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by Dave Mitsky I took this photo of Mars and the bright open cluster M45, better known as the Pleiades, at the ASH Naylor Observatory near Lewisberry, Pennsylvania, using a Canon EOS Digital Rebel DSLR and a Canon EF 80-200mm zoom lens set at maximum zoom. Mars is the bright object in the upper left...
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by Dave Mitsky I captured this image of Saturn and the bright open cluster M44 in Cancer, better known as the Beehive Cluster or Praesepe, using a Canon EOS Digital Rebel DSLR and a Canon EF 80-200mm zoom lens set at maximum zoom. Saturn is the bright object to the right of the center of the picture...
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by Bill Clark "Moon Venus Conjunction with Jet Plane," Santa Cruz, CA on 4/22/09 at 6:20 am PDT, single image captured with a Canon Digital XTi using an EF 70 - 300 mm IS USM lens set at Focal Length 220 at 1/30 second and ISO 400; post processing in Photoshop to darken sky and reduce noise...
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by Stefano De Rosa What I like most about this shot is that it captured the transition moments from night to the day. In the left bottom side the yacht is lying in the peaceful landscape of the bay of Eze sur-mer (cote d’Azur - France) that is still illuminated by artificial lights as the dark clouds...
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The image by Stefano De Rosa shows the Moon (whith the occultation of the Pleiades still going on), the reddish Mars, the orangish Aldebaran and the bright Venus forming a mirror-reversed L over the city of San Remo, in the North West coast of Italy. Photo details: Date: July 18, 2009 at 4.45 a.m. Location...
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Attached is a photo taken on January 29, 2010, at 8:20 PM showing Mars at opposition and the Moon at perigee. This photo is a composite of two pictures taken with a Sony DSC-F707 camera using a 10x zoom. The picture of Mars was taken at F2.4 aperture at a shutter speed of 1/10 set at ISO 100. The picture...
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by Antonis Farmakopoulos A beautiful conjunction of the moon with the Pleiades, the most famous open star cluster in the sky occurred last night. This shot was captured few seconds before the disappearance of the 4.1 magnitude star Merope, which is visible attached to the moon’s dark limb which is lit...
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by Dave Mitsky Here's a tripod-mounted photo of the massing of the Moon, Venus, Jupiter, and the first magnitude star Spica that I took on the evening of 2005/9/6 with my Canon EOS Digital Rebel DSLR camera and a Canon EF zoom lens set at 200mm.
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by P.J. Cloud We walked out of the house and saw this in the Western sky. I quickly ran back in and grabbed my camera (a simple Canon G9 - 12.1 megapixel digital camera). This was taken on February 27th, 2009, Encinitas, California
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by Marco Busi In this picture Mercury and Saturn have just 22'' distance and rise just after Venus near the border Romania - Hungary on 08/10/2009 at 05:48 local time. Canon EOS 500D f: 90 mm, F/4.5, 5 sec, ISO-800
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