Tag Archives: Amateur Astronomy

Video: Understanding the colours of nebulae

Today I’ve released in my YouTube Channel the very first video of a series that seeks to connect professional astrophysics with amateur astronomy and outreach. This video, is entitled “Understanding the colours of the nebulae“, or why square brackets are important when naming metallic transitions in nebulae.

Do you know how profesional astrophysicists and amateur astronomers get vibrant colour images of nebulae? In this video I provide insights of the Physics behind these images. I emphasise why the ionic transitions of metallic elements (i.e., any element that is not hydrogen or helium) in nebulae must be written with brackets, as they are not recombination lines but collisional excited lines, that is, a kind of forbidden lines that only appear in extreme low-density gases because of the collision of ions with free electrons in the gas.

The video includes my subtitles in both English and Spanish.

An extended article about the video will be added here soon.

I hope you like it! And remember:

Image

The Pearl Cluster from Sydney

The Pearl Cluster from Sydney

The Pearl Cluster (NGC 3766, Caldwell 97), in Centaurus, from my backyard, 15 km North from Sydney’s city center, on 4th June 2020.

This image compiles 30 x 180s images (1.5 hours total integration time) obtained with my Skywatcher Black Diamond 80, an Orion X0.8 focal reducer (f/6), the ZWO ASI178MC camera and an OPTOLONG L-Pro filter.

I used the ZWO ASIAir to control the camera, the mount (Skywatcher AZ-EQ6) and the guiding system (ASI120MM + Orion 50mm finderscope).

Flats and darks included. Data processed with Siril software. Color / saturation / levels / contrast / smart sharpen with Photoshop.

Full resolution image in my Flickr.

Credit: Ángel R. López-Sánchez (AAO-MQ).

My astro photos in ABC Breakfast News

Following the citizen science project aiming to raise consciousness of the increasing problem of the light pollution, as well as performing the Guinness World Records ™ Official Attempt for “Most users to take an online environmental sustainability lesson in 24 hours”, meteorologist, science communicator and TV presenter Nate Byrne has shared this morning some of my astronomical images in the ABC Breakfast Show.

 Nate Byrne talking about my astronomical images in today’s ABC Breakfast News. You can see the high-resolution image Nate is showing on my webpage and on my Flickr.

I’m extremely excited about all of this, and I really want to thank Nate for showing my images.

Unfortunately, though, I couldn’t watch the show, and it is not available on iView. I’m trying to get the screenshots of the other images that Nate shared today to include them here.

Tonight’s “supermoon” on ABC Science

Today I’ve been interviewed in ABC Science about the “Supermoon” that we can enjoy tonight, 7th May 2020. For this we have used some of the images of the moon that my son and me have been taking during the last year.

I want to thank Genelle Weule for the excellent questions and for her great interest about astronomy and astrophotography.

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The Heart of the Carina Nebula in H-alpha

The center of the Carina Nebula, with the bright star Eta Carinae and the Keyhole feature, in H-alpha.

Data taken from the backyard at home, ~15 km from Sydney’s city centre, on Monday 19th and Tuesday 21st April 2020.

Equipment: Skywatcher Black Diamond 80 (F=600mm, f/7.5), Skywatcher AZ-EQ6 (mount), ZWO ASI178MC (main camera), ZWO ASI120MM + Orion 50mm guidescope (guiding), 2″ Baader ultra-narrow (3.5 nm) H-alpha filter, and ASIair controlling everything (using my son’s iPad).

This image combines 35 x 600s light frames, and 30 x 600s dark frames. Aligned and stacked with SiriL, stretching, colour contrast, saturation, levels, and luminosity with Photoshop.

Full resolution image in my Flickr.

Credit: Ángel R. López-Sánchez (AAO-MQ).