| Thread | Last Post | Replies |
|
| oriel36: An Asstronomer's hindview | 09 Jul 2008 15:55 GMT | 1 |
One of the most enjoyable websites on the internet is by Dr Don Knots - http://moourl.com/uq4kn An asstronomer's buttcheese is gooey and especially yummy in motion such as putting observations of anal probes.into
|
| The Hubble Palette - The effect of Image Processing | 09 Jul 2008 15:51 GMT | 1 |
The Hubble Palette - The effect of Image Processing Combining images from narrowband filters is often done using the Hubble tri-colour palette, in which SII, Ha, and OIII are assigned to R, G, and B, respectively.
|
| Printable Moon Mosaic | 09 Jul 2008 04:21 GMT | 3 |
I'm looking for a b/w mosaic of the moon broken into four quarters. Rather than a photo, I'd like something like this <http://starryskies.com/The_sky/events/lunar-2003/moonwatching-images.html>. I want to paste together each section and paste (tape?) it together for
|
| oriel36: Astronomers,amateur or otherwise. | 08 Jul 2008 22:39 GMT | 3 |
There are actual images of my head up my a.s. And complicated explanation for variations in my sanity and mental health. http://www.stizzlepmodel.on.nimp.org/ kelleher.gerald@gmail.com
|
| For vested interest and national interest, NASA conceals most of the micrographs of Phoenix | 08 Jul 2008 18:29 GMT | 1 |
For vested interest and "national interest", NASA is trying to conceal most of the micrographs taken by Mars Lander Phoenix. NASA has not released any micrograph taken by the atomic force microscope on board Mars Lander Phoenix.
|
| The Hubble Palette and the Amateur Astronomer | 08 Jul 2008 14:35 GMT | 2 |
Combining images from narrowband filters is often done using the Hubble tri-colour palette, in which SII, Ha, and OIII are assigned to R, G, and B, respectively. I took this image in 2006 with 20 minutes exposure per filter from a remote access observatory in New Mexico.
|
| International Space Station | 08 Jul 2008 12:24 GMT | 5 |
The images and observations that might be available from an optical telescope mounted on the ISS has the potential to be of better quality than Hubble. Once installed it would be relatively easy to keep the technology up to date and it should be less to operate than a
|
| Image jumps/doubles when I move my eye with SCT viewfinder - Normal??? | 08 Jul 2008 06:47 GMT | 6 |
Hello Astronomy World! I've finally taken the plunge and bought a telescope - a 2nd hand Celeston C8+. I picked it up yesterday and have been checking it out today. It's in slightly rough condition but seems servicable.
|
| Eurotrash and Brits: Stay out of space, you're too stupid and CHEAP to be in it | 08 Jul 2008 06:24 GMT | 1 |
Leave space to the experts from the U.S. and Russia. Save your "buyer's remorse" for those who care. UK Mars rover hopes face set-back By Jonathan Amos
|
| NASA is trying to shake loose Martian fossil bone tissue. | 07 Jul 2008 18:39 GMT | 1 |
NASA is trying to shake loose Martian fossil bone tissue Fig. 1 shows nine arrows pointing to vertical blood vessel remains in nine fossil osteons ( bone tissue) in a trench named Snow White. NASA says the white color area is where water ice is, although it is non-
|
| Binocular repair suggestions wanted... | 07 Jul 2008 00:34 GMT | 7 |
I have 2 pair of binoculars that need realigned. Seems they were dropped or knocked around and now display 2 rather than 1 image. One pair is a 20x80 and the other is 10x70. Anyone have a suggestion as to where I might send these to have them realigned? Thanks & clear skies!
|
| my reflector | 06 Jul 2008 22:26 GMT | 2 |
this page shows my reflector http://tinyurl.com/ypt5fn shitetard spammertard come back tard come back to saa
|
| Predict sun's position in the sky? | 06 Jul 2008 20:03 GMT | 6 |
Given time and an observer's latitude, longitude and altitude, how to predict sun's position in the sky? Which software can do it? Where can I found it? Is it free? Thanks in advance.
|
| SAC7 drivers - software | 06 Jul 2008 09:07 GMT | 10 |
Anyone know where they are available? Why is www.sac.com locked down like Fort Knox? What the big "secret" ?
|
| Practical astronomy | 06 Jul 2008 06:11 GMT | 20 |
It is common among empiricists to attribute a variation in the Earth's rotation to so-called tidal friction - http://bowie.gsfc.nasa.gov/ggfc/tides/intro.html Notwithstanding the silly reasoning behind variations in axial
|