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#1
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A few hints of spiral arms on the "missing" side can be seen in the
photo. This one is "sloshed" by interaction with M101 14 LX200R @ f/10, L=6x10' RGB=2x10' all binned 2x2, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#2
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Excellent picture Rick. Both detail and colour is very good. I have this one
also waiting to be processed, but I didn't get a lot of exposure time and it is quite faint.... Stefan "Rick Johnson" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... A few hints of spiral arms on the "missing" side can be seen in the photo. This one is "sloshed" by interaction with M101 14 LX200R @ f/10, L=6x10' RGB=2x10' all binned 2x2, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#3
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here I was expecting to see a drunken galaxy.... that's what I think of when
I hear "sloshed". but this is another that is distorted due to gravitational interaction: how interesting. looks like this one could have used a bit more exposure time. but it's way better than anything I've been able to do lately "Rick Johnson" wrote in message ... A few hints of spiral arms on the "missing" side can be seen in the photo. This one is "sloshed" by interaction with M101 14 LX200R @ f/10, L=6x10' RGB=2x10' all binned 2x2, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#4
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Actually it was sort of a pun as it is a drunken looking galaxy but it
did get sloshed about most of the arms are on one side of the nucleus for now. Come back in a quite a few tens of millions of years and it should be on the other side. From the literature I was reading it really is sloshing back and forth as it orbits M101. I doubt much more time would help much unless I went to your extremes. I already have 60 minutes in with 18 micron pixels. This is one faint guy. Though the nucleus is very bright. Any longer subs and it would have saturated too much to get any detail there. It was burned in using the ST-7 on my 6" f/4 scope. Sorry, I still think in film terms. Rick Richard Crisp wrote: here I was expecting to see a drunken galaxy.... that's what I think of when I hear "sloshed". but this is another that is distorted due to gravitational interaction: how interesting. looks like this one could have used a bit more exposure time. but it's way better than anything I've been able to do lately "Rick Johnson" wrote in message ... A few hints of spiral arms on the "missing" side can be seen in the photo. This one is "sloshed" by interaction with M101 14 LX200R @ f/10, L=6x10' RGB=2x10' all binned 2x2, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#5
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Good shot Rick.. lots of star formation... as one might expect.
-- Regards, Doug W. www.photonsfate.com |
#6
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![]() "Rick Johnson" wrote in message news ![]() Actually it was sort of a pun as it is a drunken looking galaxy but it did get sloshed about most of the arms are on one side of the nucleus for now. Come back in a quite a few tens of millions of years and it should be on the other side. From the literature I was reading it really is sloshing back and forth as it orbits M101. I doubt much more time would help much unless I went to your extremes. I already have 60 minutes in with 18 micron pixels. This is one faint guy. Though the nucleus is very bright. Any longer subs and it would have saturated too much to get any detail there. It was burned in using What sort of ADU counts did you measure in the core region in a subexposure after exposure but before processing? It looks to my eye that you could go a lot longer on subs without saturating the core but you do have some brightish stars that may saturate but they are comfortably away from the main galaxy so even if they get ugly they will not damage anything. the ST-7 on my 6" f/4 scope. Sorry, I still think in film terms. Rick Richard Crisp wrote: here I was expecting to see a drunken galaxy.... that's what I think of when I hear "sloshed". but this is another that is distorted due to gravitational interaction: how interesting. looks like this one could have used a bit more exposure time. but it's way better than anything I've been able to do lately "Rick Johnson" wrote in message ... A few hints of spiral arms on the "missing" side can be seen in the photo. This one is "sloshed" by interaction with M101 14 LX200R @ f/10, L=6x10' RGB=2x10' all binned 2x2, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#7
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This guy is like M42, you really need two exposure times, one for the
nucleus and one for the rest then blend them together, my skills aren't there yet. The flattening of the ABG gate cuts in at about 25,000 ADU but you can live with it to about 40k or so. After that it squashes too much. I can adjust that and likely should. I just haven't done so. You have to take out the power supply to get to the adjustment. Even though I've worked with digital circuits for years I hate even simple surgery on something this expensive. I'm not as steady as I used to be! Anyway the core was in that squashed range making it difficult for me to process with my limited skills. I learn each image but seem to forget as much as I learn. Longer subs with this size field of view is to satellites what a trailer park is to tornado's. Even at 10 minutes I had one on nearly every frame at that high declination. Lower down I average 2 per frame. If two cross on separate frames, even with sigma reject, I get a diamond shaped star. Sometimes they have intense color and are easy to spot. Until my processing skills improve (I've only had PS CS since Christmas so learning and forgetting at a high rate right now) I'm limited in what I tackle successfully. The other night one frame had a super bright satellite that left a braided twisting trail that looked a lot like Saturn's F-ring. I need to see if it was bright enough for Heaven's Above to have it listed. Never seen a wide trail with a single pixel trail running parallel with it before. I'd think the wide field of your Epsilon would be a spider web of trails to deal with. Rick Richard Crisp wrote: "Rick Johnson" wrote in message news ![]() Actually it was sort of a pun as it is a drunken looking galaxy but it did get sloshed about most of the arms are on one side of the nucleus for now. Come back in a quite a few tens of millions of years and it should be on the other side. From the literature I was reading it really is sloshing back and forth as it orbits M101. I doubt much more time would help much unless I went to your extremes. I already have 60 minutes in with 18 micron pixels. This is one faint guy. Though the nucleus is very bright. Any longer subs and it would have saturated too much to get any detail there. It was burned in using What sort of ADU counts did you measure in the core region in a subexposure after exposure but before processing? It looks to my eye that you could go a lot longer on subs without saturating the core but you do have some brightish stars that may saturate but they are comfortably away from the main galaxy so even if they get ugly they will not damage anything. the ST-7 on my 6" f/4 scope. Sorry, I still think in film terms. Rick Richard Crisp wrote: here I was expecting to see a drunken galaxy.... that's what I think of when I hear "sloshed". but this is another that is distorted due to gravitational interaction: how interesting. looks like this one could have used a bit more exposure time. but it's way better than anything I've been able to do lately "Rick Johnson" wrote in message ... A few hints of spiral arms on the "missing" side can be seen in the photo. This one is "sloshed" by interaction with M101 14 LX200R @ f/10, L=6x10' RGB=2x10' all binned 2x2, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#8
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![]() "Rick Johnson" wrote... A few hints of spiral arms on the "missing" side can be seen in the photo. This one is "sloshed" by interaction with M101 Great image Rick! This is a really interesting galaxy. Almost interesting enough for me to get my ol' galaxy dynamics text book out...... ![]() George N |
#9
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no longer have the epsilon
i had to sell it to buy the dream machine the epsilons are still in production but the DMs are not and neither are the sensors in them. "Rick Johnson" wrote in message news ![]() This guy is like M42, you really need two exposure times, one for the nucleus and one for the rest then blend them together, my skills aren't there yet. The flattening of the ABG gate cuts in at about 25,000 ADU but you can live with it to about 40k or so. After that it squashes too much. I can adjust that and likely should. I just haven't done so. You have to take out the power supply to get to the adjustment. Even though I've worked with digital circuits for years I hate even simple surgery on something this expensive. I'm not as steady as I used to be! Anyway the core was in that squashed range making it difficult for me to process with my limited skills. I learn each image but seem to forget as much as I learn. Longer subs with this size field of view is to satellites what a trailer park is to tornado's. Even at 10 minutes I had one on nearly every frame at that high declination. Lower down I average 2 per frame. If two cross on separate frames, even with sigma reject, I get a diamond shaped star. Sometimes they have intense color and are easy to spot. Until my processing skills improve (I've only had PS CS since Christmas so learning and forgetting at a high rate right now) I'm limited in what I tackle successfully. The other night one frame had a super bright satellite that left a braided twisting trail that looked a lot like Saturn's F-ring. I need to see if it was bright enough for Heaven's Above to have it listed. Never seen a wide trail with a single pixel trail running parallel with it before. I'd think the wide field of your Epsilon would be a spider web of trails to deal with. Rick Richard Crisp wrote: "Rick Johnson" wrote in message news ![]() Actually it was sort of a pun as it is a drunken looking galaxy but it did get sloshed about most of the arms are on one side of the nucleus for now. Come back in a quite a few tens of millions of years and it should be on the other side. From the literature I was reading it really is sloshing back and forth as it orbits M101. I doubt much more time would help much unless I went to your extremes. I already have 60 minutes in with 18 micron pixels. This is one faint guy. Though the nucleus is very bright. Any longer subs and it would have saturated too much to get any detail there. It was burned in using What sort of ADU counts did you measure in the core region in a subexposure after exposure but before processing? It looks to my eye that you could go a lot longer on subs without saturating the core but you do have some brightish stars that may saturate but they are comfortably away from the main galaxy so even if they get ugly they will not damage anything. the ST-7 on my 6" f/4 scope. Sorry, I still think in film terms. Rick Richard Crisp wrote: here I was expecting to see a drunken galaxy.... that's what I think of when I hear "sloshed". but this is another that is distorted due to gravitational interaction: how interesting. looks like this one could have used a bit more exposure time. but it's way better than anything I've been able to do lately "Rick Johnson" wrote in message m... A few hints of spiral arms on the "missing" side can be seen in the photo. This one is "sloshed" by interaction with M101 14 LX200R @ f/10, L=6x10' RGB=2x10' all binned 2x2, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
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