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Dear Friends,
One of the most stunning globular clusters visible from northern latitudes is M13 in Hercules and which is currently well-placed right now for observation and imaging. For an image of M13 based on two-hours total exposure, please see http://www.perseus.gr/Astro-DSO-NGC-6205.htm ... please make sure you click on the hyperlinked image to load the same image but with much better image scale. Weather permitting this evening, I will pursue M92 also in Hercules and also an impressive globular on its own. Clear skies! Anthony. |
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Anthony Ayiomamitis wrote:
Newsgroups: sci.astro.amateur,uk.sci.astronomy Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2007 8:42 AM Subject: M13 - Great Globular in Hercules One of the most stunning globular clusters visible from northern latitudes is M13 in Hercules and which is currently well-placed right now for observation and imaging. For an image of M13 based on two-hours total exposure, please see http://www.perseus.gr/Astro-DSO-NGC-6205.htm ... please make sure you click on the hyperlinked image to load the same image but with much better image scale. Weather permitting this evening, I will pursue M92 also in Hercules and also an impressive globular on its own. Stunning, Anthony. Stunning. You've captured the most sharply-defined stars I've ever seen in an image of M13 - and right to the core, too. Just beautiful! I look forward to your image of M92 (sometimes my favorite globular) with great anticipation. Clear Dark Steady Skies, Dave Jessie |
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On Wed, 16 May 2007 15:42:36 +0300, Anthony Ayiomamitis
wrote: Dear Friends, One of the most stunning globular clusters visible from northern latitudes is M13 in Hercules and which is currently well-placed right now for observation and imaging. For an image of M13 based on two-hours total exposure, please see http://www.perseus.gr/Astro-DSO-NGC-6205.htm ... please make sure you click on the hyperlinked image to load the same image but with much better image scale. Weather permitting this evening, I will pursue M92 also in Hercules and also an impressive globular on its own. Beautiful work Mr Ayiomamitis :-) -- Pete http://www.digitalsky.org.uk |
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On May 16, 7:42 am, Anthony Ayiomamitis
wrote: Dear Friends, One of the most stunning globular clusters visible from northern latitudes is M13 in Hercules and which is currently well-placed right now for observation and imaging. For an image of M13 based on two-hours total exposure, please seehttp://www.perseus.gr/Astro-DSO-NGC-6205.htm... please make sure you click on the hyperlinked image to load the same image but with much better image scale. Anthony, Splendid image. The resolution is unbelieveable. Ben |
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On May 16, 1:42 pm, Anthony Ayiomamitis
wrote: Dear Friends, One of the most stunning globular clusters visible from northern latitudes is M13 in Hercules and which is currently well-placed right now for observation and imaging. For an image of M13 based on two-hours total exposure, please seehttp://www.perseus.gr/Astro-DSO-NGC-6205.htm... please make sure you click on the hyperlinked image to load the same image but with much better image scale. Weather permitting this evening, I will pursue M92 also in Hercules and also an impressive globular on its own. Clear skies! Anthony. Look at the constellation Hercules being 'pursued' by M92 - http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/public/AList/Hercules.jpg I guess your astrological framework can join your variable tilting Earth analemma.Any chance of you lot taking up birdwatching where you can do less damage and still enjoy yourselves. |
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oriel36 wrote:
On May 16, 1:42 pm, Anthony Ayiomamitis wrote: Dear Friends, One of the most stunning globular clusters visible from northern latitudes is M13 in Hercules and which is currently well-placed right now for observation and imaging. For an image of M13 based on two-hours total exposure, please seehttp://www.perseus.gr/Astro-DSO-NGC-6205.htm... please make sure you click on the hyperlinked image to load the same image but with much better image scale. Weather permitting this evening, I will pursue M92 also in Hercules and also an impressive globular on its own. Clear skies! Anthony. Gerald, Look at the constellation Hercules being 'pursued' by M92 - http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/public/AList/Hercules.jpg I guess your astrological framework can join your variable tilting Earth analemma.Any chance of you lot taking up birdwatching where you can do less damage and still enjoy yourselves. I have just the task for you and your intellect ... count all the stars in the photo. I realize you may have problems once you get into double digits but use match-sticks. Anthony Analemmatis. |
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On May 16, 8:01 pm, Anthony Ayiomamitis
wrote: oriel36 wrote: On May 16, 1:42 pm, Anthony Ayiomamitis wrote: Dear Friends, One of the most stunning globular clusters visible from northern latitudes is M13 in Hercules and which is currently well-placed right now for observation and imaging. For an image of M13 based on two-hours total exposure, please seehttp://www.perseus.gr/Astro-DSO-NGC-6205.htm... please make sure you click on the hyperlinked image to load the same image but with much better image scale. Weather permitting this evening, I will pursue M92 also in Hercules and also an impressive globular on its own. Clear skies! Anthony. Gerald, Look at the constellation Hercules being 'pursued' by M92 - http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/public/AList/Hercules.jpg I guess your astrological framework can join your variable tilting Earth analemma.Any chance of you lot taking up birdwatching where you can do less damage and still enjoy yourselves. I have just the task for you and your intellect ... count all the stars in the photo. I realize you may have problems once you get into double digits but use match-sticks. Anthony Analemmatis.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Your mockery blows back in your face for you all are astrologers with telescopes and cameras. I would never have believed that every single person here is a sub- geocentric astrologer who detests the genuine Western astronomical jewels represented by Copernican heliocentricity and the adaption of the Equation of Time system which gives us the 24 hour/360 deg correlation between the axial cycle and clocks. The big institutions disgrace themselves before the careful work of so many,many great structural and timekeeping astronomers by adopting correlations that cannot support heliocentric reasoning - http://hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/JennyChen.shtml My task indeed, ! you feel nothing as is your condition yet I bear the responsibility of overturning centuries of indulgences by people who have no regard for human achievement even with the original texts in front of them.You do not mock me ,you mock Huiygens,Copernicus,Harrsion,the careful pre-heliocentric observers who plotted the position of celestial objects,the astronomical timekeepers and their pragmatic systems and for what !. It is not your presence with your stupid 17th century analemma creation that is the difficult part,it is the absence of genuine people who recognise just how gorgeous the actual thinking behind the clock/axial cycle correlation and Copernican reasoning actually is. |
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![]() "Anthony Ayiomamitis" ha scritto nel messaggio ... Dear Friends, One of the most stunning globular clusters visible from northern latitudes is M13 in Hercules and which is currently well-placed right now for observation and imaging. Chapeau!!! --- Beta Persei 45° 35' N 08° 51' E remove "_nospam" to reply |
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Beta Persei wrote:
"Anthony Ayiomamitis" ha scritto nel messaggio ... Dear Friends, One of the most stunning globular clusters visible from northern latitudes is M13 in Hercules and which is currently well-placed right now for observation and imaging. Chapeau!!! Thank you Franco, Pete, Sam and Ben. Your comments are very much appreciated. Anthony. --- Beta Persei 45° 35' N 08° 51' E remove "_nospam" to reply |
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"Anthony Ayiomamitis" wrote in message
... Dear Friends, One of the most stunning globular clusters visible from northern latitudes is M13 in Hercules and which is currently well-placed right now for observation and imaging. For an image of M13 based on two-hours total exposure, please see http://www.perseus.gr/Astro-DSO-NGC-6205.htm ... please make sure you click on the hyperlinked image to load the same image but with much better image scale. Weather permitting this evening, I will pursue M92 also in Hercules and also an impressive globular on its own. By Jove! Absolutely beautiful! Is there any chance you can pursue M22, Antoni? Excellent work! Clear skies! Anthony. -- I.N. Galidakis --- http://ioannis.virtualcomposer2000.com/ ---------------------------------------------------------- "There's ALWAYS a mistake somewhere" |
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