Any amateur astronomer who is interested in astrophotography, particularly if just getting started, needs to know what objects are best for imaging in each month of the year. These are not necessarily the same objects that are the most spectacular or intriguing visually. The camera reveals different things and has different requirements. What objects in the sky tonight are large enough, bright enough, and high enough to be photographed? This book reveals, for each month of the year, the choicest celestial treasures within the reach of a commercial CCD camera. Helpful hints and advice on framing, exposures, and filters are included. Each deep sky object is explained in beautiful detail, so that observers will gain a richer understanding of these astronomical objects. This is not a book that dwells on the technology of CCD, Webcam, wet, or other types of astrophotography. Neither is it a book about in-depth computer processing of the images (although this topic is included). Detailed discussions of these topics can be found in other publications. This book focuses on what northern latitude objects to image at any given time of the year to get the most spectacular results.
How about which ones are the right size for your equipment? What are the raw images supposed to look like when they come out of the camera? These questions and more are answered in this book"--Page [4] of cover.
Each target listed in this guide contains our advice on imaging, photos of expected results, and a useful information table. We've also included a few cool facts about each target, a map to find it in the night sky, and more!
... NGC 3079 Constellation Ursa Major Right ascension 10h02m. Object #129 NGC 3079 Jeff Hapeman/Adam Block/NOAO/AURA/NSF Object #135 NGC 3147 Alex and Mike Beck/Adam Block/NOAO/AURA/NSF. 58 1,001 Celestial Wonders to See Before You Die.
The book that taught thousands of people about astrophotography has been completely revised and updated in this second edition.
While PixInsight is extremely powerful, very little has been printed on the subject. The first edition of this book broke that mold, offering a comprehensive look into the software’s capabilities.
The Astrophotography Manual, Second Edition is for photographers ready to move beyond standard SLR cameras and editing software to create beautiful images of nebulas, galaxies, clusters, and the stars.
Here are clear explanations of how to make superb astronomical deep-sky images using only a DSLR or webcam and an astronomical telescope – no expensive dedicated CCD cameras needed!
This books is not about making beautiful astronomical images; it is about recording astronomical images that are scientifically rigorous and from which accurate data can be extracted.
Frequently the sole requirement for the visibility of a notoriously difficult nebula is not a large telescope or a special eyepiece , but truly dark sky . The individual in search of dark skies can do little about urban lights except ...
The touchstone for contemporary stargazers. This classic, groundbreaking guide has been the go-to field guide for both beginning and experienced amateur astronomers for nearly 30 years.