![](http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_9hgW4_BTroU/S8xmAdZBjhI/AAAAAAAAAZM/pTCUUnNaiLk/s400/luna2-18-4-2010+copia.jpg)
I took, it's time to go back picking up little by little the "hang of" the observation and especially the photographs. As time goes lately something stirred, barely had time "dusting" the telescope, but yesterday I found a few clear and I could not resist to photograph something, and as the moon was the most "by hand" that caught me, it was the "victim" perfect for a fresh start to take the pitch and play around with the camera options.
The stage at which the moon is at the moment, I love, revealing only a small part of it. It took me a little better to adjust the focus, and I still think that when I was taking pictures out of focus a bit, but I had closed account as the "snack." The end result you see in the picture that heads this post. Much improved the final result but generally speaking, has turned out pretty decent. That yes, that picture is doctored a bit with the program Registax, giving a little more focus to the image, and removing a bit of brightness. Building
some places of the moon came out more or less well, I made a small map of the image, labeling some places, so that all may know a little moon. Since craters like Atlas (87 km in diameter and 2 km deep) or Hercules (69 km in diameter and 3 km deep) to large tracts of land more or less flat as the Mare Crisium (about 418 km in diameter) or Fecunditatis Mare (about 909 km in diameter). Here's that little "map":
![](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_9hgW4_BTroU/S8xnOT6XtzI/AAAAAAAAAZU/AC0kXupazKE/s400/luna2-18-4-2010+indice+copia.jpg)
0 comments:
Post a Comment