Photography
Related: About this forumthe andromeda galaxy
I learned some new processing techniques and so i shot M31,teh Andromeda galaxy last night. 3 hours of exposures in my backyard

AllaN01Bear
(26,893 posts)
question everything
(50,740 posts)eppur_se_muova
(39,650 posts)moonshinegnomie
(3,546 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(154,733 posts)This is incredibly beautiful. I can almost see it turning in space.
Thank you for sharing!
2naSalit
(97,467 posts)That's amazing and cool!
livetohike
(23,578 posts)
relayerbob
(7,242 posts)Pluvious
(5,049 posts)I still remember the moment when if first saw Saturn and its rings through a telescope,
it was almost creepy, seemly so surreal
Seeing our "neighboring" galaxy directly must feel the same
If we could fully see M31 unaided in our night sky, is the arc span wide enough to resolve its form ?
relayerbob
(7,242 posts)This is a representation:
Pluvious
(5,049 posts)That is just beautiful !
Thanks for sharing
speak easy
(12,211 posts)Andromedas collision course with the Milky Way
https://www.astronomy.com/science/andromedas-collision-course-with-the-milky-way-this-week-in-astronomy-with-dave-eicher/
PoindexterOglethorpe
(28,025 posts)progressoid
(51,726 posts)I need to get my affairs in order.
Hekate
(98,852 posts)That is staggering
marybourg
(13,508 posts)Its clearly oval in shape, and white, but nothing else can be resolved.
relayerbob
(7,242 posts)moonshinegnomie
(3,546 posts)i use a zwo am5 mount. once its polar aligned with the earth axis it rotates with the earth. what i do is take a series of exposures and use software to stack teh resulting images.
relayerbob
(7,242 posts)moonshinegnomie
(3,546 posts)an alt az mount can take short exposures but suffer from field rotation for anything longer than 30 seconds or less depending on teh location of tge object
relayerbob
(7,242 posts)aggiesal
(10,223 posts)
Chainfire
(17,757 posts)Congrats, it is gorgeous.
AverageOldGuy
(2,830 posts)And you got M110, too!
Bayard
(26,336 posts)

ArkansasDemocrat1
(3,213 posts)My Meade ETX will track okay like that, but it's only a 60mm backpack model.
moonshinegnomie
(3,546 posts)teh equatorial mount is what makes the difference. it eliminates field rotation which an alt az mount has
ArkansasDemocrat1
(3,213 posts)(manually mind you) with the university's big reflecting telescope (naturally with an EQ mount) and then covered the piggyback SCT as class ended. The next night we had class we developed it (developer, stop-bath, fixer & wash) and then we were looking at something - not at all- printed in our Norton's Star Atlas. Turns out we were tracking Halley when it had just started to offgas but wasn't quite nekkid eye visible yet. We tracked it over several classes.
BigOleDummy
(2,274 posts)My brother-in-law does astrophotography too. Spends days after a shoot processing! Has some nice stuff too.
Duppers
(28,380 posts)I've not seen a better image of the Andromeda Galaxy.
tazkcmo
(7,419 posts)Thanks for the picture, it's outstanding.
Hermit-The-Prog
(36,631 posts)Grumpy Old Guy
(4,010 posts)I wish I could do that.
MLAA
(19,376 posts)niyad
(125,965 posts)Bluethroughu
(7,215 posts)Beam me up Scottie!
IbogaProject
(4,769 posts)Great shot! We are due to merge w that galaxy over 4.5 to 10 billion years from now.
https://www.skyatnightmagazine.com/space-science/andromeda-milky-way-galaxy-collision
jerseyjim
(129 posts)burrowowl
(18,336 posts)Hekate
(98,852 posts)RandySF
(76,469 posts)Oopsie Daisy
(6,480 posts)moonshinegnomie
(3,546 posts)Oopsie Daisy
(6,480 posts)You're very fortunate. Which city? DC and Alexandria have so much light pollution that it's difficult to see anything other than the brightest stars (and the moon.)
moonshinegnomie
(3,546 posts)there are things you can do to help with light pollution.
for things like galaxies i use a light pollution filter that does an ok job especially on brighter objects
for nebula its a little easier. nebulas tend to emit light in only a couple very specific frequencies. there are filters that will block any light outside those frequencies.
just because you cant see objects with the naked eye they are still able to be photographed,especially the brighter objects like andromeda,orion,the pleaides etc.... I looked at a dark sky map,theres a scale called the bortle scale that show how dark the skies are. im in whats called bortle 7. for you it looks like belle view /bell haven are the same darkness as me
dark sky map
https://www.lightpollutionmap.info/#zoom=4.00&lat=38.7944&lon=-77.0469&state=eyJiYXNlbWFwIjoiTGF5ZXJCaW5nUm9hZCIsIm92ZXJsYXkiOiJ3YV8yMDE1Iiwib3ZlcmxheWNvbG9yIjpmYWxzZSwib3ZlcmxheW9wYWNpdHkiOjYwLCJmZWF0dXJlc29wYWNpdHkiOjg1fQ==