First attempt at time lapse photography of clouds over the Cascades. An image every 15 seconds for 2 hours.
Full Moon - 40 stacked images at 1/200th of a second.
Take a moment to examine the first image. On the left side is a nebula that allows us to imagine the entire North American Continent. Florida and Mexico are clearly visible. On the right side of the image is imagined to be a pelican with its head and beak facing across the Atlantic Ocean towards North America. The Gulf of Mexico Nebula is a dark nebula located in the constellation Cepheus, approximately 500 light-years away from Earth. Unlike emission nebulae, dark nebulae do not emit light and are visible only by blocking out the light from background stars . This is one of the largest dark nebulae in the night sky and spans over 5 degrees in the sky, equivalent to roughly 10 times the size of the full moon. The dark nebula appears as a large, irregularly shaped cloud of dust and gas obscuring the background stars’ light. This makes it a fascinating object for both amateur and professional astronomers to study, as it provides a glimpse into the hidden world of interstellar gas and ...
This image is AI post processed. I returned to the Andromdea Galaxy last night, it is such a rewarding target due to its large size. No enlarging necessary as it fills the screen because of its closeness to our Milky Way Galaxy. This image was 200 60 second exposures stacked . Here is the same image with the stars removed.
After a 6 month wait the new "smart telescope" has arrived. There is no eyepiece to view the celestial objects. Instead, the telescope is linked to your phone or tablet for viewing and images are downloaded when you connect the scope to your desktop. Dwarf 3 telescope First night's images: The Andromeda Galaxy This galaxy is approximately 2.5 million light years from Earth. Thought to be about the same size as the Milky Way Galaxy and it's headed our way. Should arrive in 4 to 5 billion years. Few actual collisions are expected as the stars are so widely distributed with the final result being one much larger galaxy. This is the only object visible to our naked eye that lies outside of the Milky Way. Everything else we see at night, lies within our own galaxy. Here is the same image as it comes off the telscope with zero processing. Here is one more image with the number of background stars reduced through processing.
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