Quote from: Devlyn Marie on April 11, 2017, 06:14:35 PM
Anyone ever go looking for Iridium satellites? Very predictable and easy to find, good for a "Holy crap!" moment if you're in the right spot
Yes!! It's truly awesome to see how bright they can be even in broad daylight! And there are so many satellites, it doesn't take long for one flare to be visible from wherever you are.
Edit: oh, and there's also the ISS.
Quote from: Joelene9 on April 11, 2017, 08:35:12 PM
The Elephant Trunk Nebula:
Deep sky astrophoto is something I'd really love to do. There are some threads in susans asking "Transition done, now what?" and I'm a bit scared that I might end up like that, but fortunately I have this astrophoto thing, and also playing the piano and maybe painting. That photo of yours is stunning and I'd love to be able to take one. We in Spain are lucky enough to have some areas where light pollution is not too bad. The rest of Europe is a lost cause

Too bad astrophoto is expensive but hey, transitioning is
really expensive

Quote from: theqnoumenon on April 12, 2017, 10:50:26 AM
Do you have a telescope or study something related to this? I'm studying social sciences degrees, but I'd love to study physics in the future <3
I own a reflector 114/500 (f/4.4) with equatorial mount but not motorised so taking deep sky pics if out of the question. I used to spend my spare time browsing a spanish astrophoto forum, where I learned most of the stuff I know. Back then, the chinese Skywatcher made some affordable scopes at only 2000 EUR that enabled you to get your feet wet.
I also own a Canon EOS 40D. For some reason, though, I'm unable to focus if I attach it to my scope. I'd have to shave the focuser a couple of millimetres, something that I've never got to do.
Quote from: findingreason on April 12, 2017, 11:50:08 AM
pushed a KP level of 7.66 (G3 geomagnetic storm) and bZ levels of -22. (these are extreme numbers) The altitude was 63 degrees north, which is nowhere near the Lapland region where there are even more intense viewings. They were taken with a Nikon D5000 SLR camera.
Awesome pics! I'd love to see and shoot auroras too. What exposure time did you use? And, what's KP and bZ? Just a quick definition would be ok, it's only that I don't expect a web search for "KP" will yield useful results

So, with no motorised scope I'm pretty limited on what I can share, and I would be insta-outed if anyone found this but, anyway:

(large version at
http://imgur.com/RSjq8LD, I'll remove it in a few days)