Wednesday, September 2, 2009
NGC 7000 North America Nebula
Telescope: Skywatcher ED80
Guide scope: Bresser 70/700
Mount: HEQ6 pro autoguided
Camera: QHY8
Guide camera: QHY5
Saturday, June 6, 2009
M8 Lagoon Nebula
M16 Eagle Nebula
Saturday, March 7, 2009
A night in Sounio
Photo by Costas (ckld)
At Saturday February 28 we went to the Sounio area in Attica, in the region north of the temple of Poseidon. The sky there is good considering it's close to Athens. Maybe around 5.5 mag when looking east and at zenith. We were around 10 people, with 6 scopes. It was the official first light for my 6" f5 refractor.
Oh boy! I had some concerns about colour for this scope, but with a William Optics VR-1 filter the colour is little on the very bright stars. I acquired this scope simply for the widefield views, deep sky views in general, and portability. So i knew that it wouldnt do that good in planteray observation. Nevertheless with the filter and by putting the aperture stop on it making it 115mm and f6.5, i could see Saturn almost without any colour abberation. The view was sharp up until 120X. I didnt have a smaller eyepiece with me to try higher mags.
On deep sky the scope rocks! I thought that with the 6 inches of aperture i wouldn't be able to see the popular galaxies that good, but, oh boy, Leo triplet, M81 and M82, the Sombrero, M51 and other galaxies were there clearly visible without averted vision and with detail to be seen. It seems that a 6 inch refractor is actually like a 7 inch Newtonian, due to the lack of central obstruction, and due to the refrctor contrast, it delivers very nice views in many targets. The Double Cluster was glorious, and you could see the stars at M13 even at a lower magnification. The eyepieces that i used were a 13mm Nagler and an 20mm WO swa, and a 2x Televue barlow. Even though the Nagler is a fine eyepiece, i mostly used the 20 swa because it gave brighter views at most objects. I used the barlow with the Nagler at M13 to see if i could reslove the vore, and even though you could see the individual stars, the image wasnt that good at that magnification. It was far more better in the 8 inch Orion Optics Newtonian of a friend of mine, where the stars were resolved more easily at this mag. But hey, i expected that an f5 refractor wouldn't be able to show very good views in high magnifications, mainly due to the chromatic and spherical aberration. But in lower magnifications the views were outstanding.
All in all, we had a very nice night under the stars, and it was almost 3 months since we had a chance for a star party under a crystal clear sky, due to the weather.
After 3 days we went back there with a friend of mine, but the conditions were not good for observing. Although the sky cleared after the moon set, the humidity was high. We had to clean our eyepieces every half a minute or so. I was able though to look through a 32mm eyepiece in my scope. Very nice views. I hadn't taken the EQ6 with me, so i was searching the targets the old fashoned way, with the refractor on a Vixen porta alt az mount. So the 32mm eyepiece was very nice as a finder, and gave stunning views of large objects, like open clusters. :)
Friday, March 6, 2009
Theophilus
Moon mosaic 2
Eratosthenes
Clavius area
Moon mosaic
Saturn
Jupiter
Schiller crater
Nearch craters
Nearch mosaic
Cassini mosaic
Archimedes mosaic
Milky Way
M22 Globular Cluster
Double Cluster
M42 Orion Nebula
M13 globular cluster
Center of IC 1805 Heart Nebula
M46 open cluster
M39 open cluster
M45 Pleiades
M27 Dumbell Nebula
M33 galaxy
M31 Andromeda Galaxy
M31 is the nearest and the largest galaxy in our local galaxies group. It has two smaller gallactic companions, M32 and M110.
Location: Kithaironas mountain, near Attica Greece
Telescope: Skywatcher ED80 at F7.5
Camera: Canon eos 450D at iso 1600
Exposures: lights 5X5 mins, darks 5X5 mins.
Processing: deepskystacker, Photoshop cs3.
Welcome to Starry Nights
This is my amateur astronomy blog. I am Stathis Mexias and i live in Athens Greece. In this blog you can see my astrophotos as well as my observation reports, and other interesting stuff. Observations and imaging are usually made from places around Attica or from my village which is 110km from Athens, in the Peloponnese.
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