Extremely lucky it was clear again last night – BUT – unfortunately there was thin high cloud so this isn’t as good an image as it could have been.
Hyperstar4 and M2600MC Pro 23 subs at 4-minutes per sub, dithered data.
Extremely lucky it was clear again last night – BUT – unfortunately there was thin high cloud so this isn’t as good an image as it could have been.
Hyperstar4 and M2600MC Pro 23 subs at 4-minutes per sub, dithered data.
A clear Moonless night last night, so I fired up the Hyperstar. After focusing and running CCDCalc I found I had perfect collimation! I’m not arguing – I just went straight to the best looking bit of sky to give me at least a couple of hours of imaging and got on with it. This is in the M105 region and the central star is SAO 99280. Yes I know I was an idiot and if I’d bother to look at the planetarium program and frame it better I would have got M95 and M96 as well – but you can’t have everything. This image comprises 19 subs at 200-seconds per sub on the Hyperstar4 with UV/IR cut filter and ASI 2600MC Pro CMOS camera running at -5C. It has been MONTHS since I last got an image so I am more than pleased that the kit behaved itself last night.
This week’s POW featured as an EPOD (Earth Science Picture of the Day). Here we see a macrophoto of a Sunflower seed-head on the left, and on the right we see a simulation of the seed-head produced using the Mathcad 2000 mathematical software.
This week we feature a selection of 3D prints from the old (and now retired) ANET A6 which performed superbly for many years.
Back to astronomy this week with an image of the Witch’s Broom nebula in Cygnus. This is not my data but data given to me by a lecturer at Brockenhurst College. He got professional narrowband data – Ha Hb and O3 – from a Tenerife observatory and I assigned Ha to red, O3 to green and Hb to blue to get this image. Hb data is not usually taken professionally as it offers no more useful information than the Ha channel.
Back over the New Forest again this week with one of my favourites. I call them Highlanders (after the film) but they are Highland cattle. They look pretty formidable, but they don’t give visitors a second glance.
https://www.newforestobservatory.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Dads_photos0001-scaled.jpg
My Dad was out in the Northwest Frontier in WWI doing plate photography! I have just a few surviving images that were transferred to photographic paper as the hundreds of plates he had were all destroyed when my parents were bombed out, twice, during the Blitz in WWII. How did he bring back hundreds of plates from the NW Frontier, and how did he even go about doing plate photography out there since he lived on horseback (17th-21st Lancers)? Unfortunately I will never know.
But today was a bit of a revelation for me. I gave one of my Dad’s images of a Massoud (that’s the tribe they were fighting out in Afghanistan) to ChatGPT and asked it to clean up and colourise it, which it did brilliantly. I then asked Grok to animate it and I was floored by the result, which actually includes a soundtrack.
Unfortunately the uploaded MP4 plays fine as an attachment – but doesn’t seem to work when you click on the above link. Highly annoying, sorry about that.
If you look on YouTube you will see a lot of recent hype on the progress in controlled nuclear fusion reactors. Without seeing progress I guess the funding would soon dry up, call me cynical. The first nuclear fusion experiment I am aware of was the THETA experiment at Harwell that was started in 1954. Are we now suddenly, just 70 years on, seeing some real progress?
The ZETA fusion experiment ran at Harwell from 1954 to 1968. I worked at Harwell and Culham from 1973 to 1975, and fusion was still just 20 years away back then. Now, 70 years on from ZETA we are still (apparently) 20 years away from controlled nuclear fusion – do you see a pattern yet? With 50 years in semiconductor physics I learnt something very interesting – not everything is amenable to scaling. For example, it is not a good idea to keep reducing the size of a pressure sensor if you want a “good” pressure sensor. In electromagnetism the “goodness” of an electric circuit increases the smaller you make it – BUT – the “goodness” of a magnetic circuit increases with size (see Laithwaite). The only fusion reactors we see around us are the stars. Stars are pretty big. I suspect the “goodness” of a controlled nuclear fusion reactor also increases with size. If this is the case, then making tiny fusion reactors, just the size of a building, is a pointless task. The “goodness” factor is so crippled you will be lucky if you can even break-even. I strongly suspect that a fusion reactor, the size of a huge building, capable of supplying net power to the National Grid is not possible. Come back to this post at the end of the next 20 years to see how we get on (but I won’t be here to say I told you so).
Back to non-astro pics this week with birds that you often hear over the New Forest in summer, but rarely see as they like to hide in the gorse. This is a lovely pair of Stonechats and you know they’re about when you hear their distinctive call which is like a pair of small pebbles being clicked together.
I just saw an image of the Sombrero galaxy taken by Hubble on X. Prompted me to download the highest resolution image I could find and print it out at A1 size on the HP Designjet T230. Here is the result.