M1-110 Gordons EAA Adventures

Sub forum for submission of Messier EAA Images.
Post Reply
User avatar
Gordon United States of America
Site Admin
Site Admin
Articles: 1046
Online
Posts: 8391
Joined: Wed Apr 24, 2019 10:52 pm
5
Location: Cottonwood, AZ
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

I Broke The Forum.

TSS EAA Messier awards

M1-110 Gordons EAA Adventures

#1

Post by Gordon »


Here's my start. I will be adding more as I go along and will let the TEAM know when I hit each level.

Captured using a SeeStar S50. Images are all captured using only the SeeStar internal processing.

Hope you enjoy my journey!


https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/ ... sp=sharing
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.

Image
User avatar
Graeme1858 Great Britain
Co-Administrator
Co-Administrator
Articles: 1
Online
Posts: 7453
Joined: Mon Jun 24, 2019 7:16 pm
4
Location: North Kent, UK
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

I Broke The Forum.

Re: M1-40

#2

Post by Graeme1858 »


Looking forward to seeing what the SeeStar can do Gordon.

Enjoy the journey.

Graeme
______________________________________________
Celestron 9.25 f10 SCT, f6.3FR, CGX mount.
ASI1600MM Pro, ASI294MC Pro, ASI224MC
ZWO EFW, ZWO OAG, ASI220MM Mini.
APM 11x70 ED APO Binoculars.

https://www.averywayobservatory.co.uk/
User avatar
Bigzmey United States of America
Moderator
Moderator
Articles: 8
Online
Posts: 7672
Joined: Sat May 11, 2019 7:55 pm
4
Location: San Diego, CA USA
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

Re: M1-40

#3

Post by Bigzmey »


Nice captures Gordon! SeeStar is the little telescope which can. :)
Scopes: Stellarvue: SV102ED; Celestron: 9.25" EdgeHD, 8" SCT, 150ST, Onyx 80ED; iOptron: Hankmeister 6" Mak; SW: 7" Mak; Meade: 80ST.
Mounts: SW: SkyTee2, AzGTi; iOptron: AZMP; ES: Twilight I; Bresser: EXOS2; UA: MicroStar.
Binos: APM: 100-90 APO; Canon: IS 15x50; Orion: Binoviewer, LG II 15x70, WV 10x50, Nikon: AE 16x50, 10x50, 8x40.
EPs: Pentax: XWs & XFs; TeleVue: Delites, Panoptic & Plossls; ES: 68, 62; Vixen: SLVs; Baader: BCOs, Aspherics, Mark IV.
Diagonals: Baader: BBHS mirror, Zeiss Spec T2 prism, Clicklock dielectric; TeleVue: Evebrite dielectric; AltairAstro: 2" prism.
Filters: Lumicon: DeepSky, UHC, OIII, H-beta; Baader: Moon & SkyGlow, Contrast Booster, UHC-S, 6-color set; Astronomik: UHC.
Solar: HA: Lunt 50mm single stack, W/L: Meade Herschel wedge.

Observing: DSOs: 3106 (Completed: Messier, Herschel 1, 2, 3. In progress: H2,500: 2180, S110: 77). Doubles: 2437, Comets: 34, Asteroids: 257
User avatar
Ben Cartwright SASS
Orion Spur Ambassador
Articles: 0
Offline
Posts: 659
Joined: Fri May 17, 2019 10:39 am
4
Location: SE New England
Status:
Offline

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

Re: M1-40

#4

Post by Ben Cartwright SASS »


OK challenge accepted, I started the Seestar Messier Challenge, now if we could just get some clear weather, the last 2 months have been totally overcast, all the people with solar panels are complaining!
I might not always be right but I am never wrong, once I thought I was wrong, but I was mistaken...

Ferengi Rule of Acquisition #59
Free advice is seldom cheap

"Sometimes having is not so pleasing as wanting, it's not logical but it is true"
Commander Spock

Canon DSLR's R7, R6II, 5D, 7D2, 90D 21 lenses incl. 100-400L mk ii, 70-200L mk iii f/2.8, RF600/11
Lunt LS50 DS, LS80 DS, Lunt 102ED, Stellarvue SV80 APO, Orion ST80, 127 MAK, Skywatcher Evostar 120ED, 102 MAK, Celestron 8" Edge HD, 102AZ
Skywatcher EQ6-R Pro
ZWO ASI071MC-cool, ASI174mm, ASI174mm-cool, ASI178MC-cool, ASI290 mini, ASI120MM-S, ASI120MC Revolution Player One mm (178 chip)
User avatar
Gordon United States of America
Site Admin
Site Admin
Articles: 1046
Online
Posts: 8391
Joined: Wed Apr 24, 2019 10:52 pm
5
Location: Cottonwood, AZ
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

I Broke The Forum.

TSS EAA Messier awards

Re: M1-40

#5

Post by Gordon »


I added a few more from last night (2-14-2024).

I love using this scope!
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.

Image
User avatar
AstroBee United States of America
Moderator
Moderator
Articles: 0
Offline
Posts: 2290
Joined: Thu Nov 14, 2019 11:03 pm
4
Location: Henderson, NV
Status:
Offline

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

Re: M1-40

#6

Post by AstroBee »


Very nice Gordon. My favorite open cluster, M-40, with that embedded planetary nebula looks really nice.
Greg M.~ "Ad Astra per Aspera"
Scopes: Celestron EdgeHD14", Explore Scientific ED152CF & ED127 APO's, StellarVue SV70T, Classic Orange-Tube C-8, Lunt 80mm Ha double-stack solar scope.
Mounts: Astro-Physics Mach One, iOptron CEM70EC Mount, iOptron ZEQ25 Mount.
Cameras: ZWO ASI2600mm Pro, ZWO 2600MC Pro, ZWO ASI1600mm
Filters: 36mm Chroma LRGB & 3nm Ha, OIII, SII, L-Pro, L-eXtreme
Eyepieces: 27mm TeleVue Panoptic, 4mm TeleVue Radian, Explore Scientific 82° 30mm, 6.7mm , Baader 13mm Hyperion, Explore Scientific 70° 10mm, 15mm, 20mm, Meade 8.8mm UWA
Software: N.I.N.A., SharpCapPro, PixInsight, PhotoShop CC, Phd2, Stellarium
https://www.nevadadesertskies.com
User avatar
Gordon United States of America
Site Admin
Site Admin
Articles: 1046
Online
Posts: 8391
Joined: Wed Apr 24, 2019 10:52 pm
5
Location: Cottonwood, AZ
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

I Broke The Forum.

TSS EAA Messier awards

Re: M1-40

#7

Post by Gordon »


AstroBee wrote: Thu Feb 15, 2024 7:46 pm Very nice Gordon. My favorite open cluster, M-40, with that embedded planetary nebula looks really nice.
Do you mean M46?
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.

Image
User avatar
Graeme1858 Great Britain
Co-Administrator
Co-Administrator
Articles: 1
Online
Posts: 7453
Joined: Mon Jun 24, 2019 7:16 pm
4
Location: North Kent, UK
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

I Broke The Forum.

Re: M1-40

#8

Post by Graeme1858 »


Gordon wrote: Thu Feb 15, 2024 7:41 pm I added a few more from last night (2-14-2024).

I love using this scope!

That list is starting to look quite lengthy now Gordon!

Graeme
______________________________________________
Celestron 9.25 f10 SCT, f6.3FR, CGX mount.
ASI1600MM Pro, ASI294MC Pro, ASI224MC
ZWO EFW, ZWO OAG, ASI220MM Mini.
APM 11x70 ED APO Binoculars.

https://www.averywayobservatory.co.uk/
User avatar
AstroBee United States of America
Moderator
Moderator
Articles: 0
Offline
Posts: 2290
Joined: Thu Nov 14, 2019 11:03 pm
4
Location: Henderson, NV
Status:
Offline

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

Re: M1-40

#9

Post by AstroBee »


Gordon wrote: Thu Feb 15, 2024 8:03 pm
AstroBee wrote: Thu Feb 15, 2024 7:46 pm Very nice Gordon. My favorite open cluster, M-40, with that embedded planetary nebula looks really nice.
Do you mean M46?
Yes, sorry about the typo.
Greg M.~ "Ad Astra per Aspera"
Scopes: Celestron EdgeHD14", Explore Scientific ED152CF & ED127 APO's, StellarVue SV70T, Classic Orange-Tube C-8, Lunt 80mm Ha double-stack solar scope.
Mounts: Astro-Physics Mach One, iOptron CEM70EC Mount, iOptron ZEQ25 Mount.
Cameras: ZWO ASI2600mm Pro, ZWO 2600MC Pro, ZWO ASI1600mm
Filters: 36mm Chroma LRGB & 3nm Ha, OIII, SII, L-Pro, L-eXtreme
Eyepieces: 27mm TeleVue Panoptic, 4mm TeleVue Radian, Explore Scientific 82° 30mm, 6.7mm , Baader 13mm Hyperion, Explore Scientific 70° 10mm, 15mm, 20mm, Meade 8.8mm UWA
Software: N.I.N.A., SharpCapPro, PixInsight, PhotoShop CC, Phd2, Stellarium
https://www.nevadadesertskies.com
User avatar
jrkirkham United States of America
Orion Spur Ambassador
Articles: 0
Offline
Posts: 950
Joined: Fri Jun 07, 2019 12:37 am
4
Location: Illinois United States
Status:
Offline

TSS Photo of the Day

TSS Awards Badges

Re: M1-40

#10

Post by jrkirkham »


I am curious. Is there a sweet spot for the number of frames you can take or does the picture just keep improving as long as new frames are added to the stack?
Rob
Telescopes: 50mm refractor, ED80 triplet, 90mm makcass, 10" dob, 8"SCT, 11"SCT
Mounts: Celestron CGX, Orion Sirius + several camera tripods
Cameras: Canon 6D, Canon 80D, ZWO-ASI120MC
Binoculars: 10x50, 12x60, 15x70, 25-125x80
Observatory: SkyShed POD XL3 + 8x12 warm room
AL Projects Completed: Lunar #645, Outreach #0280, Universe Sampler #93-T, Binocular Messier #871, Messier #2521, Messier Honorary #2521, Constellation Hunter Northern Skies #112, Planetary Transit Venus #1, Galileo #26, Outreach Stellar 0280, Meteor Regular #157, Solar System Telescopic #209-I, Observer Award #1
AL Projects Currently in Process: Double Stars, Comet, Lunar Evolution
User avatar
Ben Cartwright SASS
Orion Spur Ambassador
Articles: 0
Offline
Posts: 659
Joined: Fri May 17, 2019 10:39 am
4
Location: SE New England
Status:
Offline

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

Re: M1-40

#11

Post by Ben Cartwright SASS »


jrkirkham wrote: Fri Feb 16, 2024 5:05 am I am curious. Is there a sweet spot for the number of frames you can take or does the picture just keep improving as long as new frames are added to the stack?
I am sure that Gordon will chime in but I thought I would put in my 2 cents worth. First it depends on the target, Nebulas, at least faint ones want the most exposure, I would say open clusters and maybe the globulars as well as large bright nebulas the least, it is amazing what you can do with Orion with just a couple minutes.

More exposure gives more depth and also reduces noise in the image. but as you give more exposure it becomes less of an impact, There is a mathematical formula to tell why and what. As you give more exposure the noise is reduced or "cancelled out" to a large part.

BUT with an Alt/az mount you start to get field rotation, i.e. the upper left and lower right corners will not show any exposure when the image is stacked. The seestar or most stacking software will crop to the common area, although on a long exposure that can be a lot of cropping.

Due to field rotation you are better off doing 15 or 20 minute exposures over several days, we get about one clear night a week or so and lately Chicago has nothing on us for wind, steady winds 10 mph and gusts to 50 mph

Here is a single 10 second sub of Orion then a 10 minute exposure, stacked by the Seestar and then one showing field rotation.

the second shot was stacked and cropped by the Seestar internal software
M42 10 seconds.jpg
M42 10 minutes.jpg
M42 lighter.jpg
I might not always be right but I am never wrong, once I thought I was wrong, but I was mistaken...

Ferengi Rule of Acquisition #59
Free advice is seldom cheap

"Sometimes having is not so pleasing as wanting, it's not logical but it is true"
Commander Spock

Canon DSLR's R7, R6II, 5D, 7D2, 90D 21 lenses incl. 100-400L mk ii, 70-200L mk iii f/2.8, RF600/11
Lunt LS50 DS, LS80 DS, Lunt 102ED, Stellarvue SV80 APO, Orion ST80, 127 MAK, Skywatcher Evostar 120ED, 102 MAK, Celestron 8" Edge HD, 102AZ
Skywatcher EQ6-R Pro
ZWO ASI071MC-cool, ASI174mm, ASI174mm-cool, ASI178MC-cool, ASI290 mini, ASI120MM-S, ASI120MC Revolution Player One mm (178 chip)
User avatar
Gordon United States of America
Site Admin
Site Admin
Articles: 1046
Online
Posts: 8391
Joined: Wed Apr 24, 2019 10:52 pm
5
Location: Cottonwood, AZ
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

I Broke The Forum.

TSS EAA Messier awards

Re: M1-40

#12

Post by Gordon »


jrkirkham wrote: Fri Feb 16, 2024 5:05 am I am curious. Is there a sweet spot for the number of frames you can take or does the picture just keep improving as long as new frames are added to the stack?
I agree with what Jeff said. Typically with clusters/galaxies, I can get away with 5 minutes of 10-second images. But If it's a nebula then the times start stretching. Even with galaxies and clusters, more images will help reduce the noise and bring out more detail.

With doing the Messiers for the contest I'm trying to capture as many in a night as I can using a 4-hour window. The weather has been a factor so I have to catch as many as possible when the sky is cooperating.
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.

Image
User avatar
Gordon United States of America
Site Admin
Site Admin
Articles: 1046
Online
Posts: 8391
Joined: Wed Apr 24, 2019 10:52 pm
5
Location: Cottonwood, AZ
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

I Broke The Forum.

TSS EAA Messier awards

Re: M1-110 Gordons EAA Adventures

#13

Post by Gordon »


I had a productive night last night as was able to add a bunch more!

Click on the link in the topic starter and you can see my progress.

I'm up to 62 now and plan on trying for more tonight!
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.

Image
User avatar
TSS TEAM United States of America
Earth Ambassador
Articles: 0
Offline
Posts: 48
Joined: Tue Feb 13, 2024 6:49 pm
Location: USA
Status:
Offline

Re: M1-110 Gordons EAA Adventures

#14

Post by TSS TEAM »


Excellent progress Gordon.

Congratulations on reaching the 40 EAA Images Challenge Target!

Please see the Certificate attached and the Profile Flair bling awarded.

Regards

TSS Team
Attachments
Gordon_EAA_Messier_40 Award_Certificate_041024.pdf
(617.09 KiB) Downloaded 14 times
User avatar
Gordon United States of America
Site Admin
Site Admin
Articles: 1046
Online
Posts: 8391
Joined: Wed Apr 24, 2019 10:52 pm
5
Location: Cottonwood, AZ
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

I Broke The Forum.

TSS EAA Messier awards

Re: M1-110 Gordons EAA Adventures

#15

Post by Gordon »


Thanks!!!
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.

Image
User avatar
helicon United States of America
Co-Administrator
Co-Administrator
Articles: 592
Online
Posts: 12374
Joined: Mon May 06, 2019 1:35 pm
4
Location: Washington
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

Re: M1-110 Gordons EAA Adventures

#16

Post by helicon »


Congrats Gordon!
-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
User avatar
Bigzmey United States of America
Moderator
Moderator
Articles: 8
Online
Posts: 7672
Joined: Sat May 11, 2019 7:55 pm
4
Location: San Diego, CA USA
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

Re: M1-110 Gordons EAA Adventures

#17

Post by Bigzmey »


Congrats on M40 EAA Gordon!
Scopes: Stellarvue: SV102ED; Celestron: 9.25" EdgeHD, 8" SCT, 150ST, Onyx 80ED; iOptron: Hankmeister 6" Mak; SW: 7" Mak; Meade: 80ST.
Mounts: SW: SkyTee2, AzGTi; iOptron: AZMP; ES: Twilight I; Bresser: EXOS2; UA: MicroStar.
Binos: APM: 100-90 APO; Canon: IS 15x50; Orion: Binoviewer, LG II 15x70, WV 10x50, Nikon: AE 16x50, 10x50, 8x40.
EPs: Pentax: XWs & XFs; TeleVue: Delites, Panoptic & Plossls; ES: 68, 62; Vixen: SLVs; Baader: BCOs, Aspherics, Mark IV.
Diagonals: Baader: BBHS mirror, Zeiss Spec T2 prism, Clicklock dielectric; TeleVue: Evebrite dielectric; AltairAstro: 2" prism.
Filters: Lumicon: DeepSky, UHC, OIII, H-beta; Baader: Moon & SkyGlow, Contrast Booster, UHC-S, 6-color set; Astronomik: UHC.
Solar: HA: Lunt 50mm single stack, W/L: Meade Herschel wedge.

Observing: DSOs: 3106 (Completed: Messier, Herschel 1, 2, 3. In progress: H2,500: 2180, S110: 77). Doubles: 2437, Comets: 34, Asteroids: 257
Post Reply

Create an account or sign in to join the discussion

You need to be a member in order to post a reply

Create an account

Not a member? register to join our community
Members can start their own topics & subscribe to topics
It’s free and only takes a minute

Register

Sign in

Return to “Messier EAA Images”