The Great nebula in Orion M42 picture 1.

The Great nebula in Orion M42 picture 1.

Nikon D5000
Lens Nikon 55.0-200.0 mm f/4.0-5.6
F5.6
200mm zoom
ISO 1600
Exposure 9 x 2.5sec
Stacked in DeepSkyStacker
Edited in Lightroom and spickes in CS5

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Uploaded on Sep 18, 2010  |  Map

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The Milky Way ISO 3200

The Milky Way ISO 3200

1 picture
Exposure 30 sec
Aperture f/3.5
Focal Length 18 mm
ISO Speed 3200

Edited in Photoshop by my friend Jens .

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Uploaded on Sep 2, 2010  |  Map

15 notes / 2 comments

The Subaru Cluster M45

The Subaru Cluster M45

Exposure 2.5 sec
Aperture f/5.6
Focal Length 200 mm
ISO Speed 6400

The Pleiades star cluster known in Japanese as Subaru

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Uploaded on Sep 2, 2010  |  Map

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Jupiter and the four Galilean satellites

Jupiter and the four Galilean satellites

Camera Nikon D5000
Lens 55.0-200.0 mm f/4.0-5.6
Exposure 2.5
Aperture F/10.0
Focal Length 200 mm
ISO Speed 3200

Jupiter has three main unique characteristics. The first one is its immense size. It is indeed, as its name suggests, the king of the planets. About 1,320 Earths could fit inside of it.

The second characteristic is the Great Red Spot. This is a gigantic (three Earth diameters) storm that has existed for more than three centuries (Galileo discovered it in the seventeenth century). It will probably continue to exist for hundreds or thousands of years, for it is constantly being fed by smaller eddies surrounding it .

The third characteristic is its many moons. Jupiter has the most moons of any planet in the solar system: 63.

These are the four Galilean satellites. They are named so because they were the only four moons that Galileo was able to see. They are also the largest of Jupiter's moons. They are Ganymede, Callisto, Europa, and Io.

If Ganymede were not bound to Jupiter, it would be considered a planet in its own right. It is actually bigger than Mercury, being 390 km (234 miles) larger in diameter. It has heavily cratered dark regions, with lighter expanses in-between. Geologists think that it used to have plates, like the Earth, but they froze together soon after Ganymede's birth.

Callisto, the outermost of the Galilean moons, is almost an exact twin of Mercury in size and appearance. Every square mile is covered with craters or other signs of bombardment. Other than that, there are no distinct characteristics

Europa, closer to Jupiter than Ganymede, is the smoothest natural body in the solar system. It resembles a billiard ball until seen very close-up. At that distance you can start to see dark, deep, and narrow cracks. In scale, though, the relief is no bigger than a line on a billiard ball made with a felt-tipped marker. Geologists think that Europa has liquid water underneath the icy surface - and possibly life.

Io, closer yet, is commonly compared to a pizza. Its volcanoes make it the most active world in the solar system. They spew out the sulfuric acid that gives Io its many colors. They also make Io one of the only three moons with an atmosphere in the solar system. Saturn's Titan and Neptune's Triton are the other two moons. Io is similar in size and composition to our moon. Io is caught in the middle of a tug-of-war between Jupiter and the other moons. Tension has melted the interior and raised the surface temperatures so high that scientists calculated that it generates the most heat for its size of any body in the solar system, except for the sun.

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Uploaded on Aug 25, 2010  |  Map

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Male Scorpionfly in Morning Light

Male Scorpionfly in Morning Light

Camera Nikon D5000
Lens Helios 44-2 2/58mm whit 2 extension rings (30mm)
Exposure 0.003 sec (1/320)
ISO Speed 100
Sunlight from the right

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Uploaded on Aug 10, 2010  |  Map

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