Thursday, June 15, 2006

M27 The Dumbell Nebula in H-Alpha


©2006 Richard Murray

Techno Stuff: 6/15/06, LX90 8" SCT, ATK-2HS, Taurus Mini Tracker, HA Filter, Used 2 focal reducers in tandum - a Taurus .50 and a Mogg .60, Guided with Guidedog, Darks, 5fps, 8 frames at 300 secs each, 55% gain, Brightness 50%, Gamma 15%, Sat 50%, Processed in K3ccdTools, Registax 3, Photoshop, PixInsight.

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

NGC6823 Open Cluster With Nebulosity


©2006 Richard Murray


©2006 Richard Murray

This is my first successful attempt at taking an image with a Hydrogen Alpha filter which helps to bring out nebulosity in objects.

The bottom image is an example of how creating a pseudo red image in Photoshop, bluring it, and then placing the HA filtered image on top of it as a luminance layer can bring out even more nebula details.


Techno Stuff: 6/6/06, LX90 8" SCT, ATK-2HS, Taurus Mini Tracker, HA Filter, Used 2 focal reducers in tandum - a Taurus .50 and a Mogg .60, Guided with Guidedog, Darks, 5fps, 9 frames at 300 secs each, 55% gain, Brightness 50%, Gamma 15%, Sat 50%, Processed in K3ccdTools, Registax 3, Photoshop, Loreal, PixInsight.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

NGC6946 Spiral Galaxy in Color


©2006 Richard Murray

This is the first image I have taken in color using RGB filters. I used the black and white image below as the luminance layer and combined it with the RGB images in Photoshop. Since I had only a few color images to process I used multiple luminance layering for an LLRGB image to enhance color detail.

Techno Stuff: LLRGB, 5/29/06, LX90 8" SCT, ATK-2HS, Taurus Mini Tracker, Baader IR, DSI Pro RGB Filters, Used 2 focal reducers in tandum - a Taurus .50 and a Mogg .60, Guided with Guidedog, No Darks, 5fps, RGB 5-7 frames each at 200 secs each, 75% gain, Brightness 50%, Gamma 0%, Sat 50%, Processed in K3ccdTools, Registax 3, Photoshop, Loreal, PixInsight, Astrowave.

Monday, May 22, 2006

NGC6946 Spiral Galaxy


©2006 Richard Murray

Techno Stuff: 5/23/06, LX90 8" SCT, ATK-2HS, Taurus Mini Tracker, Baader IR, Used 2 focal reducers in tandum - a Taurus .50 and a Mogg .60, Guided with Guidedog, No Darks, 5fps, 61 frames at 100 secs each, 65% gain, Brightness 50%, Gamma 0%, Sat 50%, White Balance nothing selected, Processed in K3ccdTools, Registax 3, Photoshop, Loreal, PixInsight.

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The image below of NGC6946 is a 61 image stack done in Registax before any further processing was done. I know, I can't believe it either! The histogram stretch is a miracle tool for astrophotography. Compare it to the final processed image directly above.


©2006 Richard Murray

Saturday, May 13, 2006

High Velocity Winds From Dying Stars


Chandra's X-ray and Hubble Images

Dynamic elongated clouds envelop bubbles of multimillion degree gas produced by high-velocity winds from dying stars. In these images, Chandra's X-ray data are shown in blue, while green and red are optical and infrared data from Hubble.

read more | digg story

Saturday, April 29, 2006

Nervana








This is what it looked like in my obseratory at 3:00am on the morning of 4/24/06.

My planetarium program is synced perfectly with the telescope, the Sunflower Galaxy is dead center in K3CCDTools and Guidedog is locked on and tracking its guide star.

At this point in time I am either at one with the universe or at one with my machines and probably both. :>)
















©2006 Richard Murray

Friday, April 28, 2006

M94 Spiral Galaxy



©2006 Richard Murray

Techno Stuff: 4/28/06, LX90 8" SCT, ATK-2HS, Taurus Mini Tracker, Baader IR, Used 2 focal reducers in tandum - a Taurus .50 and a Mogg .60, Manually Guided with Guidedog, Darks Used, 5fps, 41 Images at 53 secs each, 55% gain, Brightness 50%, Gamma 20%,Sat 50%, White Balance nothing selected, Processed in K3ccdTools, Registax 3, Photoshop and PixInsight.

Monday, April 24, 2006

M63 Sunflower Galaxy Widefield & Closeup


©2006 Richard Murray

Techno Stuff: 4/24/06, LX90 8" SCT, ATK-2HS, Taurus Mini Tracker, Baader IR, Used 2 focal reducers in tandum - a Taurus .50 and a Mogg .60, Guided with Guidedog, No Darks, 5fps, 24 Images with various exposures and gain levels the best of which seemed to be 40 secs at 80% gain, Brightness 50%, Gamma 20%,Sat 50%, White Balance nothing selected, Processed in K3ccdTools, Registax 3, Photoshop, Loreal and PixInsight.

Friday, April 14, 2006

M3 Globular Cluster


©2006 Richard Murray

Techno Stuff: 3/29/05, LX90 8" SCT, ATK-2HS, Taurus Mini Tracker, Guided, Baader IR, Darks Used, 5fps, 24 x 35 secs, Brightness 50%, Gamma 80%,Sat 50% Gain 75%, White Balance nothing selected, Processed in K3ccdTools, Registax 3, Photoshop, Loreal

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Saturn's Moon 'Best Bet For Life'

That is the view of a senior scientist working on the Cassini spacecraft, which has been studying Saturn and its moons for nearly two years. Dr. Bob Brown told a major conference in Vienna, Austria, Enceladus contains simple organic molecules, water and heat, the ingredients for life.

read more | digg story

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Andromeda Galaxy, "The Little Cloud"


©2006 Richard Murray

The above image of M31, the Andromeda Galaxy, is of the central
core and covers about a third of its actual size. To give you an
idea of how large this object is, 6 full moons stacked end to end
would be about equal to its diameter!

This image is the result of a six hour processing marathon in
Photoshop (an amazing program) with the goal of squeezing
as much detail as possible out of the meager image I was
able to obtain with my 8" SCT telescope and modified webcam.
Here's one raw frame before any processing was done:



If you take a close look at the raw image (that's it - get your nose
right up close to the screen), you can see some of the detail
around the core just ever so faintly visible.

To determine if the detail seen, particularly around the bright central
core is real and not processing artifacts, I scoured the internet for
another image of M31 which shows at least some detail around
the edge of the core itself and this is what I found:



This is an image obtained with the Isaac Newton Telescope by David
Malin: Isaac Newton Telescope

As you can see, there are three objects, two at 1 o'clock and one
at 6 o'clock which indicate that the detail around the core is in
fact real when comparing the two images. My image is tilted from
this one so the objects are at 12 o'clock and 5 o'clock. Looking
closer, you can see that there are two additional confirmation
objects in the Malin image at the 12 o'clock position which also
match my image.

Andromeda is about twice as big as the Milky way with about
twice the number of stars and is the largest of our local group
of 30 galaxies. It is 2.2 million light years away, 125,000
light years in diameter and has a central black hole the size
of 30 million suns.

M31 is one galaxy you'll never have to wonder if we will ever visit
because it's on its way to visit us! It's headed our way at about
68 kilometers per second and in all likelihood will meet us in
a head on collision. Even if Earth happens to be on that side
of the galaxy when it happens, I wouldn't worry too much. The
collision, for our planet, probably won't be too cataclysmic because
,even though galaxies contain many billions of stars, they are
mostly "empty" space and the chance of any given two stars
meeting is quite small. However,galactic collisions can cause drastic
effects on the basic shapes of galaxies. wreak havoc on gas
and dust formations and trigger a large number of new star
formations.

With Andromeda's rapid movement towards us, perhaps a million or
so years from now a stargazer on planet Earth will be treated
to a nightsky view similar to this:


'Andromeda Rise' by Rick Murray

Notes: Up to now only one supernova has been recorded in the
Andromeda Galaxy, called Supernova 1885, which was discovered
by Ernst Hartwig (1851-1923) on August 20, 1885 and was also
the first supernova discovered beyond our Milky Way.

The first known representation of the Andromeda Nebula, as it was
first known, marked with the letter 'A' by Persian astronomer Abd-
Al-Rahman Al Sufi in his 'Book of Fixed Stars' of 964 AD. He called
it the "Little Cloud":



Techno Stuff: 40.5 sec X 48, 24 frames processed, 8" SCT,
Mogg 0.6 fr, Mogg extender for FL 3.3, Baader IR Filter, Toucam
840k SC1.5, Normal Mode, 5 FPS, Brightness 40%, Gamma 25%,
Saturation 45%, White Balance Auto, Gain 75%, Altitude 78 deg.
Polar Mode

In order to get this level of detail, I used a Photoshop gaussian
blur and unsharp masking cycle about four times and was amazed
to see the details literally 'pop out' on the fourth pass.

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Mosaic of First Quarter Moon


©2006 Richard Murray

Techno Stuff: 5/16/05, LX90 8"SCT, Baader IR Filter, 2 6.0 Focal Reducers, ATK -2HS, Mosaic With 3 AVi's: 120 sec each x 5fps, 1/1000 sec, Gain: 40%, Brightness: 35%, Gamma: 20%, Processed in: K3ccdTools, Imerge, Photoshop

Thursday, April 21, 2005

M51 Image Processing (refer to Grayscale Image Processing Tutorial)


©2006 Richard Murray

M51 The Whirlpool Galaxy Below are some of the steps involved in processing the final images.




©2006 Richard Murray

Friday, April 08, 2005

M64 The Blackeye Galaxy



©2006 Richard Murray



Techno Stuff: 4/8/05, LX90 8" SCT, ATK-2HS, Taurus Mini Tracker, Baader IR, Guided, Darks Used, 5fps, 6 x 240 secs, 15 x 480 secs, 6 x 720 secs, Brightness 50%, Gamma 15%,Sat 50% Gain various from 30%-55%, White Balance nothing selected, Processed in K3ccdTools, Registax 3, Photoshop, Loreal, NeatImage.