It was halloween weekend with a national holiday on the first of November. Three nights for astrophotography on the horizon and i was eager to test all those technics i learned.
Couldn't be more disapointed because clouds, rain and wind where calling the shots around here. For professional reasons i can't image during the week, so i'm at the mercy of weather conditions on weekends.
To my surprise the sky's cleared on the last night and it was photon happy hour. I set course to the Messier 52 star cluster and Bubble nebula in the
Cassiopeia constellation. The Bubble is an
emission nebula, a
Hα region, wich an unmodified DSLR has difficulties capturing due to the stock UV/IF filter. I'm planning to do a Hα project just to see how far my unmodified camera can go.
For this picture i could go so far as 3 hour total exposure before clouds filled the sky once again.
Lens/Scope: Sky-Watcher 80mm
Focal Length: 400mm
F/Stop: f/5
Exposure: Stack of 90 120-second exposures (3 hour total exposure)
Mount: Sky-Watcher HEQ5 Pro SynScan GoTo (CdC & EQMOD Control)
Guiding: None
Camera: Unmodified Canon 500D (Digital Rebel T1i)
Mode: Raw
ISO: 800
White Balance: Custom, set on sky background
In-Camera Noise Reduction: Off
Filter: None
Date: November 01, 2010
Start Time: 00:30
Location: Beja, Portugal
Calibration: 50 Darks. 50 Flats. 50 Dark Flats.
Processing: Calibrated, aligned and stacked in DSS. Levels, curves, cropped, resampled in Photoshop. GradientXTerminator. Carboni Tools.