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Saturday, May 15, 2010

NGC 4945 as an anaglyph Red/Cyan 3D





You'll need Red/Cyan Eyeglasses to be able to see this movie right.
Note, if you have a Red and Green/Blue filters, you can try them out! Red goes to Left eye.


NOTE
You'll find a complete collection of my astronomical images from my portfolio:
http://astroanarchy.zenfolio.com/
All of my 3D-material is behind "Volumetric 3D images", at a middle of the page.



Other 3D-versions





NOTE! This is a personal vision about forms and shapes, based on some known facts and an artistic impression

Friday, May 14, 2010

M20, the "Triffid nebula"




M20, the "Triffid Nebula" in constellation Sagittarius. Distance about 7600 light years.

Actually this is my firs image of a reflection nebula from a dark location, what a difference!
Image above is only Ten minutes exposure (Luminance channel)
Ten minutes was all I could do due the speeding clouds, I'll continue with this later.
I couldn't believe, that anything can be done from so thin data but here we go, nothing beats great instruments and a dark location!
Ones again, this is a preview image, since I don't have yet all the calibration filesa nd the exposure time is a way too short.

Details:

NGC 4945




NGC 4945 in Centaurus 
Beautiful and relatively large edge-on spiral galaxy.
Distance from Earth, about 12 million light years.

My second light for the Northern Galactic groups members telescope under the Australian dark skies.
This galaxy is not imaged too commonly, due the proximity of famous targets, Centaurus A and M86.

Ones again, this is a preview image, since I don't have yet all the calibration files.

Details:
Camera, Apogee U9000
Exposures, 24x300s for the Luminance and 4x300s for each RGB channel.
Darks, NO Flats.



Tuesday, May 11, 2010

One more anaglyph Red/Cyan 3D Moon







You'll need Red/Cyan Eyeglasses to be able to see this movie right.
Note, if you have a Red and Green filters, you can use them! Red goes to Left eye.

Please, click movie twice to see in in YouTube



Full Moon

Animation is made by re projecting the 2D-Moon image to a 3D-sphere.
The resulting 3D-model is then animated to a two movies with some parallax difference for Stereo effect.
The Moon is now seen about 90 degrees side from what we normally are seeing from the Earth.

Original 2D-full moon image, used for this animation, can be found here:

More 3D-astronomical targets in different formats can be found here: