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FORUMS Photo Sharing & Discussion Astronomy & Celestial 
Thread started 17 Jan 2009 (Saturday) 18:57
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What is this??

 
RyanB
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Jan 17, 2009 18:57 |  #1

So, I was playing with my 5d Mk II at the Grand Canyon last week and decided to snap some pictures of the milky way. I'm not the best at it, but i do enjoy astrophotography (from my camera, not a telescope). I was reviewing some of the pictures I took, and there's an object (a galaxy? maybe?) in my pictures that I didn't recognize, and I wish I had seen it before so I could get a picture of it closer than 16mm!

Anyways, I circled it in the picture below. Excuse the crappy quality, I put it in paint haha. What is it? I'm just curious to know :)


IMAGE: http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h307/moejoe649/stars23.jpg

Here's another:

IMAGE: http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h307/moejoe649/stars.jpg

5d Mk II + Meike Grip l Canon 24-105mm f4L l Canon 85mm f1.8 l Contax Carl Zeiss 100mm f2 Planar T* l Sigma 50mm f1.4 EX DG |Sennheiser MKE-300 Microphone l Carl Zeiss Distagon T* 35mm f2 ZE l
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Canon ­ Pete
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Jan 17, 2009 20:32 |  #2

deff looks like a Galaxy , as to what one , err ..pass.

excellent shot as well good capture of Milky Way .




  
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drevilsmom
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Jan 17, 2009 21:17 |  #3

I'm guessing Andromeda galaxy.


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R ­ Hardman
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Jan 17, 2009 21:54 |  #4

Yep, It's the Andromeda Galaxy or if you prefer, M31.


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slitherjef
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Jan 17, 2009 22:53 |  #5

Yup, M31 :)
BTW, I really like that first shot! Thats a nice view indeed


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Adrena1in
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Jan 18, 2009 03:30 |  #6

M31, yes. Always surprises people when they take wide-angle long exposures and the Great Andromeda Galaxy makes an appearance. But hey, it is apparently six times wider than the full moon!! And it may be a long way away, but it's so incredibly big that it's relatively close. I mean, imagine two frisbees flying through the air about 15 feet away from each other. If you could shrink to the size of an atom and stand on one of the frisbees, the other frisbee would be quite clearly visible, would it? ;)


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gabebalazs
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Jan 18, 2009 08:27 |  #7

Great shot!

By the way you also faintly captured M33, Triangulum galaxy, it's fainter, towards the upper left corner. Good job :-)


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Benandbobbi
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Jan 18, 2009 13:50 |  #8

Yep. M31. You can see it clearly with binoculars.


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bjordan
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Jan 18, 2009 15:37 |  #9

Now when someone asks how far you can see with your lens, you can honestly answer... "well, I got a good shot from a distance of 2.5 million light years."


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dale65bama
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Jan 18, 2009 20:16 |  #10

Did you have the camera functions set for long exposure noise reduction?

Great shots. I may try something like that when I visit by brother in TN and go out to the astronomy club's dark site on Walden Ridge far away from city lights.

Thanks,

Dale


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RyanB
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Jan 18, 2009 20:26 |  #11

Thanks for the answers, I thought it looked like a galaxy but had no idea Andromeda would come out like that :) Good info!

These were taken at ISO 6400, I didn't have anything set for NR.


5d Mk II + Meike Grip l Canon 24-105mm f4L l Canon 85mm f1.8 l Contax Carl Zeiss 100mm f2 Planar T* l Sigma 50mm f1.4 EX DG |Sennheiser MKE-300 Microphone l Carl Zeiss Distagon T* 35mm f2 ZE l
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Karl ­ Johnston
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Jan 19, 2009 05:12 |  #12
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I can't believe thats 12800 ISO! I can't wait to get mine ! And lucky grab with that galaxy, wow!


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RyanB
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Jan 19, 2009 10:59 |  #13

Whoops you're right Kajuah! The top one is 6400, and the bottom one is 12800. Forgot about that haha. And yeah, it's an amazing camera.


5d Mk II + Meike Grip l Canon 24-105mm f4L l Canon 85mm f1.8 l Contax Carl Zeiss 100mm f2 Planar T* l Sigma 50mm f1.4 EX DG |Sennheiser MKE-300 Microphone l Carl Zeiss Distagon T* 35mm f2 ZE l
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