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  1. Galleries
  2. »
  3. Astrophotography
  4. » Orion, Toro and Wirtanen

 
Orion, Toro and Wirtanen...

Astrofotografia grande campo Cano

View gallery (12 photos)

Orion, Toro and Wirtanen sent on December 18, 2018 (10:10) by Daniele Bonfiglio. 7 comments, 570 views. [retina]

, 10 sec f/3.5, ISO 1600, tripod.

Somma di 60 foto da 10 secondi, senza inseguitore, allineate e sommate con DSS, infine tolto il gradiente con GIMP. Foto fatta a Legnago (VR) nella nuova sede dell'Associazioni Astrofili di Legnago.



View High Resolution 4.3 MP  



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avatarjunior
sent on December 21, 2018 (7:17) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Wow nice picture... But how did you draw the constellations?

avatarjunior
sent on December 21, 2018 (7:48) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Hello Teamwild, thanks for the appreciation! To make the green lines I simply used GIMP! ;-)
But in fact there is also a very useful site, called astrometry.net, on which you can upload astronomical photos and he recognizes what part of the sky is represented, gives you the exact coordinates and above all produces an image like mine with the Main stars and constellations indicated with green lines! Hello and thanks again of the passage, Daniele

avatarjunior
sent on December 23, 2018 (13:14) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Thank you so much for the answer!

avatarjunior
sent on March 25, 2019 (21:51) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Hi, first congratulations for the really nice photo!
I take this opportunity to ask you something as I also have a Canon 1300d how did you click it?
I tried to make several attempts but the most I managed to do is the photo of the moon (see my gallery if you
VA) I would be strongly interested in the starry sky but I do not know how to do..

avatarjunior
sent on March 27, 2019 (9:18) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)


avatarsenior
sent on April 03, 2019 (17:24) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Beautiful! And excellent explanation. However at 18mm you can safely hold more than 10 ", at least 13 and you're still in total safety!
The rule of 500 instead I personally have never seen it work empirically: a 15 "on a focal 16mm the blur you see all the same looking at the photo full size! Maybe I have misunderstood the rule?

avatarjunior
sent on April 05, 2019 (17:32) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Hello Francis, thank you so much for your speech and appreciation for this photo of mine! As For the exposure time, I state that I'm a bit manic and if I see the slightest movement of the stars are not satisfied ;-) However a remark that I have made is that much depends also what part of the sky you want to resume: for example Cassiopea which is close to the polar allows you a significantly longer exposure time than Orion that is on the celestial equator... So I would say that even the rule of 500 is taken as an indicative "rule of thumb", but then you have to check with practice what is the best exposure time.... Hello, Daniele


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