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I haven't had much to post on TSS lately.
At this time of year, at my latitude, I don't get dark skies.
I do, however, have increased chances of catching some of these.
Hmmm... Somehow the saturation looks very high in the version I've uploaded. It might be my browser's settings.
When I view my original in Photoshop and on desktop image preview, the colours are more subtle, but certainly still there.
See Far Sticks: Antares Elita 103/1575, AOM FLT 105/1000, Bresser BV 127/1200, Nočný stopár 152/1200, Vyrobené doma 70/700, Stellarvue NHNG DX 80/552, TAL RS100/1000, Vixen SD115s/885 EQ: TAL MT-1, Vixen SXP, AXJ, AXD Az/Alt: AYO Digi II/ Argo Navis, Stellarvue M2C/ Argo Navis Tripods: Berlebach Planet (2), Uni 28 Astro, Report 372, TAL factory maple, Vixen ASG-CB90, Vixen AXD-TR102 Diagonals: Astro-Physics, Baader Amici, Baader Herschel, iStar Blue, Stellarvue DX, Takahashi prism, TAL, Vixen flip mirror Eyepieces: Antares to Zeiss The only culture I have is from yogurt My day was going well until... people
Gordon
Scopes: Explore Scientific ED80CF, Skywatcher 200 Quattro Imaging Newt, SeeStar S50 for EAA.
Mounts: Orion Atlas EQ-g mount & Skywatcher EQ5 Pro.
ZWO mini guider.
Image cameras: ZWO ASI1600 MM Cool, ZWO ASI533mc-Pro, ZWO ASI174mm-C (for use with my Quark chromosphere), ZWO ASI120MC
Filters: LRGB, Ha 7nm, O-III 7nm, S-II 7nm
Eyepieces: a few.
Primary software: Cartes du Ciel, N.I.N.A, StarTools V1.4.
Nice image Stephen and congrats on winning today's APOD!
-Michael Refractors: ES AR152 f/6.5 Achromat on Twilight II, Celestron 102mm XLT f/9.8 on Celestron Heavy Duty Alt Az mount, KOWA 90mm spotting scope Binoculars: Celestron SkyMaster 15x70, Bushnell 10x50 Eyepieces: Various, GSO Superview, 9mm Plossl, Celestron 25mm Plossl Camera: ZWO ASI 120 Naked Eye: Two Eyeballs Latitude: 48.7229° N
Hi Steven. Well, you were in the right northern latitude and very observant at the right time to catch this phenomenon. This is a fantastic nightscape of the noctilucent clouds. They usually start after the Summer Solstice, and you caught the beautiful striations of the ice crystal clouds (and sometimes with rising methane gas to emphasize their appearance) high up in the mesosphere at astronomical twilight. I love the details and colors in your capture and it is well framed. This is textbook quality work Steven, and congratulations on winning the well deserved TSSAPOD Award today.
Marshall
Sky-Watcher 90mm f/13.8 Maksutov-Cassegrain on motorized Multimount
Orion Astroview 120ST f/5 Refractor on EQ3 mount
Celestron Comet Catcher 140mm f/3.64 Schmidt-Newtonian on alt-az mount
Celestron Omni XLT150R f/5 Refractor on CG4 mount with dual axis drives.
Orion 180mm f/15 Maksutov-Cassegrain on CG5-GT Goto mount.
Orion XT12i 12" f/4.9 Dobsonian Intelliscope.
Kamakura 7x35 Binoculars and Celestron SkyMaster 15x70 Binoculars. ZWO ASI 120MC camera.
>)))))*>
By the way, I've got more. The following day the NLC's were even more spectacular, reaching almost overhead. I didn't know that was even possible.
Unfortunately I was without my camera until I could walk a long way back to the house, pick it up, and walk back out. By then they were much diminished, and in my hurry, I didn't swap a suitable lens on it.
I'm still a little nonplussed by the way my browser's colour palette has gone extremely saturated. Either you aren't seeing the blob of cyan that I'm seeing on your screens, or you all actually like it that way!