M42
Redo, and a nearly full moon, too
Well,
the holidays have passed, the kids and grandkids are back home. You
would think it would be time for some astronomy. The clouds “think”
differently. However, the night of January 12th finally
saw the parting of the clouds long enough to allow for a few images
to be taken. It also allowed me to try a new toy that I got for
Christmas: a T ring. What is a T ring? Thank you for asking. It is
basically an adapter that allows a DSLR to connect directly to the
telescope by replacing the lens. In effect,the telescope now becomes
the camera lens. So, what did this test session produce? Let's see.
Really, you don't know what this is? |
You
don't need to have a degree in astronomy to guess what this is. The
DLSR allows a fairly large field of view and importantly, a short
exposure time. It's the short exposure time that allows this image of
the moon.
A
few minutes after the full moon image, I moved over to M42, the Great
Orion Nebula. This area is, as noted before, a star forming region in
the constellation of Orion. Noted before? When? Well, that would be
September 24, 2016. However, the image taken then wasn't published.
So, what did that look like? See below!
M42 taken with ZWO, the planetary camera |
This
image was taken with the camera I usually use for imaging the moon
and planets. It's a “one shot color” camera that works like a
webcam. It actually takes videos. Then the individual frames of the
video are “stacked” to make a single image. With this
arrangement, I can't guide the scope, meaning correcting for tracking
errors, so the stars are slightly elongated.
M42 taken with Canon 450D, 10 Sec exposure |
M42 taken with Canon 450D, 60 Sec exposure |
Both
images are were taken with the DSLR, but for different lengths of
time. The first, or top, one is a 10 second exposure. The second, or
bottom one is a one minute exposure. The top one shows the stars of
the Trapezium better (that would be the four stars that looks like a
little like a rectangle). The bottom one shows the surrounding nebula
better at the expense of overexposing the Trapezium. These images are
also unguided, but don't look too bad. All in all, I am pleased with
the results of this experiment.
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