It turns out that there was just a bit too much noise in the high ISO images I took of comet Jacques back on August 26th. Stacking and processing them in PixInsight revealed a slightly better view of the nucleus/coma of the comet, but the improvement was marginal at best. If there is a tail in there I didn't capture it.
Thursday, September 4, 2014
Saturday, August 30, 2014
Comet Jacques - Part 2
While I'm still processing the closeup images of comet Jacques from August 26, I couldn't resist the clear skies we got in Maryland this past Thursday and Friday evenings. Although I'm still calibrating the new motor control unit on my telescope mount I was able to image Jacques as well as M103 (Star cluster) and M15 (Globular Cluster).
For the comet I decided to image sixty 30 second images and put them together into an animated gif so you can see the rate at which the comet is traversing the sky. I actually only imaged 41 photos since I was fighting off dew and other issues but the animation is still kinda cool.
For the comet I decided to image sixty 30 second images and put them together into an animated gif so you can see the rate at which the comet is traversing the sky. I actually only imaged 41 photos since I was fighting off dew and other issues but the animation is still kinda cool.
![]() |
Comet Jacques August 29, 1:25-1:47 AM Celestron EdgeHD-11 |
Thursday, August 28, 2014
Comet Jacques
Initial image of comet C/2014 E2 Jacques
Here is the initial (no post processing to remove noise and bad pixel artifacts) image of the nucleus of comet Jacques taken on August 26, 2014. This is the result of 60 individual 30 second images of the comet taken through a Celestron EdgeHD-11" telescope at prime focus (108x magnification).The dimmer dotted lines are bad pixels. The brighter dotted line is the result of a star image drifting in the field of view since the stacked images were centered on the comet and the comet was moving pretty rapidly during the 30 minutes of total imaging time.
I will be removing noise and bad pixels later and will repost the hopefully improved image.
![]() |
Comet C/2014 E2 (Jacques) Celestron EdgeHD-11" (prime focus)/Canon 50D 60x30sec ISO-1600 (30min total) |
Where's the Lithium?
Measurement at Big Bang Conditions Confirms Lithium Problem
Lithium, aside from hydrogen and helium, is one of the three elements that are created before the first stars form. These three elements were – according to the theory – already created early on, through what is known as “primordial nucleosynthesis.”But, many observations of astronomers show that the oldest stars in our Milky Way contain only half as much lithium-7 as predicted. So where is all the missing Lithium?
See the complete article at: HZDR
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
Back in Action!
Well the new motor board arrived on Saturday - but I was at the dump taking care of household chores. Of course, the shipment required a signature and so it went back to the Post Office. No worry, the sky was cloudy and rainy all weekend anyhow.
Wifey picked up the package at the PO on Monday (they didn't ask for a signature!) and I installed it that evening. Checked out the mount for the basic operations and all seemed OK. Didn't have the time to test the guiding system yet - hope to do that this Friday when skies are supposed to be clear and the humidity low.
Wifey picked up the package at the PO on Monday (they didn't ask for a signature!) and I installed it that evening. Checked out the mount for the basic operations and all seemed OK. Didn't have the time to test the guiding system yet - hope to do that this Friday when skies are supposed to be clear and the humidity low.
Thursday, July 31, 2014
Disaster - sorta!
Well, it had to happen. As anyone who knows about the "Mangieri Cloud", technology and the local Mangieri household don't get along. It seems that whatever I buy, build, assemble, or otherwise acquire will very soon develop a problem. This is how the cloud works. I even told a salesclerk in a local store that I wanted to exchange a product while I was still in the checkout line. When asked why I told her: "to save me the trouble of getting home, finding the item to be defective, and then having to drive back to the store to get a replacement!"
So, last weekend, out of the blue, after I had setup the complete telescope system with full imaging capability, the telescope mount motor control board failed. Had to cancel the session, pack everything back up and find a vendor to replace the unit. Why, isn't the board under warranty, after all it has only been 10 months since I got the mount? Well, it would have been if I hadn't jury-rigged a power coupler on it the very day I got the telescope (see post October 26, 2013). New part costs $350 (not in the budget!). Yikes. I guess high-end, expensive equipment comes with pricey replacement parts. Funny thing (OK, not so funny) is that its probably a $1.50 component on the board that went bad, but nobody fixes circuit boards anymore, and without a schematic I don't know what type of component to get. Maybe some day I'll experiment and see if I can fix it - then I would have a spare.
New board should arrive this weekend, just in time for the cloudy skies and rain :)
A day before the board failure I was able to get some good subs of the Ring Nebula. Haven't processed them yet, but should be posting them within the next few days.
So, last weekend, out of the blue, after I had setup the complete telescope system with full imaging capability, the telescope mount motor control board failed. Had to cancel the session, pack everything back up and find a vendor to replace the unit. Why, isn't the board under warranty, after all it has only been 10 months since I got the mount? Well, it would have been if I hadn't jury-rigged a power coupler on it the very day I got the telescope (see post October 26, 2013). New part costs $350 (not in the budget!). Yikes. I guess high-end, expensive equipment comes with pricey replacement parts. Funny thing (OK, not so funny) is that its probably a $1.50 component on the board that went bad, but nobody fixes circuit boards anymore, and without a schematic I don't know what type of component to get. Maybe some day I'll experiment and see if I can fix it - then I would have a spare.
New board should arrive this weekend, just in time for the cloudy skies and rain :)
A day before the board failure I was able to get some good subs of the Ring Nebula. Haven't processed them yet, but should be posting them within the next few days.
Sunday, July 20, 2014
Apollo 11 - 45 Years Ago Today
“Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed.”
Where were you 45 years ago when that message was beamed to earth from the Moon? Hard to believe it was almost half a century ago.
Read the complete story at NasaSpaceflight.com
Where were you 45 years ago when that message was beamed to earth from the Moon? Hard to believe it was almost half a century ago.
Read the complete story at NasaSpaceflight.com
Monday, July 7, 2014
M27 - The Dumbbell Nebula
Last Friday evening was an unbelievable evening for July in Maryland. The temperature was in the low 60's, dew point way low, no wind, clear skies. Yeah, a bit of turbulence in the atmosphere which would have made planetary imaging a bit difficult, but the clarity of the sky was awesome. About the only problem was the waxing moon - but once it set, everything was a go.
So here is the result. The Dumbbell nebula in all its glory.
So here is the result. The Dumbbell nebula in all its glory.
![]() |
Dumbbell Nebula (M27) - July 5, 2014 Celestron EdgeHD-11 Prime Focus 20x180 sec ISO800 |
Sunday, June 15, 2014
Moon; Oh Yeah - the Moon!
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Hubble: Timelapse of V838 Monocerotis (2002-2006)
Many of us have seen images of supernovae remnants, rings of gas from exploding stars and various other astro-photos of similar star explosions. But because the objects are so far away, all we see is a static single image in time. But the Hubble telescope team captured the explosion of v838 monocerotis (20,000 light-years from earth) in a time-lapse video that spanned 4 years; 2002-2006. The video is absolutely fantastic - gives you a new perspective on the awesomeness of these stellar explosions.
Sunday, June 8, 2014
The Eagle Nebula
This past Friday evening the sky conditions were the best they've been in months. Couldn't pass up the chance to try imaging some of the nebulae in the Sagittarius/Scutum area of the Milky Way. This region is low in the southern sky, and from my location just NW of Baltimore, there is a lot of light pollution to deal with. However, the moon had set, the sky was very transparent, and I had to go for it. So, here is the Eagle Nebula, a loose star cluster with associated nebulosity throughout.
![]() |
Eagle Nebula (M16) June 7, 2014 2:00AM - 30 minutes @ ISO800 f/10 EdgeHD-11 Prime Focus |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
The Black Hole Nebula - LDN 323
Nestled within the Small Sagittarius Star Cloud, the Black Hole Nebula—formally known as Barnard 92 or LDN 323—appears as a haunting void in...

-
We had an unscheduled ' entertainment ' activity last evening (actually, early morning of the 13th). The ship ran into a fairly lar...
-
Thursday, Jan 16 ... the weather did not get any better. The open sea continued with winds in excess of 80-90 mph and waves up to 50 ft high...