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Old 26-10-2008, 06:03 PM
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Peter Ward
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A lazy NGC1566

I seem to recall this tiny spiral being nicknamed the "Spanish dancer"

http://www.atscope.com.au/BRO/gallery34.html

is a somewhat noisy, not very high res version I started last night....I suspect a few more hours and an AO will do wonders for the end result
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Old 26-10-2008, 06:20 PM
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h0ughy (David)
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peter, i hate to say it but i have visually seen this better through Peter Robbin's 30" at qld astrofest. he kept going back to it - one of his favourites.
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Old 26-10-2008, 06:30 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by h0ughy View Post
peter, i hate to say it but i have visually seen this better through Peter Robbin's 30" at qld astrofest. he kept going back to it - one of his favourites.
I can see why....this 'lil sucker is going to take at least 4-8 hours (from the 'burbs at least) of luminance to do it any justice
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Old 26-10-2008, 07:04 PM
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Nice change from NGC 253 (and Eta Carina )

In your own words Peter "A tidy image"

Should look great when you have finsihed it

Mike
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Old 26-10-2008, 08:24 PM
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Originally Posted by strongmanmike View Post
Nice change from NGC 253 (and Eta Carina )

In your own words Peter "A tidy image"

Should look great when you have finsihed it

Mike
Thanks, but no need to be PC with me ..as is, the image doesn't past muster in my book (but I must admit the stars are nice and round), but as mentioned earlier, I suspect this little galaxy could end up looking a whole lot bigger with some seriously deep imaging.

Searching the web, looks to me like DM's image taken with the AAT is the pick.... emulating it will be tough!
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Old 26-10-2008, 09:08 PM
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..but I must admit the stars are nice and round....
well given your kit, experience and permanent setup I'd bluddy hope so

Quote:
but as mentioned earlier, I suspect this little galaxy could end up looking a whole lot bigger with some seriously deep imaging.
I think you have it all there already, just need to bring it out.

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Searching the web, looks to me like DM's image taken with the AAT is the pick.... emulating it will be tough!
This one?:
http://www.aao.gov.au/images/captions/aat054.html

Bill Pence took this with the AAT and only did 25min each blue & green plus 35min red sensitive emulsions - aperture rules again love to see the actual plates, the detail would be amazing

Mike
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Old 26-10-2008, 09:20 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by strongmanmike View Post

This one?:
http://www.aao.gov.au/images/captions/aat054.html

Bill Pence took this with the AAT and only did 25min each blue & green plus 35min red sensitive emulsions - aperture rules again love to see the actual plates, the detail would be amazing

Mike
Yep...that'd be the image....aperture rules!
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Old 26-10-2008, 09:44 PM
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Originally Posted by h0ughy View Post
peter, i hate to say it but i have visually seen this better through Peter Robbin's 30" at qld astrofest. he kept going back to it - one of his favourites.
http://www.go.ednet.ns.ca/~larry/astro/maglimit.html

would indicate that visually a 30" scope should top out at around 17th magnitude in a mag 6 sky.

You can also forget photopic vision...images at this intensity level are very much shades of gray.

What did my rig CCD pull in mag 4 skies? Try around mag 20.

It's interesting how perceptions are often mixed
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Old 26-10-2008, 09:52 PM
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nice to see work in progress
look forward to the final version to see the difference
frank
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Old 26-10-2008, 09:59 PM
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http://www.go.ednet.ns.ca/~larry/astro/maglimit.html

would indicate that visually a 30" scope should top out at around 17th magnitude in a mag 6 sky.

You can also forget photopic vision...images at this intensity level are very much shades of gray.

What did my rig CCD pull in mag 4 skies? Try around mag 20.

It's interesting how perceptions are often mixed
biting well
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  #11  
Old 26-10-2008, 10:24 PM
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biting well
Not really....I found it an interesting observation plus it's hard with so much stuff on the net for newbies to separate the wheat from the chaff

A medium-large scope (~14 inch), CCD, deep exposure (say 2-3 hours) should easily pull mag 22

I think Paul Boltwood might have made mag 24? There was something in S&T not that long ago....perhaps someone can refresh my memory?
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Old 26-10-2008, 10:31 PM
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I observed it in a 16" scope last Night and saw lots of detail, of cause not as much as your image but just as pleasing.
Ron
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Old 26-10-2008, 11:02 PM
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Not really....I found it an interesting observation plus it's hard with so much stuff on the net for newbies to separate the wheat from the chaff

A medium-large scope (~14 inch), CCD, deep exposure (say 2-3 hours) should easily pull mag 22

I think Paul Boltwood might have made mag 24? There was something in S&T not that long ago....perhaps someone can refresh my memory?
Peter,

the view through the 30 was pretty good but alas - no colour - very grey for me. to be quite honest that evening I saw this galaxy through my meade 12" and a 10" scope and was quite taken back by the view through the 30" on how much more spiral you pick up. yuo will never beat a long exposure

Mate i will never have the money, or the skill, to snap what you have, but it is good to see that your still human.
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  #14  
Old 26-10-2008, 11:41 PM
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Originally Posted by h0ughy View Post
.... you will never beat a long exposure
Amen to that. I did a bit of digging it was Johannes Schedler and Ken Crawford that set the record in 2007, Mag 24.8 with about 16 hours of combined data.

As a ballpark figure, a CCD should be able to reveal stars about 50x fainter than visual observation through the same scope.

Of course the highest QE CCD on the planet will not solve the problem of eight 8th's of cloud over Sydney right now
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  #15  
Old 27-10-2008, 05:03 AM
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I love this galaxy, one of my first view through the late Mike Kerr's 25" monster at my first SPSP. Blew me away.
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  #16  
Old 27-10-2008, 08:42 PM
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Nice image Peter, Like the bit of grain in the background. Makes you look a little more like us mere mortals. Pretty little spiral with some nice colour.
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  #17  
Old 27-10-2008, 09:22 PM
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Nice image Peter, Like the bit of grain in the background. Makes you look a little more like us mere mortals. Pretty little spiral with some nice colour.
Appreciate the sentiment....but the data has a *long* way to go. I'm a little embarrassed for being hasty in posting a work in progress.
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  #18  
Old 27-10-2008, 09:31 PM
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Nice image Peter, Like the bit of grain in the background.
Woohoo! some noise! YEH! GOTTA LOVE IT!

(said very noisily!)



Nothing to be embarassed about, the idea that every image released on a forum must be some sort of perfect "grand presentaion" with some inane accompanying lyrical prose... is a bit try hard nerdy anyway . (hey Fred am I a try hard "nerd" too..? )

Mike
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