CCD Imaging with a Starlight Xpress CCD

The following images were taken with a
Starlight Xpress parallel port mono CCD
camera attached to my 14" f5.2 reflector. Most of the images were multiple one minute
or thirty second unguided exposures combined to give the total exposure. The
images were taken before any PEC correction or autoguiding was used with the
14". At high
declinations the drive gave me round star images for 1 minute exposures. At lower
declinations 30s was about the maximum before drifting occurred. The 14"
could be guided
with an off-axis guider but aligning the object on the CCD
and
a guide star in the o/a guider was a nightmare!. Unless otherwise noted all the images
were taken from my light polluted location, about three miles from the city centre of
Liverpool, England.
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Globular cluster M2 in Aquarius.
5.5 minute exposure, 24th Oct 2003.
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NGC6946 on the Cygnus - Cepheus border. An excellent object to study
visually or imaged. This image a 12 minute exposure. |
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Everyone's favourite galaxy! M51 in Canes
Venatici, high overhead from
northern latitudes in the springtime. This image an 8 minute exposure. |
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The famous spiral M101 in Ursa Major. This 25 minute exposure shows many
intersesting details in this face-on spiral including dense knots of star forming regions
within the spiral arms. |
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M66 in Leo Major, 9 minute exposure. |
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M99, 23.5 minutes |
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M64, the 'black-eye' galaxy in Coma Berenices, this 7 minute exposure
shows some fine detail in the inner 'eye' of the galaxy |
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M63, the sunflower galaxy. 15 minute
exposure |
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M100, 11 minutes |
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M82 in Ursa Major. This was taken when I had interference in the CCD
signal, hence the image is fairly poor quality. |
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This image of M13 was taken with Eric Strach's SXL8 CCD in the summer of
1996. The 2 minute exposure gave a very fine image which resolves the cluster's core and
has sharp, tiny star images. |
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NGC 884, better known as one half of the double cluster was taken with a
6" reflector at f6 and a 5 minute exposure. Providing the image is not enlarged too
much stars at this smaller image scale do not appear 'square' and the CCD is able to cover
a much larger area of sky. |
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Not a colour image unfortunately, but Beta Cygni (Albireo) still looks a
beautiful double star in this image. The colours of the stars in this famous double are
often described as golden yellow and blue - take a look on the next clear night. |
Nebulae
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M1, one of my first targets with the CCD camera. M1 has many fascinating
features including it's unique history. M1 is the remnant of a supernova observed in 1054
AD and contains a pulsar at it's heart seen close to the centre of this image (see
Burnham's Celestial Handbook p1860). The complex filaments are still expanding outward at
1000 Km-s. 10 minute exposure. |
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The Owl nebula, M97. Observed and named so by Lord Rosse with the giant
72" telescope at Birr castle in Ireland. 5 min exposure. |
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M57, the ring nebula, one of the best known objects in the sky. Details in
the ring are easily recorded with quite short exposures, this one was 2 minutes. The
central star, much sought after visually, can be seen on exposures as short as 5 seconds
with the CCD. |
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Without a doubt the most famous and probably the most observed nebula in
the skies. The great Orion nebula M42 spans an area too large to fit on the CCD coupled to
the 14". This picture is a composite of 3 images carefully taken, calibrated and
jigsawed together. Each image was exposed for just 15s. |
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Hubble's variable nebula. A favourite of mine for many years, well
placed in the Winter sky in Monoceros. NGC2261 was the first object to be photographed
with the famous 200" Mount Palomar telscope in 1948. 5 minute exposure in poor seeing
conditions. |
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'The little dumbell', M76, so called for it's resemblance to M27. M76 can
be found in Perseus. This image shows the loops of material extending out from the body of
the nebula, not often seen on many published images. 6 minutes exposure. |
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NGC 2392, the Eskimo nebula has a very bright central star of magnitude 8.
Under high power in the telescope the impression of an Inuit face can be seen. |
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M78 in Orion, a 10 minute exposure taken in poor seeing conditions. |
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The Eagle nebula, M16 in Serpens. Taken from COAA in 1997 via the 0.5m
reflector and a 4 minute exposure. The Eagle nebula was made famous by the Hubble space
telescope image showing immense detail in the 'pillars' which can be seen on a much
smaller scale in this image. |
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NGC 6781 can be found in the summer sky in
Aquila. Not very well known,
this planetary nebula can be seen visually in most instruments even under light polluted
conditions. This image shows some detail in the bubble of glowing gas and the surrounding
rich Milky Way star field. |
| Planets & Satellites  |
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Saturn taken in October 1997 before the rings were as open as now
(2003).
This image was taken with eyepiece projection at f27 and a 0.2s exposure. Six images were
averaged to achieve a better signal to noise ratio. |
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Jupiter, 24th August 1998 at 2308 UT, f27 0.05s. The image shows (left to
right) Io in transit, the shadow of Ganymede and the great red spot near the limb. Nine
images were averaged and the composite unsharp masked. |
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Mars imaged on April 29th 1999, 2148UT, CM=55°. Details as above with
eyepiece projection at f27, 0.05s. Seven images were averaged. The dark region to the
north (top) is Acidalia Planitia with Chryse (centre) and the Argyre region to the south.
The image was taken under very poor conditions of haze and moonlight, with Mars just above
a house roof! |
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Taken on 6th September at 22:37UT CM=221 degrees
Coolpix 885 used afocal to take a 40s AVI file. Processed best frames in
Registax.
14" f5.2 reflector with 6mm X2 Barlow |
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This is an image of Saturn's 16th magnitude satellite Phoebe, taken on
January 21st 1999 at 19:08 UT. The image is a mosaic of several CCD frames to include
Saturn (Saturn's image is overexposed but an internal reflection can be seen).
How do I know it was Phoebe?
The frame with Phoebe in was calibrated using the GSC and a position derived which,
remarkably, matched the JPL ephemeris exactly! The
position (unrefracted, J=2000) was measured as 01h 46m 39.09s +08° 24' 21.6" |
| Animated GIFs |
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Barnard's Star
This is an animated GIF is composed of four images of Barnard's star taken 5, 2 and 1 year
apart. First in 1991 on 4th June, 5min exposure on hypered Tech Pan 2415 film, second in
1996 on 24th June, 30s exposure using an SXL8 camera (kindly loaned at the time by my
friend Eric Strach) and the last two in 1998 and 1999 using the SX mono camera. Images
were exported as JPG files, aligned and made into the animated GIF seen above!
A crude pixel to pixel measuremet of the motion over 5 years gave just over 10" per
annum, very close to the published value of 10.36" per annum. |
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Pluto 1998
This animated GIF of Pluto was made up of images
taken from COAA in the Algarve region of Portugal. It is composed of 3 images taken on
three consecutive evenings (it's always pretty clear over there!) via a 6" f6
reflector and the Starlight Xpress mono CCD. |