow it each evening
as it gets fuller and you can see different features each evening.
Saturn rises in the evening, so it would be good for you, and it will blow
your socks off if you haven't seen it through a scope before.
Another great object would be M42 [The Orion Nebula]It's a fuzzy patch
above the three bright belt stars of Orion.
raymo
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Old 02-04-2014, 02:43 PM
scottholio (Scotty)
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+1 for M42. I thought that was so awesome the first time I saw it through a scope.
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Old 02-04-2014, 02:55 PM
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Lee
Jupiter and Mars are up, also the globular omega Centauri, the eta Carinae nebulae and the galaxy M104.

The attached SkyMapPro map is for 8pm looking north.

Jeanette might be able to help you.
http://www.iceinspace.com.au/forum/member.php?u=141
Glen
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Old 02-04-2014, 03:50 PM
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Eta Carinae is an easy target, large, and directly overhead.
Orion is good, but is getting too low in the west.
Mars rises to a comfortable position around 9pm onwards.
47 Tuc is also worthy of consideration.
Do a virtual tour through Stellarium or similar and see which ones you can target.
Good luck!
Bo
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Old 02-04-2014, 08:01 PM
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doppler (Rick)
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And don't forget Jupiter and its moons
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Old 02-04-2014, 09:31 PM
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If you stay up late, or wait another couple of months then the galactic centre (Scorpius/Sagittarius region) is brimming with amazing sights to photograph. Pretty much just point the camera up and have at ye! The area around

Antares is crazily colourful and doesn't need a long focal length (max 200mm) but does need exposure time and dark skies to really look great.

The Lagoon Nebula (M8) is the standout nebula during winter. Doesn't take much to get a decent shot of it.

Best of luck!
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Old 03-04-2014, 07:45 PM
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Lee "Wormsy" Borsboom

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Thanks for your contribution everyone! :-)

I tried capturing the horsehead last night, but with an unmodded dSLR and a maximum exposure length of 30 seconds, all I managed was an incredibly noisy image where it's barely visible.

I also tried the rosette, which is what led me to create this the original post. Either I simply couldn't find it, or something about it makes it unsuitable for capture with my dSLR. It looks very bright in Stellarium, but even with ISO6400 and 30 sec exposures, I couldn't find it. Maybe I'm just retarded though ;-)

From that experience, I thought I'd ask here for good targets, because what I see in Stellarium doesn't seem to correlate with ease of capture. Some of what I've tried to capture, or have captured is:

* M42 - This is awesome, and easy
* Eta Carina nebula - Easy to find, hard to process for me
* Omega centauri - Easy to find
* Tarantula nebula - too dark for me to image currently
* Horsehead neb - again, too dark
* Beehive cluster - easy to find
* Southern pleiades - easy to find
* Jupiter - cool visually with its moons, but nothing but a spec to my ED80

I'd really love to get a decent image of a galaxy, but I'll need something pretty large to be able to get a decent image of it with the ED80 (Andromeda?)
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Old 03-04-2014, 10:38 PM
raymo
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Try M83; it will be small, but it is easy to get your first image of it, and
you can use a barlow to make it an acceptable size.
raymo
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Old 04-04-2014, 12:26 AM
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glenc (Glen)
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The LMC and SMC galaxies might come out OK in an image.
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Old 04-04-2014, 04:51 AM
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rcheshire (Rowland)
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Star clusters look nice with an umodded camera.
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Old 04-04-2014, 06:28 AM
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Bright D.S.O. for Southern Observers

Here are 142 images of bright deep sky objects for southern observers.
https://picasaweb.google.com/1100488...hernObservers#
The images are from http://server1.wikisky.org/
Most images have a 1 degree field.
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Old 04-04-2014, 06:22 PM
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codemonkey (Lee)
Lee "Wormsy" Borsboom

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Wow, thanks again everyone! :-)

Tonight I might try (clouds permitting) piggybacking my camera with a 90mm F2.8 and my 18-55 for some wider shots including the LMC.

I'll also have a look and see if I can find M83.
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