I've been spending a lot of time with Palomar and the gang lately, so I ** really ** appreciate your bringing this topic back to center stage, even if only for a moment. This topic would be a good place for some of the astonishing images from the James Webb, as well as other images that advanced technology is going to be delivering soon.
Re the link you provided ... I'm planning to follow the link when I get to a modern machine. Thanks for finding and posting that.
And while I'm on the line here, thanks for ** all ** the research/discovery you've been doing , both inside and outside the forum archive.
Where you find the energy is a mystery to me, but may your star shine brightly!
(th)
]]>Anyway, there's a guy named Croman -- an amateur -- whose photos are being showcased at space.com! Check out the "New Discoveries *3*" thread in the Science & Technology folder, page 6 (last post on that page), post dated June 24. His pics are being compared alongside of Hubble.
I'd love to try my hand at astrophotography some day. Especially solar astrophotography. Nebulae too -- but I'd want to develop colorful pics...the gray-ghostlike images are fine and I know it takes time and effort, but I'd want really pretty stuff to make it worth my while.
--Cindy
]]>Crappy by Hubble standards but descent by backyard standards. I'll do better in the summer I think when I don't freeze to death.
They may not look as clear as Hubble, but the satisfaction in capturing images of the planets is something that you just have to experience. I enjoy looking at pictures from Hubble (and other large pro telescopes) but I get as much pleasure looking at amateur pictures, as I know the time and effort that has gone into taking them.
Keep on taking them through winter, just try wearing more layers than one thick jacket, wear a good pair of gloves and hat - it gets easier standing out on freezing cold nights, after a while you don't even notice it, the excitement alone while I'm observing keeps me warm.
How did you took those pics? mounting your camera on the telescope?
Saturn and Jupiter are very big, they are even so far away, still they are as big as venus on the telescope, and still venus is concentrated near the earth and quite the same as the earth (in weight)
]]>Jupiter: You can almost see the clouds.
Saturn:
Venus: It's so bright in the sky at sunset it's unbelievable. Couldn't get a good focus though.
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