Shaunna & Sarah Kathryn's Astro Page
Albireo
This is a 2 second image taken using a clear filter.
This is a RGB stacked image taken at 2s, 3s, and 6s,
respectively.
M 104
The Sombrero Galaxy
This is a 15s image using a clear filter.
This a 30s image using a clear filter.
Notice that the arms are more distinctive with a longer
exposure.
This a 45s image yet again using a clear filter.
This exposure is long enough to show the dust lane on the
edge of the galaxy.
This image is composed of 3 45s stacked images.
The "Mustard" Sombrero Galaxy.
This image is comprised of 45s, 67s, 3x45s RGB photos
stacked in Photoshop.
You can see the dust lane in the mustard image here, too.
:)
If you are interested, this link has further images of the
Sombrero Galaxy:
http://www.seds.org/messier/more/m104_more.html
M51
~~~~Whirlpool Galaxy~~~~
45 second clear filter image.
55 second clear filter image.
65 second clear filter image of Whirlpool Galaxy and
distorting companion.
75 second clear filter image.
Notice the ever more prominent arms, whirlpooling about.
80 second clear filter image.
We probably got some trailing here, but who would notice
it with these lovely arms?
For more titilating images like this one, see:
http://www.seds.org/messier/more/m051_more.html
M58
Spiral Galaxy in Virgo
Isn't it cute? It's so tiny.
Anyway, this is a 45 second exposure, clear filter as
always.
Still tiny.
50 second exposure, clear filter.
Wow! Now you can see that small, diffuse nucleus.
60 second exposure, clear filter.
Not much better.
70 second exposure, clear filter.
This photo appears at:
http://www.seds.org/messier/more/m058_more.html
M61
Virgo Cluster Spiral Galaxy
50 second exposure, clear filter.
The clouds were approaching when we took this, so we were
unable to show the knotted arms with longer exposure times.
Links:
http://www.seds.org/messier/more/m061_more.html
M63
Sunflower Galaxy
50 second exposure, clear filter.
It's tiny but you can see the, no wait, you can't. It's a
spiral galaxy even if it looks like a fuzzy blob here.
But you can see the sunflower resemblance.
Links:
http://www.seds.org/messier/more/m063_more.html
M64
Black Eye Galaxy
45 seconds, clear filter.
Can't see anything, can you?
Ooooooooh. Now you can see the LARGE dust lane and the
black eye effect.
50 seconds, clear filter.
Ooooooh. Purdy. And Prominent dust lane.
3, 50 second exposures, clear filter, stacked.
Link:
http://www.seds.org/messier/m/m064.html
Mars
Yup, that's right, The War God's namesake.
.02 seconds, like, duh, we only did clear filters, so it
doesn't appear red here.
Same thing, only .01 seconds this time. Only slightly
better, we know. But it's the best we can do with our limited
resources.
This photo courtesy of:
http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/PIAGenPlanetPage.pl?Mars
BLOOPERS!
Our first attempt at focusing gave us this lovely modern
art version of Arcturas.
Ahhh. Much better. This is Arcturas, in focus, saturating
our camera at that magical 65535 number. This is as clear as she gets
with Arcturas and our equipment.
Can YOU find M104 ?
This is what happens when you forget to subtract the dark
frame.
This is supposed to be the lovely Mustard Sombrero galaxy.
Okay, can you guess what this is?
No? Neither could we. We were aiming for M27, the Dumbell
Nebula. Those wonderful clouds, an astronomer's nightmare, arrived on
the tail end of this picture or we were just cold and tired and had
just ordered pizza. You decide. We can't remember. Either way, it is
a lovely field of stars, isn't it? :)
This is what it should look like:
Found at:
http://www.seds.org/messier/m/m027.html
This wonderful selection of images was taken with a Meade
LX200, F10 with an ST6 CCD Camera
Our images were taken on May 19, 1999.
This page was created by Shaunna L.
Barnhart and Sarah Kathryn
Covin.
June 3, 1999
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