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This Is How Amateur Astronomers Can Image What Professionals Cannot

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Ciel Austral: Jean Claude CANONNE, Philippe BERNHARD, Didier CHAPLAIN, Nicolas OUTTERS and Laurent BOURGON

The Universe is full of astronomical wonders, but it's up to humanity to observe and analyze them.

ESO/S. Brunier

The key factors determining what we can reveal are resolution, light-gathering power, and the wavelengths filters we choose.

NASA/Smithsonian Institution/Lockheed Corporation

Professionals have larger, more powerful telescopes with superior instruments, but amateurs have the advantage of time.

NASA, ESA, A. Riess (STScI/JHU), and Palomar Digitized Sky Survey

Observing an object for four times as long gathers as much light as a telescope twice as large.

European Southern Observatory/P. Crowther/C.J. Evans

This is the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC): the closest large galaxy to our own.

Ciel Austral: Jean Claude CANONNE, Philippe BERNHARD, Didier CHAPLAIN, Nicolas OUTTERS and Laurent BOURGON

It's the local group's 4th largest galaxy, located just 160,000 light-years away.

Andrew Z. Colvin

It's huge from our perspective, spanning 5° across: 10 times the full Moon's diameter.

Jesús Peláez Aguado

Equipped with a 160-mm (6.3") telescope, a team of amateur astronomers constructed a record 204,000,000 pixel image of the LMC.

Ciel Austral: Jean Claude CANONNE, Philippe BERNHARD, Didier CHAPLAIN, Nicolas OUTTERS and Laurent BOURGON

With a total of 1060 hours of observation time, 620 GB of data were synthesized in creating this mosaic.

Ciel Austral: Jean Claude CANONNE, Philippe BERNHARD, Didier CHAPLAIN, Nicolas OUTTERS and Laurent BOURGON

The narrow-wavelength filters allowed the identification of hydrogen, sulfur, and oxygen, plus red/green/blue color.

Ciel Austral: Jean Claude CANONNE, Philippe BERNHARD, Didier CHAPLAIN, Nicolas OUTTERS and Laurent BOURGON

The mosaic includes the Tarantula Nebula: the largest star-forming region in the entire local group.

Ciel Austral: Jean Claude CANONNE, Philippe BERNHARD, Didier CHAPLAIN, Nicolas OUTTERS and Laurent BOURGON

Ciel Austral now holds the longest-exposure amateur astronomy image record.


Mostly Mute Monday tells an astronomical story in images, visuals, and no more than 200 words. Talk less; smile more.

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