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At the suggestion of a couple of associates, I did a redo of the Crab Morph
and added some details about it on my website. This animation is a morphing of an image of the Crab Nebula taken by me through narrowband emission line filters ([SII], Ha and [OIII]) with a composite image from the Chandra website created by combining Radio, Optical and XRAY data. Credits for the composite image a (Credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Optical: NASA/HST/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Radio: VLA/NRAO) In the case of the emission line images, Red= [SII], Ha= Green and [OIII]= Blue. For the Composite image, Red= Radio, Green= Optical, Blue= XRAY. The animation with several relevant hyperlinks can be found he http://www.rdcrisp.darkhorizons.org/crab_morph_page.htm It is interesting to me to watch how the optical regions transform into radio and xray emitting regions as the animation progresses. From the perspective of visualization of the physical processes at work in The Crab, I suspect this sort of composite and morphing is very useful. Richard Crisp |
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On Tue, 13 Jan 2004 10:57:24 -0600, Richard Crisp wrote
(in message ) : At the suggestion of a couple of associates, I did a redo of the Crab Morph and added some details about it on my website. This animation is a morphing of an image of the Crab Nebula taken by me through narrowband emission line filters ([SII], Ha and [OIII]) with a composite image from the Chandra website created by combining Radio, Optical and XRAY data. Credits for the composite image a (Credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Optical: NASA/HST/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Radio: VLA/NRAO) In the case of the emission line images, Red= [SII], Ha= Green and [OIII]= Blue. For the Composite image, Red= Radio, Green= Optical, Blue= XRAY. The animation with several relevant hyperlinks can be found he http://www.rdcrisp.darkhorizons.org/crab_morph_page.htm It is interesting to me to watch how the optical regions transform into radio and xray emitting regions as the animation progresses. From the perspective of visualization of the physical processes at work in The Crab, I suspect this sort of composite and morphing is very useful. Richard Crisp I think it is much better than your first try, which I still like. Damned hypnotic to watch, but it certainly helps a person see what is powering, and feeding, what. -- Harry F. Leopold aa #2076 AA/Vet #4 The Prints of Darkness "You think atoms like having a half-life?" Incenjucar |
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On Tue, 13 Jan 2004 10:57:24 -0600, Richard Crisp wrote
(in message ) : At the suggestion of a couple of associates, I did a redo of the Crab Morph and added some details about it on my website. This animation is a morphing of an image of the Crab Nebula taken by me through narrowband emission line filters ([SII], Ha and [OIII]) with a composite image from the Chandra website created by combining Radio, Optical and XRAY data. Credits for the composite image a (Credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Optical: NASA/HST/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Radio: VLA/NRAO) In the case of the emission line images, Red= [SII], Ha= Green and [OIII]= Blue. For the Composite image, Red= Radio, Green= Optical, Blue= XRAY. The animation with several relevant hyperlinks can be found he http://www.rdcrisp.darkhorizons.org/crab_morph_page.htm It is interesting to me to watch how the optical regions transform into radio and xray emitting regions as the animation progresses. From the perspective of visualization of the physical processes at work in The Crab, I suspect this sort of composite and morphing is very useful. Richard Crisp I think it is much better than your first try, which I still like. Damned hypnotic to watch, but it certainly helps a person see what is powering, and feeding, what. -- Harry F. Leopold aa #2076 AA/Vet #4 The Prints of Darkness "You think atoms like having a half-life?" Incenjucar |
#4
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On Tue, 13 Jan 2004 10:57:24 -0600, Richard Crisp wrote
(in message ) : At the suggestion of a couple of associates, I did a redo of the Crab Morph and added some details about it on my website. This animation is a morphing of an image of the Crab Nebula taken by me through narrowband emission line filters ([SII], Ha and [OIII]) with a composite image from the Chandra website created by combining Radio, Optical and XRAY data. Credits for the composite image a (Credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Optical: NASA/HST/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Radio: VLA/NRAO) In the case of the emission line images, Red= [SII], Ha= Green and [OIII]= Blue. For the Composite image, Red= Radio, Green= Optical, Blue= XRAY. The animation with several relevant hyperlinks can be found he http://www.rdcrisp.darkhorizons.org/crab_morph_page.htm It is interesting to me to watch how the optical regions transform into radio and xray emitting regions as the animation progresses. From the perspective of visualization of the physical processes at work in The Crab, I suspect this sort of composite and morphing is very useful. Richard Crisp I think it is much better than your first try, which I still like. Damned hypnotic to watch, but it certainly helps a person see what is powering, and feeding, what. -- Harry F. Leopold aa #2076 AA/Vet #4 The Prints of Darkness "You think atoms like having a half-life?" Incenjucar |
#5
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Hi Richard,
That's fantastic! Enjoyed the show! Alan "Richard Crisp" wrote in message ... At the suggestion of a couple of associates, I did a redo of the Crab Morph and added some details about it on my website. This animation is a morphing of an image of the Crab Nebula taken by me through narrowband emission line filters ([SII], Ha and [OIII]) with a composite image from the Chandra website created by combining Radio, Optical and XRAY data. Credits for the composite image a (Credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Optical: NASA/HST/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Radio: VLA/NRAO) In the case of the emission line images, Red= [SII], Ha= Green and [OIII]= Blue. For the Composite image, Red= Radio, Green= Optical, Blue= XRAY. The animation with several relevant hyperlinks can be found he http://www.rdcrisp.darkhorizons.org/crab_morph_page.htm It is interesting to me to watch how the optical regions transform into radio and xray emitting regions as the animation progresses. From the perspective of visualization of the physical processes at work in The Crab, I suspect this sort of composite and morphing is very useful. Richard Crisp |
#6
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Hi Richard,
That's fantastic! Enjoyed the show! Alan "Richard Crisp" wrote in message ... At the suggestion of a couple of associates, I did a redo of the Crab Morph and added some details about it on my website. This animation is a morphing of an image of the Crab Nebula taken by me through narrowband emission line filters ([SII], Ha and [OIII]) with a composite image from the Chandra website created by combining Radio, Optical and XRAY data. Credits for the composite image a (Credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Optical: NASA/HST/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Radio: VLA/NRAO) In the case of the emission line images, Red= [SII], Ha= Green and [OIII]= Blue. For the Composite image, Red= Radio, Green= Optical, Blue= XRAY. The animation with several relevant hyperlinks can be found he http://www.rdcrisp.darkhorizons.org/crab_morph_page.htm It is interesting to me to watch how the optical regions transform into radio and xray emitting regions as the animation progresses. From the perspective of visualization of the physical processes at work in The Crab, I suspect this sort of composite and morphing is very useful. Richard Crisp |
#7
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Hi Richard,
That's fantastic! Enjoyed the show! Alan "Richard Crisp" wrote in message ... At the suggestion of a couple of associates, I did a redo of the Crab Morph and added some details about it on my website. This animation is a morphing of an image of the Crab Nebula taken by me through narrowband emission line filters ([SII], Ha and [OIII]) with a composite image from the Chandra website created by combining Radio, Optical and XRAY data. Credits for the composite image a (Credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Optical: NASA/HST/ASU/J. Hester et al.; Radio: VLA/NRAO) In the case of the emission line images, Red= [SII], Ha= Green and [OIII]= Blue. For the Composite image, Red= Radio, Green= Optical, Blue= XRAY. The animation with several relevant hyperlinks can be found he http://www.rdcrisp.darkhorizons.org/crab_morph_page.htm It is interesting to me to watch how the optical regions transform into radio and xray emitting regions as the animation progresses. From the perspective of visualization of the physical processes at work in The Crab, I suspect this sort of composite and morphing is very useful. Richard Crisp |
#8
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"Alan Chen" wrote in message
That's fantastic! Enjoyed the show! I second that emotion. -- Posted via Mailgate.ORG Server - http://www.Mailgate.ORG |
#9
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"Alan Chen" wrote in message
That's fantastic! Enjoyed the show! I second that emotion. -- Posted via Mailgate.ORG Server - http://www.Mailgate.ORG |
#10
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"Alan Chen" wrote in message
That's fantastic! Enjoyed the show! I second that emotion. -- Posted via Mailgate.ORG Server - http://www.Mailgate.ORG |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
ASTRO: Animation of Crab using Chandra Xray, Radio, Optical and emission line images | Richard Crisp | Astronomy Misc | 7 | January 16th 04 11:30 PM |
ASTRO: Animation of Crab using Chandra Xray, Radio, Optical and emission line images | Richard Crisp | Amateur Astronomy | 24 | January 16th 04 11:30 PM |
ASTRO: revised Crab morph animation | Richard Crisp | Astronomy Misc | 3 | January 14th 04 12:05 PM |