mini-WASP, the latest

Well with the Sky 90 doing the imaging and the poor C11 just acting as a guide scope we are rapidly coming to the point where I go the whole hog and move over to mini-WASP imaging.  Doesn’t look like first light will be 2010, but it will probably be running during the first half of 2011.  Phase 1 will be just 2 x Sky 90s with their own one-shot imaging cameras, phase 2 will be 4 x Sky 90s each with its own one-shot colour camera.  This is a long drawn out project that’s for sure – lucky I used to do Bonsai – I have patience when necessary 🙂

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First light with the Sky 90 back on board

Put the Sky 90 plus SXVF-M25C back on top of the C11, so once again my beautiful 11″ reflector has been relegated to the role of guide scope 🙁  Anyway – I was trying to get the Stock 2 region of Perseus, but I think I missed it – quite amazing when you have a 3.32 x 2.21 degree field of view to play with.  Never mind – got 49 subs at 200 seconds per sub of the unknown region and Noel processed the data yesterday, result below.  I just love the Sky90’s FOV and the way the stars come out with this combination of kit.

Noel has confirmed that I did actually manage to get Stock 2 contained in this image 🙂

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Exhibition at ArtSway

The Exhibition opening went extremely well last night with standing room only for my presentation on “The Magic of Photography”.  The Exhibition runs over the weekend, and then the next chance to see the images and hear a (different) presentation will be at “The Photo Gallery” in Bristol from 23rd October until 3rd November 2010 – more details to follow.

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Fantastic News!!!

Yesterday I received the best news I’ve had in a really long time – I’ve been granted early retirement from the University – YIPPEEEEEE!!

I can now pursue all my interests without the incessant distraction of the day job 🙂 🙂


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Sky 90

I’ve just seen my comments on the IOM post below and strangely enough I have just put the Sky 90 back on the C11 for some wide field narrowband imaging.  We’ll see if I can bag CTB1 this year 🙂

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IOM September 2010 – six clusters and a supernova remnant to boot – what more do you want?

Cassiopeia as you will know is open cluster central – but do you know that there is a region THICK with open clusters (6 of them) AND it has a fantastic supernova remnant as well?  Use your scope’s GOTO to go to NGC7790 or NGC7788 in Cassiopeia – get a decent field of view – and take a very long total exposure with long subs – you won’t regret it.

This special area was first brought to my attention by Eddie Guscott in his Practical Astronomer magazine [August 2008, pages 22-24] in a great little article called “Six little clusters, all in a row….”  The six little clusters comprise King 12, Harvard 21, Frolov 1, NGC7788, NGC7789 and Berkely 58 moving from north to south through this region.  It wasn’t however the “Six little clusters, all in a row” that caught my attention in the black and white image on page 23, what was that amazing object just making an appearance at the top of the page??  There was a semi-circular region of nebulosity, obviously part of a great circle of nebulosity – but what was it?  A little detective work showed that this was CTB1, a beautiful supernova remnant, brilliantly imaged by Steve Cannistra – I wanted this one!!  No problem – I have the Hyperstar – I can image ANYTHING – especially faint stuff, not actually true.  Even though I took very long sub exposures, and extremely long total exposures – I just couldn’t pull out CTB1 – even with Noel’s superb processing skills.  Why?  Because this one is getting close to my skyglow limiting background.  O.K. no problem – stick in an H-alpha filter and have another go.  Yes I did this, and found the problem with narrowband filters and low f# optical systems – they don’t go together!  O.K. no problem again – just get one of those wideband H-alpha filters and go for it again.  Well yes but the huge increase in bandwidth means you sacrifice a lot of contrast – and to be honest, you don’t actually gain a lot by going down this route with the Hyperstar system.  So what is to be done?  The only answer I have is to one day put the f#4.5 Sky 90 back on with a narrowband H-alpha filter and do the thing properly, but that may be a LONG time off.  Until then, just look at this rich region of open clusters – and better still – get imaging them.

The accompanying image is a mosaic of 3 Hyperstar III/SXVF-M25C frames and measures something like 3.5 x 24 degrees.  Sub-exposure times with the Hyperstar III went to over 10-minutes (!!!!) equivalent to over an hour with the Sky 90 – and total imaging time would be in excess of 20-hours.  One of my more impressive deep-sky imaging failures.  Why not see if you can do better and grab a really nice image of the little-known and rarely-imaged CTB1?

Until October – clear skies and happy imaging!!!

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Last reminder before the big day – Star Vistas Exhibition Friday 3rd September 6:00p.m.

Last reminder before the big day – the Star Vistas Private Viewing at the ArtSway gallery opens at 6:00 p.m. on Friday 3rd September.  If you cannot make it on opening night, the Exhibition runs over the weekend.  At 7:00 p.m. on the 3rd I will give a short presentation on the Magic of Photography which includes high-speed photography, macro and micro work, as well as deep-sky images not on display in the Exhibition.  Hope to see you all there on the night 🙂


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“The work is the statement” – Brian Duffy – 1933-2010:

I just saw a very inspirational programme about Brian Duffy (a famous professional photographer) on BBC’s IPlayer.  Clearly Brian (who unfortunately died earlier this year) was a very bright man and his answers to the inane questions from the interviewer were intensely sharp and well-considered.  One of his answers is going to stick with me for the rest of my life, Brian said:  “The work is the statement” – what an obvious (and quite brilliant!) observation.  Basically Brian was saying that a work of art, wherever displayed, creates its own statement.  A  great work of art needs no accompanying flowery prose to justify its existence.  In contrast – I am sure sure we have all visited Art Exhibitions where quite abysmal pieces of “artwork” have been accompanied by the most exquisite and carefully crafted prose in a vain attempt to give the work credibility and substance.

And talking of Exhibitions – please remember that the Star Vistas Exhibition opens on Friday 3rd September 2010 at the ArtSway gallery – where a portfolio of deep-sky images can be seen, sans flowery prose.  After all what words can possibly describe the mind-stretching wonders of the Cosmos?

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Done and dusted

Clear night last night – didn’t matter there was a blazing Moon up for setting up the Hyperstar III.  Managed to get good collimation quite quickly and then went on to re-train the focuser as so much had moved since I last did this I think the parameters were a little bit off.  So focuser retrained as well and all seems o.k.  Took a few short subs of Sadr to check nothing out of the ordinary – will process those shortly.  Also doesn’t seem to be any water vapour now in the CCD cavity (I had to take the M25C apart after the repair and warm everything up with a hair dryer before resealing the CCD).  So – hopefully it is now all systems go, ready and waiting for the next Hyperstar target.

Oh yes – there’s something of importance to Hyperstar owners.  When it comes to collimating your Hyperstar system, only pay attention to the numbers you get from CCDInspector and don’t worry too much about the central obstruction (the CCD) not being dead centre on an out of focus star in the centre of the CCD.  This just means the optical axis of the mirror is not dead centred (this is the case with my C11 anyway) and fortunately there’s enough “play” in the Hyperstar III to deal with this.


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Flickr linking

Flickr has changed how you link to your photos – I am just putting this in as a test to see what happens:

<a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/12801949@N02/4863366848/” title=”Cocoon nebula in Cygnus by cybermystic, on Flickr”><img src=”http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4137/4863366848_7fcf82682e.jpg” width=”500″ height=”195″ alt=”Cocoon nebula in Cygnus” /></a>


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