alchemist
super member
Reged: 08/19/07
Posts: 117
|
|
Nothing to say, I think is one of the most beautiful pic I ever seen before from this area.
|
nickatnight
Carpal Tunnel
Reged: 04/14/08
Posts: 1751
Loc: Santa Clarita, CA (LA Suburbs)
|
|
That is one rocking image! Thanks for posting.
-------------------- nickatnight
Celestron CPC 9.25" GPS
Lumicon 2" LumiBrite Diagonal
Meade s5000 18mm UWA, Meade 6.7mm UWA,
Parks G.S-5 10mm, Celestrom 40mm Plossl
Parks 2x Barlow, Meade Tele-Extender
Celestron f6.3 Focal Reducer
Lumicon UHC Filter and Deep Sky Filter
Canon Rebel XTi (prime)
Canon Powershot G9 (afocal)
Canon EOS T-Ring and Parks T-Adapter
Lumicon Univ DigiCam Adapter
|
anguslau
member
Reged: 11/29/05
Posts: 13
|
|
Quote:
That's beautiful. Any chance for a larger version? Would love to use as a desktop.
Thanks for your interest, Alex. Here is a larger version which I used as one of my screen savers. It is 1920x1200, cropped to correct aspect ratio from the orignal. M42 + B33 (1920x1200 version)
|
ido
sage
Reged: 06/29/06
Posts: 368
|
|
Great FOV.
-------------------- http://bareket-astro.com/en.htm
Bareket observatory, Israel.
|
ScottD
super member
Reged: 04/22/07
Posts: 194
Loc: Atlanta, GA
|
|
The color saturation and dynamic range in this shot is nothing short of amazing.
-------------------- Celestron CPC925
Celestron F/6.3 Focal Reducer
Feathertouch Focuser
Losmandy Counterbalance
William Optics SZ66 SD APO w/ ADM Rings
William Optics 0.8 Focal Reducer
Canon XSi - Self Modded
Orion StarShoot Autoguider
Philips SPC900
Orion 2" Filter Wheel
Hardin 12" F/5 Dob
|
David Pavlich
Postmaster
   
Reged: 05/18/05
Posts: 8682
Loc: Mandeville, LA USA 30.22 X 90....
|
|
Very nice image!!
David
-------------------- Proud Member; PAS NOLA,
"If we knew what we were doing, it wouldn't be called research..."
A. Einstein
|
Samir Kharusi
scholastic sledgehammer
   
Reged: 06/14/05
Posts: 988
Loc: Oman
|
|
Superb. Excellent example for snobs denigrating DSLRs and insisting on the overwhelming superiority of astroCCDs. Still, a very short integration time for so deep an image.
-------------------- Bored? Peruse my website:
http://www.samirkharusi.net/
|
justabob
Carpal Tunnel
Reged: 05/05/07
Posts: 1685
|
|
Here is a link to a astro ccd image totaling 40 hours exposure done by well known astro imagers of the same region.
http://www.starvistas.com/2009/06/07/definitive-image-of-the-belt-and-horsehead-region-of-orion/
I think the dslr image is better.
-------------------- http://www.pbase.com/rkn/astro&page=all
Vixen Sphinx SXW
Meade sn6
Canon EF 200mm f/2.8L II USM Lens
Hutech 1000d
Self modded 350d
ST8300c on order
DSI PRO II
Bob
|
waassaabee
Carpal Tunnel
   
Reged: 11/26/07
Posts: 2710
Loc: Central California Coast
|
|
Infreakincredible!! The only thing it's missing is a frame!!!
-------------------- Gary
34N 120W
-My kingdom for blue squares!-
WO Megrez 90FD/TV 0.8x FR/FF
AT8RC
mini Borg 50/Q-Guide/PHD
CGEM
Canon 350D Hap Griffin Baader mod - o.o
My Friend Flickr
|
justabob
Carpal Tunnel
Reged: 05/05/07
Posts: 1685
|
|
The only tiny criticism I would make is the diffraction spikes around ngc 2023. This can easily be fixed using noels tools. Using per selection only and inverse select.
-------------------- http://www.pbase.com/rkn/astro&page=all
Vixen Sphinx SXW
Meade sn6
Canon EF 200mm f/2.8L II USM Lens
Hutech 1000d
Self modded 350d
ST8300c on order
DSI PRO II
Bob
|
anguslau
member
Reged: 11/29/05
Posts: 13
|
|
Quote:
The only tiny criticism I would make is the diffraction spikes around ngc 2023. This can easily be fixed using noels tools. Using per selection only and inverse select.
Hi Bob, Thanks for the comments and suggestions!  Since the spikes were added using software, I can erase the spikes effects around NGC2023 easily.
Actually there are two much more serious defects with this image which may not be apparent in this reduced size format. The first one is weired and very strong diffration spikes from Epsilon Ori (middle star of the belt). I believe this star falled right on the edge of the sensor or its frame, causing a large blue halo and very strong spikes on the left edge of the frame. It took me a long time to tame it down, but you can notice some trace of unnaturalness around the area if you look closely. 
The other one is that there were some near horizontal spikes on brights stars close to the upper-right hand quadrant of the frame. This is because the frame is extremely close to a power line overhead! It was my fault since I picked a poor spot to setup my equipment. I was very lucky that the power line was not inside the frame and its effects can be largely masked by adding star diffraction spikes on top.
Although I was quite pleased with this image. To be honest, taking this image has a lot of luck involved. Weather on the high mountain was changing rapidly on that night and even rained for a couple of hours. We waited unitl 3am before the sky finally cleared. Then I noticed the overhead power line was bisecting Orion right near M42! Since I only have about 1.5 hours imaging time left for the night, in stead of wasting time to relocate my equipment, I decided to take my chances and start imaging right away...
|
Alex Post
sage
Reged: 09/24/08
Posts: 454
Loc: Iowa, USA
|
|
Thank you Angus. I said it before, will say again: amazing picture and now my all time favorite.
-------------------- Bino: Celestron SkyMaster 15x70, WO Binoviewer
Scope: Celestron NexStar 8SE, Stellarvue 9x50 Finder
EP: Hyperion 8mm 13mm 2x21mm(bino), 14/28mm FTRs, StellarVue 23mm with Rigel Pulse Guide
Misc: William Optics 2" Dielectric, DewBuster, Celestron f/6.3 FLR, Canon 300D and XSi, JMI Motofocus, Hutech IDAS LPS 2"
|