Do you thank that you will be able to get beyond the picture that you had in your hand. Because I was wondering if the telescope that you had picks up more then what you tuck at that time.
Starlight is bright enough for intensity amplification type night vision. When you get an image, from even visible frequencies, its not just telescoped, its also light night vision was applied.
yea, alot of people dont realize that space is actually quite dark. Its evident on a night with no moon, any light on the surface is artificial or its starlight.
A week ago, I was thinking about dropping my physics course. This video brought me back to my childhood, when I first saw a photo of a nebula. It reminded me why I wanted to find out more about the universe in the first place. Thank you.
Saint James Version of Genesis 1.In the beginning God created heaven and earth. 16. And God made two great lights; the greater to rule the day, and the lesser to rule the night; he made the stars also. IF THEY ONLY KNEW WHAT THOSE TWINKLING THINGS ACTUALLY WERE!!
Hi i want that this video and the others have a traduction to spanish, subtittle in spanish please
Hola me gustaria que porfavor le pusieran subtitulos en español a sus videos son muy buenos pero no los entiendo muy bien porfavor la comunidad de habla hispana tambien quiere saber sobre astronomia
I think this series is great - how about including a few additional videos on astrophotography, or how to actually get into viewing some astronomy yourself?
Interesting video (as always!), Brady. I watch all your channels. Love Drs. Poliakoff and Moriarity; I would take a class from either if I were just a little closer!
Side note: what was the bird singing its heart out in the background?
what happens if one of your sub exposures goes accidentally wrong, like someone walks past with a bright torch, or it starts pointing off in the wrong direction or something like that, is the whole thing knackered, or can you omit that bad one?
what happens if one of your sub exposures goes accidentally wrong, like someone walks past with a bright torch, or it starts pointing off in the wrong direction or something like that, is the whole thing knackered, or can you omit that bad one?
what happens if one of your sub exposures goes accidentally wrong, like someone walks past with a bright torch, or it starts pointing off in the wrong direction or something like that, is the whole thing knackered, or can you omit that bad one?
That shot of the shuttle was pretty impressive, maybe that could be a smaller series of videos, captured pics of satellites/shuttles as they're orbiting Earth :D
multiple exposures is the oldest trick in the book for a better view in astronomy, somehow i doubt many people who watch these videos werent aware of that. nice picture of m78 tho, very pretty
.....cup of tea in the morning..quick look on youboob...these set my day up a treat.... on a side note bought a very cheap telescope a year ago from Aldis of all places, set it up one night during a drunken party and actually got an image of saturn and its rings...the que that quickly grew to see it and the child like gasps at actually looking at a dot in the sky then through the telescope was something to be remembered.... keep up the good work .
Great stuff! But I'm a little confused, sure you can track the object across the sky over a long exposure, but wouldn't things much closer and much further away, such as the stars in the background, move across the final image very slightly?
Brady, I don't know how you manage time to produce videos - whole variety of them, edit them, upload them. and still have time to read the viewers comments and respond to them....
Great image of M78, kudos! About the colors, they're there, and we can capture them from a distance of many light years. But were we to fly though those nebulae, we wouldn't notice with the bare eye that there's anything there. We would just see the background stars, because those nebulae are incredibly thin and low-density and spread over a huge volume of space.
Nice appreciation vid, though a little light on detail of the object itself. Or failing that, the details of Paul's process of imaging. Regardless, thank you as always.
i get the point of cwilsons, but i think that although this video might not give us much information on M78 it shows the pation behind astronomy, that its not only a field of science in which thousands of people work for a living but also a hobby which people persue for their own plesure. also it shows how detailed images of stars are made on a small scale (although im sure that paul's equipment has to be worth a fortune!)
i want that picture as my pc background
daryps03 1 week ago
I bet he does something secretly with these space pics when his wife is away ;)
Baldoxxx4000 1 week ago
that is amazing. nice work mate!
jozeyrules 1 week ago
I could see God's balls pssst
MrNuffsaid97 1 week ago
Comment removed
wazefaify 1 week ago
Best part of that contraption is the duck tape holding it together.
Uruckingfetard22 1 week ago
Do you thank that you will be able to get beyond the picture that you had in your hand. Because I was wondering if the telescope that you had picks up more then what you tuck at that time.
onlymusice 1 week ago
just wondering, how much does a telescope like that cost?
taleof2cities 1 week ago 2
very cool , thanks
wiseblood90 1 week ago
Did earth have two moons? You bet Uranus it did! hahaha
katinaanimator 1 week ago
he's cute lol
Shoregirlie 1 week ago
i thought that M78 was fake for a moment!!!
shonenarts23 1 week ago
very nice videos. i`m going to study astronomy this year. love al these vids & sixty symbols! are there more channels like this ?
valentijnraw 1 week ago
Starlight is bright enough for intensity amplification type night vision. When you get an image, from even visible frequencies, its not just telescoped, its also light night vision was applied.
Pimpmastahanhduece 1 week ago
yea, alot of people dont realize that space is actually quite dark. Its evident on a night with no moon, any light on the surface is artificial or its starlight.
Pimpmastahanhduece 1 week ago
A week ago, I was thinking about dropping my physics course. This video brought me back to my childhood, when I first saw a photo of a nebula. It reminded me why I wanted to find out more about the universe in the first place. Thank you.
airjoe49 1 week ago
Humans could be so much smarter then we are now, this is just the tip a huge beautiful iceberg.
For instance maybe if we were able to unlock certain parts of our brain we could see images like yours, just by looking into the sky at night.
How damn incredible would that be?!
HikeYultz 1 week ago
DUBSTEP IN FARCRY 3 TRAILER!!!!!!!
XxGypsySniperxX 2 weeks ago
Saint James Version of Genesis 1.In the beginning God created heaven and earth. 16. And God made two great lights; the greater to rule the day, and the lesser to rule the night; he made the stars also. IF THEY ONLY KNEW WHAT THOSE TWINKLING THINGS ACTUALLY WERE!!
harley881931 2 weeks ago
beautiful ....just stunning
FisherVictoria 2 weeks ago
Got here from listening to Megadeth. ^.^
MetallicaFTW1981 2 weeks ago
This is wonderful work you are doing here Brady! We You tube viewers who love science greatly appreciate your effort. :)
acs197 2 weeks ago
What fantastic work you've done - keep it up!
hznfrst 2 weeks ago
Nice. I remember that image Paul. Very beautiful.
CmdrGendoIkari 2 weeks ago in playlist More videos from DeepSkyVideos
M1 changes :-) (see the earlier video as a response to this one :P).
ThoughtfulGeek 3 weeks ago
what telescope do you use ?
revengeryus54 3 weeks ago
Stars and galaxy's is the best form of entertainment, thanks DSV!!
darkoaffliction 3 weeks ago
This guy is always wearing the same shirt
mcbeastable 3 weeks ago
You should show Messier87 or the star Arcturus.
darth000nihilus 3 weeks ago in playlist More videos from DeepSkyVideos
Hi i want that this video and the others have a traduction to spanish, subtittle in spanish please
Hola me gustaria que porfavor le pusieran subtitulos en español a sus videos son muy buenos pero no los entiendo muy bien porfavor la comunidad de habla hispana tambien quiere saber sobre astronomia
Yamier2828 3 weeks ago
wht kinda telescope is this?, can you tell me the cost of it ..
hackersway 3 weeks ago
I'm officially addicted to this channel.
woppaAUS 3 weeks ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Is this all the Information were going to get of M78?
0omu0 3 weeks ago
This has been flagged as spam show
GO TO OUR CHANNEL AND WATCH SHIT MAC MILLER SAYS
WalksWorthProduction 4 weeks ago
The more i watch these the more I want to buy a telescope and take pictures myself.
ben9345 4 weeks ago 3
awesome
culwin 4 weeks ago
OMG those damn birds.
TekaiGuy 4 weeks ago
"This mount counter acts the motion of the earth"... and me hitting it... rofl
sm0kingJay 4 weeks ago
Awesome!!
StoogesTattoo 4 weeks ago
I want a shirt that is completely of the space! no inch not covered. Anyone know where I can find one :]
JPM32007 4 weeks ago
space is the most beautiful place that can be amagine!!!... if look to it from the earth =)
4Dinatut 4 weeks ago
very expensive equipment in his backyard :)
how much money does this guy have?
BurtonRGA7 4 weeks ago
Cool stuff as usual.
markderosa 4 weeks ago
Magnificant.
Noofhead 4 weeks ago
thanks for sharing all those gorgeous videos! They are a real treat for anyone interested in astronomy.
sestraux 4 weeks ago
i just wanted to say thank you so much for schooling me on my favorite subject that I dont have the time to study right now
DaRealFiberOptix 4 weeks ago
I think this series is great - how about including a few additional videos on astrophotography, or how to actually get into viewing some astronomy yourself?
Memyselfandme 4 weeks ago
Thank you so much:) I learn a lot from your vids.
mayanmanifestor 4 weeks ago
Interesting video (as always!), Brady. I watch all your channels. Love Drs. Poliakoff and Moriarity; I would take a class from either if I were just a little closer!
Side note: what was the bird singing its heart out in the background?
dnster80 4 weeks ago
This has been flagged as spam show
what happens if one of your sub exposures goes accidentally wrong, like someone walks past with a bright torch, or it starts pointing off in the wrong direction or something like that, is the whole thing knackered, or can you omit that bad one?
Tossphate 4 weeks ago
This has been flagged as spam show
what happens if one of your sub exposures goes accidentally wrong, like someone walks past with a bright torch, or it starts pointing off in the wrong direction or something like that, is the whole thing knackered, or can you omit that bad one?
Tossphate 4 weeks ago
what happens if one of your sub exposures goes accidentally wrong, like someone walks past with a bright torch, or it starts pointing off in the wrong direction or something like that, is the whole thing knackered, or can you omit that bad one?
Tossphate 4 weeks ago
I want Brady Haran to narrate my life!
daraghfaceroll 4 weeks ago
very nice
cruiser277777 4 weeks ago
Is this all the Information were going to get of M78?
Chiodostwo 4 weeks ago
idk if anyone notice but if You download this image and look closely You'll see two faces there :)
RoZyk007 4 weeks ago
That shot of the shuttle was pretty impressive, maybe that could be a smaller series of videos, captured pics of satellites/shuttles as they're orbiting Earth :D
Tilaron 4 weeks ago
multiple exposures is the oldest trick in the book for a better view in astronomy, somehow i doubt many people who watch these videos werent aware of that. nice picture of m78 tho, very pretty
zythepsarian 4 weeks ago
.....cup of tea in the morning..quick look on youboob...these set my day up a treat.... on a side note bought a very cheap telescope a year ago from Aldis of all places, set it up one night during a drunken party and actually got an image of saturn and its rings...the que that quickly grew to see it and the child like gasps at actually looking at a dot in the sky then through the telescope was something to be remembered.... keep up the good work .
Alienalloy 4 weeks ago
How often do you fly between the UK and Australia to do these videos?
fullmetalphysicist3 4 weeks ago 5
@fullmetalphysicist3 not too often (though I am from Australia, so I go more than the average person would)!
I was in Australia a while back and filmed bits and pieces for various videos!
DeepSkyVideos 4 weeks ago 12
I live in Australia! Win.
PhoenixFire32 4 weeks ago
That imaging method is the same one they talk about in Star Trek for enhancing the mainscreen image through interference. Neat, eh?
jkazos 4 weeks ago
Great stuff! But I'm a little confused, sure you can track the object across the sky over a long exposure, but wouldn't things much closer and much further away, such as the stars in the background, move across the final image very slightly?
Soothsayer88 4 weeks ago
Brady, I don't know how you manage time to produce videos - whole variety of them, edit them, upload them. and still have time to read the viewers comments and respond to them....
pvskpraveen 4 weeks ago 23
@pvskpraveen reading comments is (sometimes) my favourite bit of the job.
DeepSkyVideos 4 weeks ago 29
Great image of M78, kudos! About the colors, they're there, and we can capture them from a distance of many light years. But were we to fly though those nebulae, we wouldn't notice with the bare eye that there's anything there. We would just see the background stars, because those nebulae are incredibly thin and low-density and spread over a huge volume of space.
virumoz 4 weeks ago 29
@virumoz interesting thought that - thanks!
DeepSkyVideos 4 weeks ago 6
@virumoz id say the same thing I guess.
allain14 4 weeks ago
Nice appreciation vid, though a little light on detail of the object itself. Or failing that, the details of Paul's process of imaging. Regardless, thank you as always.
cwilsons 4 weeks ago 5
@cwilsons thanks, you'll probably find bit of mix of heavy and light, long and short... just so the series doesn't get too samey!
I think you might like next Monday's video though! Something very different and a detailed look at how a very trendy piece of astronomy works.
Will be plenty more about imaging to come soon as well.
DeepSkyVideos 4 weeks ago 4
@DeepSkyVideos
i get the point of cwilsons, but i think that although this video might not give us much information on M78 it shows the pation behind astronomy, that its not only a field of science in which thousands of people work for a living but also a hobby which people persue for their own plesure. also it shows how detailed images of stars are made on a small scale (although im sure that paul's equipment has to be worth a fortune!)
keep up the good work.
Creepyseven 4 weeks ago
by the way nice vid :)
sooguru 4 weeks ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
FIRST
sooguru 4 weeks ago
@sooguru You were second. Sorry.
djeaglei 4 weeks ago
I could say "first" like everyone else but I rather say THANKS BRADY.
ndpratas 4 weeks ago 66
@ndpratas But you were the first :(
NAMLegolas 4 weeks ago