Comet McNaught C/2006 P1

Comet McNaught
Comet McNaught -C/2006 P1  Taken January 11, 2007 (Sunset)
Canon EOS 20D  1/60 sec.  Canon 100mm Macro f/2.8  1600 ISO  Tripod
Snow on the ground +10 degrees Fahrenheit  Hundreds of Canadian Geese in the air
Fern Ridge Reservoir, 7 miles from Eugene, Oregon

Comet McNaught C/2006 P1 was a great naked eye comet.  However in Oregon, it appeared while we had a snow storm in Eugene.  The above image was taken at Fern Ridge Reservoir with thousands of Canadian Geese flying about, some of them appear in this image.  The comet was very close to the sun at this latitude and very difficult to image.

Aurora, Leo, Jupiter and Iridium Flare

Aurora, Leo, Jupiter,   Iridium Flare and Meteor ; June19,2004
Telescope / Lens35mm  f/2 Canon at f/2.8
Mount TypePiggyback on Losmandy G11
CameraCanon F-1 with Bright Screen & Angle B magnifier
 Filters UV
 Film Kodak ED200 (Slide Film) Slide #05
 Exposure120 seconds; manual guiding FS/78
 ProcessingPushed, Scanned – 2400 dpi, Photoshop
 DateJune 19, 2004
 LocationEagles Rest, south of Dexter, Oregon
 Conditions2500′ magnitude 6 Skies; Clear, steady

 

 

 

Orion Rising in the East

 

Wide field image of Venus on left & Orion on right rising over trees.  

Telescope / Lens 50 f/1.4 Canon Lens at f/2.8
Mount Type Piggyback on Losmandy G11
Camera Canon F-1 with Bright Screen & Angle B magnifier
 Filters 52mm UV
 Film  Provia 400F (Slide Film) #10
 Exposure 15 minutes; manual guiding Takahashi FS/78
 Processing  Slide Scanned – 2400 dpi, Photoshop
 Date September 26, 2003
 Location Eagles Rest, south of Dexter, Oregon
 Conditions 2557′ magnitude 6 Skies; Clear, steady

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

M31 NGC224 Andromeda Galaxy

M31       NGC224        Andromeda Galaxy     ST10XME (SBIG) LRGB     3.5 Hour Exposure

Image Captures Information:

M31 Original imaging information

9/20/2009  10:46 PM           Latitude: 43° 31′ 21″ North      Longitude: 122˚ 52’ 35” West   4658 ft.  Snow Peak S/E of Cottage Grove. OR. Seeing: E    Transparency:Telescopes / Optics:   TMB 80mm f/ 4.8 384mm     Mount : AP1200                            Camera: SBIG ST10XME  3.5 hours; LRGB; L=120min (10 & 5 min) RGB 1.5 Hours (3x10min ea.).    FOV 133.4′  x  89.5′ Information:  Really tried to go deep into M31 and very satisfied with the results from a 3.1” refractor.  Hope to add Ha channel in the future.  Captured with CCDSoft, processed with CCDStack and Photoshop.

M31 Additional Imaging information

10/23/2022   10:03 PM        Latitude: 33° 29′ 01.48″ North      Longitude: 116° 43′ 19.24″ West.   Elevation: 4321 ft.      Jupiter Ridge #4 Observatory,  OCA site, near Anza, CA.          Seeing: E   Transparency:SQM: 20.78  Bortle: 4 Telescopes / Optics:  TMB 80mm f/ 4.8 384mm.     Mount: AP1200    Camera: SBIG ST10xme CFW10   FOV:  133.4′  x  89.5′. Filter: Astrodon L  series E Gen. 2  & 9nm Ha Total time 65 min.  Information: M31 image captured with CCDSoft; Subs- L= 5 minutes x 3 (15), Ha= 10 minutes x 5 (50)-20°c.  Processed with   CCDStack, Photoshop CS6 & PWP8.   Add previous data from 9/20/2009  L-2 hours, RGB 1.5 hours + 10/23/2022  65 min. Total  275 min or 4.5 hours.

M 31 (NGC224) Andromeda Galaxy


The Andromeda Galaxy is readily visible from a dark sky location as a fuzzy patch of light covering approximately 3+ degrees or 6 times the width of our moon. Andromeda is approximately 2.5 million light years from Earth and 220,000 light years across. Making it much larger than our own Milky Way galaxy at only 100,000 lights years across. In about 5 billion years both our Milky Way galaxy and Andromeda will collide and begin to coalesce, perhaps evolving into an even larger elliptical type galaxy. This image reveals much detail and numerous globular star clusters and nebulae are visible. Amazing for just a 3.2 diameter refractor, but Thomas Back (TMB) was a primer Telescope Maker and his designs live on.

Images below reprocessed with data captured on 10/23/2022 and previous data. 

Click full screen on movie below and view.

M31 2022 by Sam Pitts

M31 movie shows resolution captured with just an 80mm refractor zoomed in to background SC Galaxy PGC 90494/ 2MFGC511

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is M31-cropped-PGC-90494-1-1200x800.jpg

M31-Andromeda Galaxy By: Sam Pitts 10/23/2022 10:03 PM Latitude: 33° 29′ 01.48″ North Longitude: 116° 43′ 19.24″ West Elevation: 4321 feet; Jupiter Ridge #4 Observatory, OCA site, near Anza, CA. Seeing: E Transparency: 5 SQM: 20.78 Bortle: 4 Telescopes / Optics: TMB 80mm f/6 @ f/ 4.8 384mm Mount: AP1200 Camera: SBIG ST10xme CFW10 (KAF3200) FOV: 133.4′ x 89.5′ Filter: L=135min (10 & 5 min) RGB =1.5 Hours (3x10min) Ha= 5x10min (50)-20°c Information: Captured with CCDSoft Processed: with CCDStack, Photoshop CS6 & PWP8 Total exposure time = 275min / 4 ½ hours NOTE: Data from 9/20/2009 included with new data taken 10/23/2022.

Astronomy Equipment

Eyepiece Field of View (FOV)

Field of View

By: Sam Pitts 2001

What is my Field of View

This depends on your eyepiece’s magnification and apparent field of view, along with the telescope being used. The eyepiece has a focal length indicated in millimeters. The longer the focal length of an eyepiece (25mm-50mm) the lower the power (magnification) and the wider the field of view. This assumes we are using the same telescope with a fixed focal ratio (f/10) and length (fl/2000). The higher the power or magnification the shorter the focal length in millimeters, resulting in a smaller field of view (FOV).

To determine the magnification of an eyepiece, divide its focal length into the focal length of the telescope’s objective lens or mirror. 8″ f/10= 2000mm focal length (fl).

Telescope: 8″ f/10 – 2000mm fl (focal length)
Plossl Eyepiece 32mm with 50° FOV (apparent field of view)
Magnification 2000mm ÷ 32mm = 62.5x

The field of view with this setup is determined by eyepiece magnification and apparent field of view 50°. Hold an eyepiece and look through it. The circular view of light observed is its apparent field of view. The diameter of this circle is the apparent field of view measured in degrees. Below is a list of apparent field of views with different types of eyepieces.

Tele Vue ® Nagler™ 82°
Tele Vue® Radian™ 60°
Meade® Ultra Wide 84°
Erfle 60°
Orion® Ultrascopic™ 52°
Plossl 52°
Orthoscopic 45°
Kellner 40°

Find the Field of View

To find the actual field of view, divide the eyepiece’s apparent field of view by the magnification on a particular scope. Using the example above (8′ f/10 scope ).

50° ÷ 62.5 = 0.8°

The 32mm Plossl on an 8″ f/10 (2000mm) telescope will render a true field of view of 48 arc minutes or 8/10 of a degree. Remember the moon is approximately 1/2° (30′) in diameter. Wide field of view lenses may suffer from aberration near the edges due to astigmatism. The stars may be slightly distorted near the edge of the field of view.

A 32mm Tele Vue Nagler 82°, with the same telescope, would have a FOV of 1.312° or 1° 18′ 43.2″
A 32mm Kellner 40°, with the same telescope, would have a FOV of .64° or 38′ 24″

Eyepieces > 32mm are best used with 10″ or larger objectives/mirror and a 2″ diagonal.