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dragonrider
11-20-2007, 06:56 AM
Here are some pictures of the moon that I took through my telescope with my digital camera.

illnillinois
11-20-2007, 06:58 AM
and a wonderful treat, thanks for sharing.
db

ghosty
11-20-2007, 07:00 AM
very cool... someday im totally gonna buy a good telescope when i can afford to spend the money on one... +rep:thumbsup:

Cannabic
11-20-2007, 07:05 AM
wow, well done:jointsmile: you should take pics of other galatic stars

snowblind
11-20-2007, 05:37 PM
wow there amazing

good work

does you telescope have a camera attached or can you take them with the digital through the lense

dragonrider
11-20-2007, 05:58 PM
does you telescope have a camera attached or can you take them with the digital through the lense

The telescope uses different interchangeble eyepieces that give different magnifications. I bought an adapter that allowed me to attach my digital camera (just a regular Nikon Coolpix) onto an eyepeice. With something like the moon, you can use the camera's zoom to get the image framed the way you want, and then get things focused as well as you can with the telescope's focuser, and then the camera's autofocus will automatically do the last bit of focusing.

There are a lot of different ways to take pictures through a telescope. Some of them use very specialized equipemnt. Some people use the digital camer method like I did. And then there are some systems that are based on webcams, and you use a laptop to capture and process the images.

The moon is a very easy thing to image, because it is very bright, so it does not take a long exposure. And it is big and has easily visible features, so it gives your camera something to auto-focus on. Star clusters and distant deep-sky objects are harder because they take very long exposures, and you have to have a system for tracking them very precisely as they move across the sky. For planets, people get good results with webcams and using a process called "stacking" that uses software to "stack" a lot of short exposure images into one single image to build up the details.

4osiris
11-20-2007, 06:06 PM
Here are some pictures of the moon that I took through my telescope with my digital camera.

Awesome. The real picture.

pass_the_dubbie
11-20-2007, 07:25 PM
That's really cool!
I've never had the pleasure to trip out through a telescope...or even look through one sober. I should get one...the sky is very interesting indeed.

KingsBlend420
11-21-2007, 01:00 AM
awesome man.

420_24/7
11-21-2007, 01:14 AM
Cool, man those are some awesome pics, and i just got a nikon coolpix today. lol

Doctor Whoov
11-21-2007, 01:24 AM
Can you set the shudder speed on your camera? If you can set it to bulb and hold it in for a few minutes. If you wait too long you'll get trails (not the good kind) however you'll get great images of those deep sky objects. The Crab Nebula (M31 I think) is supposedly an easy one to start with.

Doctor Whoov
11-21-2007, 01:27 AM
...and in response to Pass_The_Dubbie keep looking up and you'll see some cool shit. Of course no one will believe you if you tell them because they'll think you were stoned but cool shit none the less.

jessem98
11-21-2007, 01:54 AM
thanks bud! ive always LOVED space, any more you could take would be much appreciated

Coelho
11-21-2007, 03:12 AM
This pictures are very nice!!! :eek: :thumbsup:
Do you have some picture of the planets?
Im sure you already knows where they are, but anyway... Jupiter is near Scorpio, Mars is in Gemini, Saturn is near Leo and Venus is unmistakeable... its visible before the sunrise.

dragonrider
11-21-2007, 04:24 PM
That's really cool!
I've never had the pleasure to trip out through a telescope...or even look through one sober. I should get one...the sky is very interesting indeed.

If you have a pair of binoculars, you can see a lot of great things in the sky. I actually pull out my binoculars more often than the telescope. Just kick back in the patio lounge chair, or lay on a blanket and scan around the sky with the binos. Good binos for astronomy are 7x50, but a lot os different kinds will do. The first number should be under 10x or it will be hard to hold steady without wiggling, and the last number should be over 40 --- the higher the better.


Can you set the shudder speed on your camera? If you can set it to bulb and hold it in for a few minutes. If you wait too long you'll get trails (not the good kind) however you'll get great images of those deep sky objects. The Crab Nebula (M31 I think) is supposedly an easy one to start with.

I haven't experimented too much with the rig I set up, but I was having trouble getting a focus on faint objects through the camera. I can look at different faint deep sky objects through the telescope, but the photography wasn't working that well.


This pictures are very nice!!! :eek: :thumbsup:
Do you have some picture of the planets?
Im sure you already knows where they are, but anyway... Jupiter is near Scorpio, Mars is in Gemini, Saturn is near Leo and Venus is unmistakeable... its visible before the sunrise.

Same as for the deep sky objects, I was having trouble getting a good focus on the planets through the camera. I can look at the planets through the telescope, but the photography wasn't working that well.

If I do take some more pics I'll be sure to post them!

Ghengis Chron
11-22-2007, 06:32 PM
Very cool. I have had a telescope for a little under a year now, yet I've only had the opportunity to view the moon from it. apparently it needs to be focused or realigned or something, but my star-finder, whenever I try to use it, doesn't seem to work. I'll line a planet up with the red dot in my star finder, yet
I still can't see it.

Anyways, I've seen some pretty spectacular things on the moon that I'm not willing to discuss. I've told very few people. Last winter, during a 4 night stretch, every time I viewed the moon, certain 'events' were taking place. That's all I can really say, but keep watching the sky!

mattisnotonfire
11-22-2007, 06:42 PM
Anyways, I've seen some pretty spectacular things on the moon that I'm not willing to discuss. I've told very few people. Last winter, during a 4 night stretch, every time I viewed the moon, certain 'events' were taking place. That's all I can really say, but keep watching the sky!

You know about my sexy parties on the moon? SHIT! :mad:

r0k
11-22-2007, 06:48 PM
Macro that shit man :thumbsup:

LOL, just kidding guys, great pics though.. I remember when I had my telescope..

beachguy in thongs
12-06-2007, 07:43 PM
I've seen some pretty spectacular things on the moon that I'm not willing to discuss. I've told very few people. Last winter, during a 4 night stretch, every time I viewed the moon, certain 'events' were taking place. That's all I can really say, but keep watching the sky!

What???

Do you mean, like, family reunions and frat parties?

Or, is it getting pelted by meteors? Or, are they building a jail?

dragonrider
12-06-2007, 07:49 PM
I was curious about these "events" as well. I've watched the moon a lot, and have never seen any kind of mysterious "event."

There is a decent restaurant on the moon --- good food, but no atmosphere. Maybe they could liven the place up with some events.

Markass
02-13-2008, 07:02 PM
Here are some pictures of the moon that I took through my telescope with my digital camera.

those are some badass pictures

skunke
02-17-2008, 02:56 AM
WOW just amazing! Will be anticipating some more!

FlyGuyOU
02-17-2008, 03:39 AM
wheres the moonajuana

Diffusion
02-17-2008, 05:11 AM
Anyways, I've seen some pretty spectacular things on the moon that I'm not willing to discuss. I've told very few people. Last winter, during a 4 night stretch, every time I viewed the moon, certain 'events' were taking place. That's all I can really say, but keep watching the sky!

You didn't see anything. If you did, you were probably :stoned:

pinkyslayer
04-17-2008, 09:32 AM
The telescope uses different interchangeble eyepieces that give different magnifications. I bought an adapter that allowed me to attach my digital camera (just a regular Nikon Coolpix) onto an eyepeice. With something like the moon, you can use the camera's zoom to get the image framed the way you want, and then get things focused as well as you can with the telescope's focuser, and then the camera's autofocus will automatically do the last bit of focusing.

There are a lot of different ways to take pictures through a telescope. Some of them use very specialized equipemnt. Some people use the digital camer method like I did. And then there are some systems that are based on webcams, and you use a laptop to capture and process the images.

The moon is a very easy thing to image, because it is very bright, so it does not take a long exposure. And it is big and has easily visible features, so it gives your camera something to auto-focus on. Star clusters and distant deep-sky objects are harder because they take very long exposures, and you have to have a system for tracking them very precisely as they move across the sky. For planets, people get good results with webcams and using a process called "stacking" that uses software to "stack" a lot of short exposure images into one single image to build up the details.

wow dude...youre pretty damn smart about that shit...nice photos too

Esoteric416
04-18-2008, 08:42 AM
There is a decent restaurant on the moon --- good food, but no atmosphere. Maybe they could liven the place up with some events.

"Atmosphere" Yuk Yuk :D:thumbsup:

LuciferN
04-18-2008, 12:39 PM
Here are some pictures of the moon that I took through my telescope with my digital camera.

Nice pics ! Did you ever saw the US flag on the moon ?

zebedee
05-02-2008, 12:06 AM
wicked

dragonrider
05-05-2008, 09:11 PM
Nice pics ! Did you ever saw the US flag on the moon ?

A lot of people wonder about that, but the flags and footprints and the parts of the sapcecraft that were left behind are all much to small to see at this distance, even with really powerful telescopes.

blizz
05-10-2008, 09:21 AM
good pictures i just put one as the backround for out hotel computer,nice bro :thumbsup:

Greenthing
05-10-2008, 09:29 AM
I can see my grow in my moon room on those photos wow:thumbsup:

Ubalubus
10-17-2008, 10:33 AM
Nice pics! Here's a few pics I took with my telescope over the course of the past few years... I bought it back in '04 - while its a pain in the arse to take outside and set up, the views are incredible :)

the pics are:
venus, jupiter, jupiter
mars (collage), saturn

Ubalubus
10-17-2008, 10:38 AM
A few more... one of my telescope :)

the pics are:
lunar eclipse, the sun, venus&jupiter conjunction (not thru the scope)
my telescope.

elskeetro
10-17-2008, 01:17 PM
Wow. these are all great. I've always wanted a telescope but never really researched it. Does anyone have any suggestions for a total beginner? what are some good models that will allow me to get a good view without spending too much?

great stuff. thanks
Skeet.

Stoner Shadow Wolf
10-17-2008, 01:59 PM
Here are some pictures of the moon that I took through my telescope with my digital camera.


and still, no evidence man was ever there...

dragonrider
10-17-2008, 02:51 PM
Nice pics! Here's a few pics I took with my telescope over the course of the past few years... I bought it back in '04 - while its a pain in the arse to take outside and set up, the views are incredible :)

the pics are:
venus, jupiter, jupiter
mars (collage), saturn


A few more... one of my telescope :)

the pics are:
lunar eclipse, the sun, venus&jupiter conjunction (not thru the scope)
my telescope.

These are all great! Thanks for posting them up!

FreshNugz
10-17-2008, 02:57 PM
wow.
I am completely ignorant to these things, yet they are amazing. You've inspired me to do some more research, and learn more about this. Amazing photos. A+ for you!

Nightcrewman
10-17-2008, 02:57 PM
There are some very good photos there, it's amazing how the moon looks through a telescope.
Here is a picture of my telescope taken from the moon, you have to look very very hard but it is there:)

Ubalubus
10-17-2008, 10:12 PM
There are some very good photos there, it's amazing how the moon looks through a telescope.
Here is a picture of my telescope taken from the moon, you have to look very very hard but it is there:)

bwahahaha ROFL!

Ubalubus
10-17-2008, 10:27 PM
Wow. these are all great. I've always wanted a telescope but never really researched it. Does anyone have any suggestions for a total beginner? what are some good models that will allow me to get a good view without spending too much?

great stuff. thanks
Skeet.

i bought it from orion telescopes - they're prices are good and their service is exceptional... good bang for the buck me thinks :) Telescopes & Accessories at Factory-Direct Prices! - Telescope.com (http://www.telescope.com). Don't buy anything from a department store - those are generally crap. And like dragonrider mentioned - a decent set of binoculars are good too, especially to start out with - infact i use my binocs more than my scope just because they are easy to use and require no setup. I got a set of 15x70's for 85 bux a coupla years ago and i love 'em to death!

funiman111
04-30-2009, 10:10 PM
Very nice. Im going to see if my telescope has that feature.

uneeeuh
06-01-2009, 05:56 AM
tss you should try to take picture of mars or something maybe an asteroid too..and some stars up close..i bet stars look different in that thing...good pictures

uneeeuh
06-01-2009, 06:05 AM
Nice pics! Here's a few pics I took with my telescope over the course of the past few years... I bought it back in '04 - while its a pain in the arse to take outside and set up, the views are incredible :)

the pics are:
venus, jupiter, jupiter
mars (collage), saturn

oh crap i just crapped myself...crazy how as i sit here those gigantic planets are outthere just spinning..RIGHT RIGHT NOW and in them are probably like crazy storms and lightnings and twisters like weve never and probably will never see...and...wow its like the end of the world if i were there...but instead im here in earth sitting down in peace...and then i wonder what the other side is like all dark probably and who knows what kind of reactions take place at night over there...im high...

cmasfca
06-01-2009, 06:08 AM
Fantastic thread; I love star gazing :stoned:

cubanman1122
06-01-2009, 10:41 PM
Those are some very nice pictures, great view! I love how different the surface looks when you really take a good up-close look as opposed to the naked eye...

Very nice! :thumbsup:

space toker
06-29-2009, 04:42 AM
I'm surprised no one has asked yet, what size (aperature) are those telescopes (threadstarter + 2nd person) ? What size do you need to take pics like that in other words? I got a telescope, 4 1/2 reflector I think, and all I could do with it was look at the moon briefly. Granted I never handled a telescope before so I had no clue on a lot of things, but it was supposed to be "go to" and it never went anywhere you wanted it to! :D
I looked at Saturn in it and all I could see is what I can see with my 8 x 40 binoc's, a bright yellow-orange "star", maybe with the faintest trace of rings. I was expecting a lot more, and couldn't get it into focus with the larger eyepieces. I don't know if it was defective or me, but they took it back. Once I have more money, I would like to get a better scope so any ideas would be helpful. thanks
peace

Ub3rB0ng
09-15-2009, 05:49 PM
Nice shots man. I too like stargazing. My wife and I have been thinking about getting a telescope.