|
|
Browse by Tags
-
by Jeff Barton Archimedes via ToUCam Pro 840k avi file, processed with Registax 3, about 400 frames. Scope was Stellarvue 152mm apo. Used 4X Televue Powermate. Image is inverted. Strong sunset shadowing from crater rim resembles a Beatle haircut. Mountains left of center are The Spitzbergens. Scope and...
-
by Dave Mitsky This is an eyepiece projection photo that I took with the ASH 17" f/15 classical Cassegrain and a Pentax K1000 SLR camera. Ptolemaeus is the large crater at the top of the picture. Rupes Recta or the Straight Wall, which also has the nickname of the Scimitar, is to the lower left...
-
by Dave Mitsky This photograph of a very interesting area of the Moon was accomplished via eyepiece projection using a Pentax K1000 SLR camera and the 17" classical Cassegrain at the Astronomical Society of Harrisburg's Naylor Observatory, which is located two miles northwest of Lewisberry,...
-
by Dave Mitsky Here's a photo of the prominent southern craters Tycho, Maginus, and Clavius that I took with the 17" f/15 classical Cassegrain at the Astronomical Society of Harrisburg's Naylor Observatory and a Pentax K1000 SLR camera using eyepiece projection. These three craters are 85...
-
by Dave Mitsky This lunar image was taken with a Canon EOS Digital Rebel DSLR camera at prime focus using the 17" f/15 classical Cassegrain at the Astronomical Society of Harrisburg's Naylor Observatory, two miles northwest of Lewisberry, Pennsylvania.
-
by Dave Mitsky I took this photograph at the Naylor Observatory near Lewisberry, Pennsylvania, using the eyepiece projection technique, a Pentax K1000 SLR camera, and the Astronomical Society of Harrisburg's 17" f/15 classical Cassegrain. Schiller is the footprint-shaped crater to the upper...
-
by Dave Mitsky This is an eyepiece projection shot of the lunar dogleg formed by the prominent craters Theophilus, Cyrillus, and Catharina that I took at the Astronomical Society of Harrisburg's Naylor Observatory near Lewisberry, Pennsylvania, using a 17" f/15 classical Cassegrain and a Pentax...
-
by Dave Mitsky This is an eyepiece projection photograph of the Maginus Sunrise Lunar Ray, a lunar light ray that I had discovered a year earlier on 2001/5/1 (see http://www.lunar-occultations.com/rlo/rays/maginus.htm for further information). I photographed the event at the Astronomical Society of Harrisburg's...
-
by Terry Durbin Taken afocally on 090629 at 1:45 UT (8:45 CDT) with a Kodak DX6340 through an 18" Obsession Classic from Wever, Iowa. This is a close crop of a larger image. Until I find out if it is a recognized feature I'm calling it Zachary's Heart in honor of my late son.
-
by Ron Masters Taken on 5/30/2009 from light polluted skies of a major Midwest city in the US. Scope is 102mm f9 Vixen fluorite apochromatic refractor. Camera is Canon G3 set for manual mode, manual focus, 4x optical zoom and afocal to Orion 7.5mm Epic ED-2 eyepiece. Total system magnification 490x with...
|
|