Finally! Someone is sharing pictures of what to expect looking through a telescope before long exposures and picture stacking. This helps me tremendously to know what to look for in the night sky through my telescope!
@@fasteddie0318 it ment there is a huge difference of expectations from photos that people see and a simple glance through telescope eyepiece. Many people get dissapointed after looking through a telescope, seeing just smudges of light. Many expect Hubble space telescope instant live view images...
Don't forget he is using a low magnification wide angle view. My live view of the Pleiades is better than his was using a 20mm Takahashi Orthoscopic eyepiece (EP) at 37x magnification that barely fit the whole 7 Sisters of Pleaides in it (including their 2 parents Atlas and Sterope). The Crab Nebula also is better at a higher power. At 75x in my C6-N 150mm or 6" F-5 telescope, using a Baader orthoscopic 10mm EP 50 degree field of view (fov) it looks a lot better than his live view. It just depends on the object, I get nice views of globular star clusters because I can fit them into the fov of my higher magnification EPs. BUT! I can't see Andromeda without long exposure times because it is so big. It is literally the size of six moons or 3 degrees of arc and the Moon is 1/2 a degree. I need my 32mm 82 degree wide view to even get it into my telescope's fov, but although my view is a little brighter than in the video it is still just a big fuzzy ball of light. To see Andromeda without a long exposure view you'd need a large telescope with a huge mirror and I don't know how big that is.
Great video to see the comparison. I had a bit of a reality check when I first got into astronomy - thinking that live view would somehow be near the same level as stacked images - and that's where the learning curve began!
What a great idea for a video. I've never seen anything like this. Live views followed by long exposure, now that's how you make a deep space video. And your images are phenomenal. Thank you for spending the time to do this. This is the best video on RUclips.
Excellent, truly excellent. The live view directly through the eyepiece is in reality better ( darker surroundings/more crispy) than what you saw in this vid, because not processed on your screen. Every time I observe real time with the eyepiece it is sensational! Because it is real, it is there, photons hitting your eyes, crispy clear white blobs, shiny planet details on Saturn, Jupiter, Mars and great detail if you watch the moon. Never forget the moon, closest astronomical neighbor in the sky, pay attention to it as it will probably one of the most beautiful objects to look at in real live.
Definitely live view is way better than stacking and processing, looking at dsos is the best medicine for my soul. Thanks for sharing your work. Just one thing, could you put bigger captions on the bottom of the screen?. Thanks, an old guy here...
This is a very good representation of what's seen through the eyepiece of a 6"-8" telescope under darker suburban skies. Under very dark skies, like the double exposure or better
Your are the best, you make me notice that we live in a wonderful in universe, when the things are not going well, I come here and I feel good again :D
Ji man can you explain me what is picture stacking and how to make picture like that. I want to buy telescope but im afraid in same time because i read i cant see such things without those tehnicks
Wouuu!! Congratulations!! Really amazing!! This give a real idea about how the objects look trought the telescope and with time exposition. Fantastic video.
Amazing! The live views are pretty much spot on with what I see in my 8" cave astrola reflector. And you cover all the best objects. Thanks for posting this fantastic video!
@Astromagazine, Holy cow!, your mount cost more that double the telescope!!!!!. I just bought a Orion SkyQuest XT10i IntelliScope Dobsonian Telescope today and I can't wait!!!!!!!
Reality check boom! Astrophotography is such an important tool for mankind to be able to "collect" light and build it up to show us what we couldnt otherwise see. For me though, I like to see real things first hand with my eyes so astrophotography is not for me. For me astrophotography, well I may as well sit here and look at other people's on my computer, but aeeing the real thing through a telescope is much more exciting. But as a newbie this is the reality check I, needed. I now know Im searching for near invisible objects. Its almost depressing as I know Ill never see full bliwn galaxies with my own eyes. Still to know those murky grey pin points or pin ponts of light are what they are is amazing. Great great video. Respect!
The Dumbbell nebula is amazing to watch throught the teleskope with your own eyes. You can even see the tourquise and pink colours if you know how to watch correctly (I cant explain this in English, you have to focus your eyes on a spot next to the nebula, then you see the colour.)
If think the words you are looking for are peripheral vision I'm amazed by the fact that you could see M27 in color, what was the diameter of your telescope, and were you using a filter ?
Thank you so much. Those videos are exactly what I'm looking for. You're doing an amazing job, my friend. Your videos helped me to get through some anxiety crisis and I'm so grateful for that. Thank you.
I'm sorry, you might even get angry if I comment. But you make such beautiful videos that it's hard not to comment. I always share them with my friends in Brazil and they are delighted with their work. I know the work and nights sleep you miss making them. And the weather conditions don't always help. Congratulations on your beautiful work. I wish you professional and life success!
@@FisTheDucc Because he's American and another culture! I've already praised other videos and their respective authors didn't like it. In each country, its native has its own culture and I above all must respect it. For this reason I asked him for permission to praise his work.
Great stuff!!! Can't remember the last clear night round here, my poor 'scopes are lying idle in their boxes 😭🌧️🌨️☔. Thanks for reminding me of what I'm missing!
Of course the first clear night that comes you won't be prepared, worked a long day at work, or just plain don't feel like it. 😆 Have you ever gone out with these circumstances JUST because it actually IS clear? Damn, I don't feel like it, but can't pass this up. Ugghhhh.... 😂
Beautiful. I have a 12inch dob reflector and am relatively new to the game but I need to get a camera and learn to stack photos and all that. I'm not good with computers so hope I can do it. Thanks for the video
Truly the best comparison video ever. I have been looking for something like this. Thank u. Over the past few months I have slowly found these. I really like old school for now just learning the skys very peaceful. 10in 4.7 dob and the hunt. Clear skys
I would like to get a telescope myself but physical pain makes it hard for my neck to look up, so Simulation Curriculum Corp satisfies this hobby for me. But really really nice live shots.
As someone said, a unique and beautiful feeling i had when seeing this spectacular objects. Kind of something we know is out there but no one will ever go there even the closest ones, we don't even know how they actually look nowadays, plus that magic background music ...
I'd like to ask for some clarification: Is it the EQ6 or the EQ6-R mount? Your description text contains conflicting information on this. Is the specified telescope also correct, so it's a dobsonian 10 inch newton adapted to fit onto the mount? The same for all pictures? With or without a coma corrector? If possible I would also like to know what camera(s) where used?
hope you don't mind me asking if you know, but what's the orange light moving slowly from left to right, left center 00:00 - 00:14? too slow for a plane, too bright for a satellite.
I have a 76mm telescope, how many of this objects I can see?? And how do you took that long exposure photos, with a telescope camera or with a professional camera with adapter??
DSOs in this Video: M101 (Pinwheel), M13, M27 (Dumbbell), M33 (Triangulum), M15, M57 (Ring), M42 & NGC 1977 (Orion-, Running Man Nebula), M51 (Whirlpool), M31, M31, M110, M1 (Crab), M45 (Pleiades), M65, M66, NGC 3628, M81, M82, M22
Music: Borrtex: ruclips.net/video/Opk4poKc4mk/видео.html
Tracks:
00:00:00 Borrtex - Snowflake (Winter Special)
00:04:11 Borrtex - Waiting For You
00:07:38 Borrtex - Passion
00:11:00 Borrtex - Desire
00:13:26 Borrtex - Floating
I love astromy
no filters? OIII? H-B? SII?
What bortle did you take most of them?
Finally! Someone is sharing pictures of what to expect looking through a telescope before long exposures and picture stacking. This helps me tremendously to know what to look for in the night sky through my telescope!
Pardon my ignorance, what do you mean by long exposures?
@@fasteddie0318 it ment there is a huge difference of expectations from photos that people see and a simple glance through telescope eyepiece. Many people get dissapointed after looking through a telescope, seeing just smudges of light. Many expect Hubble space telescope instant live view images...
@@fasteddie0318 you know like with cameras. Long exposures take in more light so you can see more details basically
Don't forget he is using a low magnification wide angle view. My live view of the Pleiades is better than his was using a 20mm Takahashi Orthoscopic eyepiece (EP) at 37x magnification that barely fit the whole 7 Sisters of Pleaides in it (including their 2 parents Atlas and Sterope). The Crab Nebula also is better at a higher power. At 75x in my C6-N 150mm or 6" F-5 telescope, using a Baader orthoscopic 10mm EP 50 degree field of view (fov) it looks a lot better than his live view. It just depends on the object, I get nice views of globular star clusters because I can fit them into the fov of my higher magnification EPs.
BUT! I can't see Andromeda without long exposure times because it is so big. It is literally the size of six moons or 3 degrees of arc and the Moon is 1/2 a degree. I need my 32mm 82 degree wide view to even get it into my telescope's fov, but although my view is a little brighter than in the video it is still just a big fuzzy ball of light. To see Andromeda without a long exposure view you'd need a large telescope with a huge mirror and I don't know how big that is.
@@MountainFisher 250mm
Spiral galaxies are the most amazing and beautiful things I ever seen in my life. Their shape has something essential point of life circle.
This channel is seriously underrated. It deserves a lot more appreciation.
I am 61 and recently became a huge cosmos fan. Thank you for this video
Gosh, there's a feeling I can't explain seeing these deep sky objects in live view vs a processed image, something about it is just so aw inspiring..
Great video to see the comparison. I had a bit of a reality check when I first got into astronomy - thinking that live view would somehow be near the same level as stacked images - and that's where the learning curve began!
What a great idea for a video. I've never seen anything like this. Live views followed by long exposure, now that's how you make a deep space video. And your images are phenomenal. Thank you for spending the time to do this. This is the best video on RUclips.
Excellent, truly excellent. The live view directly through the eyepiece is in reality better ( darker surroundings/more crispy) than what you saw in this vid, because not processed on your screen. Every time I observe real time with the eyepiece it is sensational! Because it is real, it is there, photons hitting your eyes, crispy clear white blobs, shiny planet details on Saturn, Jupiter, Mars and great detail if you watch the moon. Never forget the moon, closest astronomical neighbor in the sky, pay attention to it as it will probably one of the most beautiful objects to look at in real live.
Definitely live view is way better than stacking and processing, looking at dsos is the best medicine for my soul. Thanks for sharing your work. Just one thing, could you put bigger captions on the bottom of the screen?. Thanks, an old guy here...
This is a very good representation of what's seen through the eyepiece of a 6"-8" telescope under darker suburban skies. Under very dark skies, like the double exposure or better
Great video. This should be required viewing for all new astronomers.
Concordo contigo.
You have Included Most of My Favourite Deep Sky Objects. Could Include More Globular Star Clusters, Never the Less, This Is A Wonderful a video!!
Wow You Broke the Record! Amazing photos from your backyard! No need to go waste gas to go in Universe
Your are the best, you make me notice that we live in a wonderful in universe, when the things are not going well, I come here and I feel good again :D
Brilliant transition from live view to long exposure/stacked. Really evokes a sense of wonder. I really appreciate the video, thank you!
Ji man can you explain me what is picture stacking and how to make picture like that. I want to buy telescope but im afraid in same time because i read i cant see such things without those tehnicks
Sorry for bad english im slav
Your Orion Nebula image is awesome!
Wouuu!! Congratulations!! Really amazing!! This give a real idea about how the objects look trought the telescope and with time exposition. Fantastic video.
Amazing! The live views are pretty much spot on with what I see in my 8" cave astrola reflector. And you cover all the best objects. Thanks for posting this fantastic video!
The music is as fine as the vid itself
Thank you for these videos / I watch these videos every day / I keep posting these videos / God bless you
@Astromagazine, Holy cow!, your mount cost more that double the telescope!!!!!. I just bought a Orion SkyQuest XT10i IntelliScope Dobsonian Telescope today and I can't wait!!!!!!!
Big Fan
Old Subscriber
Love From India
Espectacular. Maravilloso.
👍👍🇨🇱
Omg😢 this is a channel for me💘 can't even begin to explain😆
This is really helpful to know what is going to be cool to look at for visual astronomy rather than the expectations from JW or Hubble - thanks :)
This is what I NEED to See....Great Work...Outstanding!
Great Job! OMG I LOVED THIS VIDEO! 😍 this is the best channel I've ever found here!
Enjoyed the live stacks with the music here, nice.
I don't know why but this is satisfying to me
Reality check boom! Astrophotography is such an important tool for mankind to be able to "collect" light and build it up to show us what we couldnt otherwise see.
For me though, I like to see real things first hand with my eyes so astrophotography is not for me. For me astrophotography, well I may as well sit here and look at other people's on my computer, but aeeing the real thing through a telescope is much more exciting.
But as a newbie this is the reality check I, needed. I now know Im searching for near invisible objects. Its almost depressing as I know Ill never see full bliwn galaxies with my own eyes. Still to know those murky grey pin points or pin ponts of light are what they are is amazing. Great great video. Respect!
The Dumbbell nebula is amazing to watch throught the teleskope with your own eyes. You can even see the tourquise and pink colours if you know how to watch correctly (I cant explain this in English, you have to focus your eyes on a spot next to the nebula, then you see the colour.)
If think the words you are looking for are peripheral vision
I'm amazed by the fact that you could see M27 in color, what was the diameter of your telescope, and were you using a filter ?
@@etme1572 No filter, The diameter was 12 inches.
A beautifully surreal video.
Thanks for sharing, after viewing this it has made me think how can we be alone? Beautiful.
thanks, really can see these dso like you and good is to compare with camera
Thank you so much. Those videos are exactly what I'm looking for. You're doing an amazing job, my friend. Your videos helped me to get through some anxiety crisis and I'm so grateful for that.
Thank you.
I'm sorry, you might even get angry if I comment. But you make such beautiful videos that it's hard not to comment. I always share them with my friends in Brazil and they are delighted with their work. I know the work and nights sleep you miss making them. And the weather conditions don't always help. Congratulations on your beautiful work. I wish you professional and life success!
Thank you
why should he get angry? bruh
@@FisTheDucc Because he's American and another culture! I've already praised other videos and their respective authors didn't like it. In each country, its native has its own culture and I above all must respect it. For this reason I asked him for permission to praise his work.
Realmente lindo
Great stuff!!! Can't remember the last clear night round here, my poor 'scopes are lying idle in their boxes 😭🌧️🌨️☔. Thanks for reminding me of what I'm missing!
Of course the first clear night that comes you won't be prepared, worked a long day at work, or just plain don't feel like it. 😆
Have you ever gone out with these circumstances JUST because it actually IS clear? Damn, I don't feel like it, but can't pass this up. Ugghhhh.... 😂
Right I live in Washington state always raining
Thank you many times. I can see with your channel what I wish I could from my backyard. Maybe one day I will have that awesome telescope 🔭.
This is Phenomenal!!
Beautiful. I have a 12inch dob reflector and am relatively new to the game but I need to get a camera and learn to stack photos and all that. I'm not good with computers so hope I can do it. Thanks for the video
And subscribed.
Good content . Keep it up
It is better than what is on TV and I appreciate the beauty and tranquility of space ❤️
Man.....just wow.
Honestly this is very cool and amazing
oh thats accurate, nice! thats also what i see through my scope-w-
Let's praise the creator of this astonishing and silent ocean of cosmos. Let's praise the calmness and beauty of this unimaginable creation ❤
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻
Amazing . Good job
Nice collection of images. Where do you image from in the world?
really great video, thanks for taking the time to make this
Beautiful images!
Love from brazil❤️
Truly the best comparison video ever. I have been looking for something like this. Thank u. Over the past few months I have slowly found these. I really like old school for now just learning the skys very peaceful. 10in 4.7 dob and the hunt. Clear skys
Brilliant!
This video is beautiful. I wish I had seen this before I ever saw that andromeda is just a fuzzy patch of blurr with binos lol
I liked the part where the piano went dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun DUN DUN DUNNNN
dont know why, but orion nebula brought me to tears.
Me too
One of the easiest to see
Great work!
I would like to get a telescope myself but physical pain makes it hard for my neck to look up, so Simulation Curriculum Corp satisfies this hobby for me. But really really nice live shots.
Excelente trabajo 👌👌👍👍
Brilliant for budding astronomers, what you can expect from visual astronomy to astrophotographer .
How do you make the stars twinkle in the final long exposures?
can't wait to see what James Webb Telescope will bring to us
As someone said, a unique and beautiful feeling i had when seeing this spectacular objects. Kind of something we know is out there but no one will ever go there even the closest ones, we don't even know how they actually look nowadays, plus that magic background music ...
You can maybe go wherever you want when you’re dead and no longer confined to man made technology and a meat jacket.
That was amazing,
Thank you
1:53 on the upper right side. Is that a galaxy?
The fact that some of those lights were already dead very long time ago somehow makes me sad
Sehr schöne Aufnahmen!😃
I'd like to ask for some clarification:
Is it the EQ6 or the EQ6-R mount? Your description text contains conflicting information on this.
Is the specified telescope also correct, so it's a dobsonian 10 inch newton adapted to fit onto the mount? The same for all pictures?
With or without a coma corrector?
If possible I would also like to know what camera(s) where used?
And he never answered
Inspiring, make more videos like this!
This is so good!
hope you don't mind me asking if you know, but what's the orange light moving slowly from left to right, left center 00:00 - 00:14? too slow for a plane, too bright for a satellite.
What equipment did you use to capture these awesome views/pictures?
love it ❤️
Perfect video. :) We want to see our planets in our solar system through the eyes of your telescope. :)
I will do a Video soon :)
Beautiful
From Were Did You Take this Amazing Picture s At?
So coool, I've gotten nebula like trapzeium cluster and ring nebula, no galaxiws yet, hopefully tonight
Excelente 👏👏👏👏
woow 🥰😍😘
A moment of silence for the people who never found this..
Amezing! Wondarful!
I wonder how this would be with a 16"
Hei mate, the link that leads to your telescope model is broken, can you put another link to that? I'd really like to buy one same as yours :), ty!
What camera you using, pictures are so sharp
From morocco ♥️
Good work.
What is the second picture where things are more bright and colorful. Also if i buy this telescope how would i see, the first image or the second one?
I have a 76mm telescope, how many of this objects I can see?? And how do you took that long exposure photos, with a telescope camera or with a professional camera with adapter??
Nice !
So when you show the long exposure shots, are these color edited or would you see those colors just by stacking the unedited snapshots?
Bro this video is underrated tho’
super super super
I love the music too, what is it?
My problems are so small that I can't even see them under a microscope.
I was looking at ordering at setup like yours, what eyepiece/camera are you using?
magic as alw!
Quite nice.
Best
Hey how do you edit your photo's?
What exposure times for final images and how many light darks flats and bias?