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parabol
Posts: 4932
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Alright so you wake up one day and decide you want to explore space from your backyard and do some astrophotography without having to sell your house to afford it. What would you need after doing a week's worth of research? 1. Mid-size reflecting telescope: $450 2. Equatorial mount/tripod to hold the scope and counter Earth's rotation: $1300 3. Highly sensitive webcam + UV/IR filter + adapter: $300 4. 2x magnification lens: $30 5. High quality 3x lens: $140 (optional) $1300 for a mount you say? Well it is really heavy duty and can hold a massive load. It weighs 35kg itself and can easily carry the 10kg telescope at any angle and prevent it from wobbling in the wind (something that's very bad when doing photography!). Also it has decent motors to rotate the telescope 15 degrees an hour which is the same rate and in opposite direction as Earth's rotation, ensuring your object of interest stays firmly in view for minutes/hours at a time (depending on how well you align it). http://homepage.powerup.com.au/~boldajis/images/space_0.jpghttp://homepage.powerup.com.au/~boldajis/images/space_0.5.jpg Now what? Hook up the camera to the laptop and fumble around for a few minutes finding Jupiter in the sky at such a high magnification (not easy!). Once found, configure: the frame-rate, shutter speed, white balance, gain .. until the perfect balance is found. Then record a movie of Jupiter with its moon Io and the shadow it's casting: Looks a bit blurry and wobbly hey? That's caused by air currents in the Earth's atmosphere causing refraction of the incoming light from Jupiter, making high magnification viewing difficult. An analogy would be looking at the surface of a car on a hot sunny day and noticing the gassy turbulence. But that's ok, we'll do some signal processing and stack the best frames of the movie on top of each other and make a still, each R/G/B channel processed separately. Then we unblur to bring out the detail, then recombine the colour channels: http://homepage.powerup.com.au/~boldajis/images/space_1.png Much better, can definitely see the moon (at left) and its shadow on Jupiter! But hey, I just happened to take 5 movies, 10 minutes apart - so let's do a time-lapse animation of 40 minutes duration to show the moon orbiting the planet as well as the Great Red Spot going around: http://homepage.powerup.com.au/~boldajis/images/space_1.gif And finally, replace the 2x magnification lens with the high quality 3x and repeat: http://homepage.powerup.com.au/~boldajis/images/space_2.png Not as good as the photos that Hubble takes of the planet, but still not bad for gear costing about $2k. Hope you enjoyed the tour! |
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| #0 10:20pm 26/11/08 |
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system
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d[o_0]b
Posts: 2619
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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that fukin ace dude |
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| #1 06:58pm 26/11/08 |
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Triamks
Posts: 1816
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Good stuff ole chap.
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| #2 07:01pm 26/11/08 |
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eu4ia
Posts: 830
Location: Gold Coast, Queensland
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Impressive. We expect regular updates. |
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| #3 07:12pm 26/11/08 |
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Fireblood
Posts: 8890
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Definately regular (weekly/monthly) updates. "Parabol's Astronomy Corner Mach 1"
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| #4 07:18pm 26/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4933
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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We expect regular updates. Yeah with this rainy weather I've barely taken the telescope out in the last 3 weeks :/ Oh I forgot the very first image I ever got out the webcam + telescope combo. This one was taken with the camera misconfigured (frame-rate, colours, shutter, etc) and probably improperly focused as well. But hey, can still see some detail, but haven't touched the moon since: http://homepage.powerup.com.au/~boldajis/images/space_3.jpg |
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| #5 07:22pm 26/11/08 |
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épic™
Posts: 2007
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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wow awesome man.. defiantly something i would like to try one day :)
post m0ar, the movies are especially cool |
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| #6 07:27pm 26/11/08 |
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Jim
Posts: 8868
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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holy s*** that's pretty damn cool
reminds me of iceman, a dude who used to be a gameop on ga a couple of years back, he got right into taking pics with his own gear http://www.iceinspace.com/ |
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| #7 07:37pm 26/11/08 |
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eu4ia
Posts: 831
Location: Gold Coast, Queensland
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I've been thinking about buying this sort of gear for a while now but it's too much money to spend when the chances are likely that it would all start collecting dust in a corner after a few months.
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| #8 07:39pm 26/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4934
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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reminds me of iceman, a dude who used to be a gameop on ga GA gameop? Wow, I never would have guessed. Yeah I'm basically where he was (in terms of experience) about 3 years ago. Basically trudging through his footsteps. His site is awesome, arguably the best of its kind - it's where I did most of my reading to decide on what gear to buy. It's a fairly tedious hobby. It can easily use up 4-5 hours a night (setting up, cooling the gear, assembling + polar aligning, recording, packing up, image processing), which I can't afford most of the time. But it's good putting the effort in on a free weekend and getting some good results. |
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| #9 07:53pm 26/11/08 |
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Midda
Posts: 2868
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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f***, that's awesome. It's pretty amazing that these sorts of images can be seen straight from ones backyard.
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| #10 07:52pm 26/11/08 |
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TicMan
Posts: 3929
Location: Melbourne, Victoria
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Awesome stuff.. I used to get out in the backyard with the old man when we were in Mt Isa (alot less light pollution) when I was a kiddie and loved looking up to the skies through the telescope.
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| #11 07:59pm 26/11/08 |
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Dazhel
Posts: 24
Location: Gold Coast, Queensland
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Impressive. :D
Can it pick up that toolbag dropped from the ISS a few days ago? |
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| #12 08:20pm 26/11/08 |
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Crakaveli
Posts: 2887
Location: USA
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There's a thought, snap a pic of the ISS!
Also, awesome pics hope to see regular updates. |
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| #13 08:37pm 26/11/08 |
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demon
Posts: 3826
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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nice setup parabol :D i hardly ever drag out my celestron nexstar gt114 anymore.. in fact it's over at a mate's place coz he lives up at mt.mee... very nice for viewing up there once the weather is clear! i could never get a camera to work with mine... do you use some sorta adaptor to put the wevcam on the eyepiece? i tried making one & it didn't work & i gave up :P
one thing i can recommend for ppl that perhaps don't want ot jump in quite so deep... the maidenwell observatory up near bunya mountains. ~3 hour drive north. they have some awesome 15" refractors that are hard mounted. on the night i went we didn't do any photography but it's all setup for it. jupiter was in it's full glory & heaps if clusters & nebulae. pity saturn won't be visible till march next year but my old man & i are thinking of going up again then. $25 for a full night of viewing & awesome steak meal at the pub next door for $15 ! :D last edited by demon at 20:55:27 26/Nov/08 |
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| #14 08:55pm 26/11/08 |
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infi
Posts: 10447
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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breathtaking. i wonder if there is oil on jupiter?
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| #15 09:07pm 26/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4935
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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do you use some sorta adaptor to put the wevcam on the eyepiece? I go for (magnified) prime focus, so no eyepiece. I use a special adapter that I bought for about $40, it screws into the webcam (with its own lens removed!) and the other end is a 1.25" barrel that slides into the focuser. So basically the telescope becomes the webcam's primary lens. Can put stuff like Barlows in between to magnify further. pity saturn won't be visible till march next year Some people who have good views of the horizon are already taking snaps early in the morning, just before sunrise. I wouldn't mind giving it a shot sometime. |
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| #16 09:29pm 26/11/08 |
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scuzzy
Posts: 13152
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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are there any reasonably well priced mounts for digital SLR cameras out there?
last edited by scuzzy at 21:39:30 26/Nov/08 |
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| #17 09:39pm 26/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4936
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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You mean a camera adapter for mounting onto a telescope's focuser or do you mean a standalone tripod suitable for long exposure astro-shots?
For the former, I'm quite sure you can pick up an adapter somewhere for $40-100. Here's one: http://www.myastroshop.com.au/products/details.asp?id=MAS-238 For the latter, if you want to do long exposure shots then you might be able to get a lighter motorised mount for about $500, maybe less. last edited by parabol at 21:54:06 26/Nov/08 |
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| #18 09:54pm 26/11/08 |
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orbitor
Posts: 7831
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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reminds me of iceman, a dude who used to be a gameop on ga Yeah ice was the head of our RTCW team too, O2 (Oxygen) way back in the day. Good bloke. |
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| #19 10:10pm 26/11/08 |
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mooby
Posts: 4356
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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thats f***ing awsome, i used to be a massive astro nerd in the day. was a pain in the ass tho, this was pre internet and all the mags where northern hem. now with gps, tripods like that and teh interweb, so easy!
was that bright f***er last weekend jupiter? i was down past beauy, bright as. can you get scopes that mount slrs? cant belive how cheap reflectors are. went into nat geographic store the other day and was looking at em. last edited by mooby at 22:14:41 26/Nov/08 |
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| #20 10:14pm 26/11/08 |
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mooby
Posts: 4357
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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demon, that sounds like a great plan.
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| #21 10:13pm 26/11/08 |
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maxe
Posts: 13471
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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i cant believe you can see f***ing jupiter from your house
thats crazy |
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| #22 10:18pm 26/11/08 |
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fpot
Posts: 15788
Location: Gold Coast, Queensland
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Awesome. Do mars next!
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| #23 10:20pm 26/11/08 |
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Spook
Posts: 23515
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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ok, that was slightly cool
props |
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| #24 10:22pm 26/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4937
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Do mars next! Earliest I can do that is maybe May next year. Mars is only overhead during the day at the moment :/ |
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| #25 10:28pm 26/11/08 |
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mooby
Posts: 4358
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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venus was always a bit cool too. mercury was f***ing hard to find.
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| #26 10:32pm 26/11/08 |
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Zylox
Posts: 773
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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| #27 10:59pm 26/11/08 |
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whoop
Posts: 13130
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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I'd love to do something like this, too many trees around here though I'd have to build some sort of platform up on my roof or up in one of the trees to be able to see anything :(
Can you put more filters on it & take pictures of the sun? |
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| #28 11:09pm 26/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4938
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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^ Yeah looking at about $200 for a filter that will show you the sun without much detail. If you want to make out solar prominences and stuff, you're looking at a few grand for a single filter. Not cheap!
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| #29 11:51pm 26/11/08 |
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whoop
Posts: 13131
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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so, who wants to take bets on how long until this gets used to spy on the neighbours wife? :p
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| #30 12:11am 27/11/08 |
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Reduaram
Posts: 79
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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So the hubble telescope takes proper coloured pictures? Always thought most of the stuff that comes out of NASA was coloured in? I know a lot of the pictures is touched up a bit.
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| #31 12:25am 27/11/08 |
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jadz0r
Posts: 77
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Nice! Very Nice! Needs more Pluto!
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| #32 12:42am 27/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4939
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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So the hubble telescope takes proper coloured pictures? Well colour is just a perceptual thing, it's not exactly real. A typical CCD with a Bayer pattern will have a matrix of sub-pixels, some of which are more sensitive to wavelengths we perceive as green, others sensitive to red and the remaining blue. So basically each sub-pixel will collect light within a range of wavelengths, not an exact colour. The onboard electronics (or external computer) will then process to produce something that approximates what we should see with the naked eye. You can treat the received data however way you like but the moment you try to prepare it for purely visual purposes, you have to accept the fact that there are many ways to produce the image. For example, the 'green' pixel of my webcam is actually sensitive to light ranging from the fringes of blue through to all of green. So technically treating it as pure green like the webcam software does might not actually be the best approach, it's closer to picking up aqua in reality. Here's the default RGB mode, and then there's my manually processed version where I ditch the blue completely but treat the green channel as aqua. Which is more correct? Hard to say: http://homepage.powerup.com.au/~boldajis/images/space_4.png The CCDs are also very sensitive to IR which we can't see ourselves, so that bleeds in and is picked up by the red sub-pixel which deceives us into thinking there's more red content than there really is. Hence I use a UV/IR filter to prevent this from happening :) last edited by parabol at 01:09:32 27/Nov/08 |
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| #33 01:09am 27/11/08 |
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3dee
Posts: 2779
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Here's a photo of Jupiter and its four main moons my dad and I took with his $300 digicam up against the lens of his (about) $900 celestron mirror telescope at Sandgate in the backyard (hardly good light conditions).
http://gallery.me.com/nick.bedford/100012/IMG_0061/web.jpg |
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| #34 08:54am 27/11/08 |
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StopShootingMe
Posts: 2904
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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For whoever was asking, Venus was probably the bright object you saw in the sky. Jupiter and Venus are pretty close together in the evening in the west in the evenings ATM.
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| #35 09:20am 27/11/08 |
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fpot
Posts: 15790
Location: Gold Coast, Queensland
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3dee: you lose :P
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| #36 09:41am 27/11/08 |
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Opec
Posts: 5472
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Awesome doode.
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| #37 10:30am 27/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4940
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Not bad 3dee, taking photos like that (with eyepiece, without adapter) is not easy!
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| #38 10:33am 27/11/08 |
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3dee
Posts: 2780
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Thanks fpot!
Yeah we were just looking at different objects and thought of trying to take a photo with dad's digicam. Took a few tries but for a cheapass camera and not a huge reflector t'scope, we managed to get even the four moons. |
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| #39 10:48am 27/11/08 |
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demon
Posts: 3827
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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with my 4" refractor scope venus & mars are pretty boring... venus is an orange circle & mars is a red circle :P saturn & jupiter are where it's at for planetary viewing imo. even a couple of years back when mars was on it's closest to earth in a very long time... i had to use light filters to see any detail on it's disc & still at best i could just barely make out the valles marineris as a brownish blur :P
(edit) check this guy's astropics site... it's a canada dude i sometimes talk to on efnet. pic of his scope ... http://ozastro.dyndns.org/images/scope3.jpg the guy is mad keen on astrophotography... makes a lot of his own equipement & produces some awesome galaxy & nebulae photos. last edited by demon at 11:13:20 27/Nov/08 |
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| #40 11:13am 27/11/08 |
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TiT
Posts: 1795
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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yes get some photos together need a new wallpaper :)
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| #41 11:05am 27/11/08 |
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FaceMan
Posts: 158
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Can you see any proof on the moon that the US were there ?
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| #42 01:08pm 27/11/08 |
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Pinky
Posts: 59
Location: Melbourne, Victoria
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f***ing cool parabol. Can you do some galaxies? |
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| #43 01:15pm 27/11/08 |
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demon
Posts: 3829
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Can you see any proof on the moon that the US were there ? no. info from this nasa site. And why haven't we photographed them? There are six landing sites scattered across the Moon. They always face Earth, always in plain view. Surely the Hubble Space Telescope could photograph the rovers and other things astronauts left behind. Right? |
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| #44 01:20pm 27/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4941
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Can you do some galaxies? With some circuitry and soldering, I've modified my webcam to do unlimited-duration exposures to be able to take galaxy/nebulae snaps. Just waiting for the freaking weather to clear up so I can try it out for the first time! |
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| #45 01:24pm 27/11/08 |
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Pinky
Posts: 61
Location: Melbourne, Victoria
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In 2008 NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will carry a powerful modern camera into low orbit over the Moon's surface. Its primary mission is not to photograph old Apollo landing sites, but it will photograph them, many times, providing the first recognizable images of Apollo relics since 1972. Thank Christ. I would have chipped in $10 to the funding just to shut up all the conspiracy theorists. http://www.freakingnews.com/pictures/22000/TV-Studio-Moon--22478.jpg |
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| #46 01:30pm 27/11/08 |
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Hogfather
Posts: 2229
Location: Cairns, Queensland
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You think that will shut them up?
If they think that the original event was faked then a few photos from NASA won't make any difference. Until you can see structures on the moon with the naked eye from earth (or we blow the moon up!) some people just won't believe we can go there. |
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| #47 01:56pm 27/11/08 |
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Jim
Posts: 8869
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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asif it'll shut them up
the reason they come up with and maintain the conspiracies in the first place is to fill an emotional void, not because evidence isn't available |
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| #48 01:58pm 27/11/08 |
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casa
Thimes
Posts: 3124
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Try googling images of the moon and the planets and you get better quality images, what a horrendous waste of $2000+ |
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| #49 02:44pm 27/11/08 |
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3dee
Posts: 2783
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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You obviously haven't done any astronomy before...
Also, we could see the cloud bands of jupiter in that photo (obvsiouly with our eyes not the camera) which was sweet. Though our eyes can't expose for long enough (or are sensitive) to see any accumulation of colour so it was only white. |
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| #50 03:03pm 27/11/08 |
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trog
AGN Admin
Posts: 25482
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Dude they are f***ing awesome pics! About the time Iceman started his website I started getting interested in that stuff and have been thinking about buying a bunch of gear, but I just haven't had time to do anything about it, and don't want to do it half-assed and end up with assloads of gear that just takes up space that I never use. So I have been living vicariously through APOD, ice's site and Bad Astronomy. Those photos are amazing, I can't wait until I have time to do it and can gaze upon the moon in that sort of detail with mine own eyes. |
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| #51 04:59pm 27/11/08 |
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E.T.
Posts: 1611
Location: Queensland
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parabol, just adding my congrats on the images man. Well done. |
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| #52 06:23pm 27/11/08 |
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BillyHardball
Posts: 8560
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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All are very awesome. I really like 3dee's pic though - something more "realistic" about it.
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| #53 07:04pm 27/11/08 |
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HerbalLizard
Posts: 3036
Location: Queenstown, New Zealand
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Was only just taking some long exposure star trail shot last night, the wife is complaining that she wants a EOS T-Mount adapter for her C10-NGT, but I wouldn't mind modding my 10d with some added sensor cooling for astrophotograhy
last edited by HerbalLizard at 19:42:52 27/Nov/08 |
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| #54 07:42pm 27/11/08 |
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iceman
Posts: 1
Location: Central Coast, New South Wales
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Hi guys
Wow, some trips down memory lane here.. Nice to see you again Trog, Jim and Orbitor! I hope you guys are well. Orb, how's Insolence going? I do miss those RTCW days.. they were great fun. Nice photos too, Ash (parabol). I remember you posting them on IceInSpace. You're coming up to speed nice and fast. For anyone interested, I've created my own personal website for my images and a blog. You can see it at: http://www.mikesalway.com.au Cheers guys, thanks for the memories! |
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| #55 08:51am 28/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4943
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Nice photos too, Ash (parabol). I remember you posting them on IceInSpace Yeah I normally wouldn't post stuff like that outside astro forums, but I figured posting a non-technical walk-through to an off-topic audience might inspire some people and make space seem a little less distant :) |
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| #56 10:42am 28/11/08 |
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Merky007
Posts: 203
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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there is actually physical proof men have been to moon.
gentlemen i give you the moon laser reflector! http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2004/21jul_llr.htm |
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| #57 10:53am 28/11/08 |
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fpot
Posts: 15794
Location: Gold Coast, Queensland
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It's from a nasa site it is part of the conspiracy.
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| #58 11:06am 28/11/08 |
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demon
Posts: 3836
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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there is a vast quantity of physical evidence that nasa has been to the moon multiple times, but as jim said, the halfwit conspiracy theorists will never believe it. coz conspiracy theorists don't like proof... they like conspiracies.
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| #59 11:32am 28/11/08 |
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3dee
Posts: 2784
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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make space seem a little less distant :) Cue quote: "Space, is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly hugely mindbogglingly big it is. I mean you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space." |
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| #60 11:43am 28/11/08 |
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E.T.
Posts: 1612
Location: Queensland
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gentlemen i give you the moon laser reflector I wonder if one day Nasa will discover that its their high energy laser that is pushing the moons orbit out... lol |
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| #61 12:18pm 28/11/08 |
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trog
AGN Admin
Posts: 25484
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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sup ice! Long time no speak. Prepare to be deluged with emails once I get some spare time :) |
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| #62 12:20pm 28/11/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 4945
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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I wonder if one day Nasa will discover that its their high energy laser that is pushing the moons orbit out... lol Haha, I remember a question in a physics textbook that asked how long you have to shine a certain laser to push yourself back to the shuttle if you're stranded during a space-walk. The next part was comparing it with throwing your space-shoe in the opposite direction to gain velocity :) |
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| #63 12:28pm 28/11/08 |
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demon
Posts: 3837
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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how cool, & scary, would it be to test out those nitrogen powered jetpacks that nasa astronauts use for propulsion in space!@ untethered ~!@~!@` :D i remember seeing an apod a while back where it showed an astronaut doing the furtherest untethered spacewalk with one of those mmu's & the pic was taken from the iss & the astronaut was this tiny little dude in the distance. that'd be pretty exhilarating i rekn! puffing along... hoping like hell you have enough nitrogen left to get back to the iss ;p
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| #64 12:44pm 28/11/08 |
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Merky007
Posts: 204
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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it wouldn't need much nitrogen though would it? just accelerate a small bit and let the frictionless void carry you along.
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| #65 12:51pm 28/11/08 |
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3dee
Posts: 2785
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Sunlight not only heats the earth, but it (the light itself) exerts a repulsive force on the earth as well. That force amounts to about 660 million newtons, equivalent to 74,000 tons. Also, Sunlight exerts a very gentle force. The power of sunlight in space at Earth's distance from the sun is between 1.3-1.4 kilowatts per square meter. When you divide 1.4 kilowatts by the speed of light, about 300 million meters per second, the result is very small. A square mirror 1 kilometer on a side would only feel about 9 Newtons or 2 pounds of force. last edited by 3dee at 12:54:37 28/Nov/08 |
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| #66 12:54pm 28/11/08 |
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demon
Posts: 3838
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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it wouldn't need much nitrogen though would it? just accelerate a small bit and let the frictionless void carry you along. i would also assume so... but what if you missed & went shooting past!? ;p |
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| #67 01:01pm 28/11/08 |
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trog
AGN Admin
Posts: 25488
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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how cool, & scary, would it be to test out those nitrogen powered jetpacks that nasa astronauts use for propulsion in space!@ untethered ~!@~!@` :D i remember seeing an apod a while back where it showed an astronaut doing the furtherest untethered spacewalk with one of those mmu's & the pic was taken from the iss & the astronaut was this tiny little dude in the distance. that'd be pretty exhilarating i rekn! puffing along... hoping like hell you have enough nitrogen left to get back to the iss ;pcheck out #29 here - I thought it was that at first and was like, f*** THAT! but it was just an empty suit |
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| #68 01:48pm 28/11/08 |
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fpot
Posts: 15800
Location: Gold Coast, Queensland
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Cool pics.
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| #69 03:37pm 28/11/08 |
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Kat
Posts: 10300
Location:
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I wish we could use our telescope. We can't get it to sit still and every time we look through it it is moving :(
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| #70 03:38pm 28/11/08 |
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Jim
Posts: 8878
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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stop using your daughter as a tripod!
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| #71 03:51pm 28/11/08 |
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system
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| #71 |
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