The great things about H-alpha imaging or observing is that you can see significant changes over short periods of time. Here are four images captured today of AR2671 over a one hour period. Looking at these images is a little like looking at those images in magazines where you have to find all the differences. The differences are subtle at first, but the more you look, the more you see.
The trials, tribulations and small triumphs of a Charlotte, NC astronomer imaging under Bortle 8/9 skies.
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In the Heart of the Heart...
The heart of the Heart. This is a stack of 2721 x 10s integrations (7.5 hours). Stacking and initial histogram stretch/star processing in Si...
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I had a couple of emails asking how to defork an ETX telescope. The ETX 90 and ETX 125 were optically superb scopes, but the mounts left a...
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After a long break due to an extended period of cloud and rain here in the Carolinas, I was finally able to get some imaging time. As it...
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The ZEQ25 doing its stuff on a cold night--imaging the Orion Nebula with an 8 inch f/4 astrograph. Note the lovely Christmas rug :) As ...
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