Added: 2 years ago
From: bouiglob
Views: 25,570
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  • I have a lil question

    how do you find objects in the skies? :D

    sry for my bad english. I´m german

  • hy, i stabilized this video, you can see it under /watch?v=4qxYcJ1DLsU tell me if i should let it or take it down, you may download it and claim it yours, bye!

  • Nice video! Looks pretty big! The smaller planets look like discs instead of points of light. you must have had a good night of seeing to get that and crank up the power. rarely does the sky let you do that!

    Cheers!

  • Darn i caught Every planet but Saturn with a 5'

  • nice ! but here on youtube you gotta upload UFO's and Nubiru and stuff... :-)

  • This is a fake. I know that the planets do not change colour

  • @MarcusMiddleton Idiot... thats the camera..

  • I'm just starting out and I might get a Celestron Powerseeker Newtonian. Also, why is Jupiter green in this?

  • wow awesome! i love observing Jupiter. very cool seeing the cloud bands and moons.

    does anyone have a solar filter? i want to know if it is worth the money. i would like to observe the sun, but i need a second opinion. i have an 8" Newtonian.

  • Wow! This is excellent, thanks for uploading.

  • This is the only good video I have seen yet! Thanks for posting this video.

  • Comment removed

  • this is beyond amazing

  • hi, i have a 50mm celestron powerseeker 50 az scope, the lens i have are h20mm, h12.5mm and sr 4mm, i also have a 3x barlow lens, i am a complete novice and i would love some advice from you about the best possible combination to see jupiters cloud belts, ive used 20mm lens on its own and can see jupiter but its like a star with tiny stars as its moons with no definition, also do you use a filter? sorry for the essay but i need some help on my way, cheers.

  • Cooooool!

    

  • wow...very nice shot!!!

  • i could look the stars with that telescope all day and night good job indeed keep it up

  • that satellite shadow looks nice! :)

  • thats it then. Getting me an Xt10.

  • Fall on the mirror? I'm worried now lol

  • I'm getting at sky watcher 12inch dobsonion, will the views be like this?

  • @siennarecords Yes they will be. Just be careful not to let anything fall on the mirror.

  • Hey man, can you tell me what type of lens you were using?

  • @thrashmetal81  10mm plossl attatched to a 3x barlow lens.

  • i looked at juppiter with my binoculars and i saw jupiter plus i saw 4 moons! my mom saw jupiter 2! but she saw it like a planet i saw it as a star lol but i know it was jupiter because my mom look at that andit was jupiter! jupiter is awesome! have you ever seen saturn? i dont think i saw it with my own eyes before but saturn is my next taget to find in the sky and if i cant find it i will look for mercury wish me luck :)

  • fantastic video!! I've just bought a meade etx-80. I'm a complete novice at astronomy and i'm extremely eager to learn about my scope and how to get the best out of it. I'm guessing I will never get to see a view like this video through my scope? Or could I? I have the basic eyepieces that came with the scope. Like I said im a bit of a novice. How could I get closer to the planets and galaxies? Can you recommend anything?

  • @twpburton The scope you are getting has a short focal length, so if you would like to see the planets close up you will need a 6mm lens and under. There is only one problem, the etx-80 has a small aperture, so as you use more powerful lenses the image may get blurry. You probably won't see Jupiter like in the video, but you will be able to see the cloud bands and the four moons. For galaxies, use a 20mm lens and up, you will need the large field of view, not power.

  • @bouiglob my field of view is 3x can i see the planets close up like in the vid?

  • @bouiglob 10' = 10 feet

  • @bouiglob

    This statement doesn't always hold true. Some galaxies require power to resolve, while others need lower power. It all depends on the brightness of them and the kind of galaxy as well.

  • Wholy fuck! Sorry about the language but damn I'm excited to know I might be able to see Jupiter like this through the 10" DOB i'm looking at purchasing! I wasn't aware I'd possibly be able to see Jupiter like this! I hope I'm able to get the Telescope before someone else get's it as i'm buying used. Cheers for the awsome video, thanks for the inspiration mate. IC.

  • @IcechickenSr  Good luck with your new scope. This video was shot with a cheap low quality digital camera which isn't even made for telescopes, and there was a lot of light pollution too. My point is that this isn't even close to what you will be seeing with your own eyes. Make sure you buy the right lenses, try to stay with 4 to 8 element lens because they will give you a large field of view which is good for planets. You will also be amazed with deep sky objects such as the ring nebula.

  • @bouiglob Awsome! I appreciate the reply man, as I hae been researching telescopes and mostly Space objects and planets ect befor egetting my first Real telescope (other than the dinky cheap 70mm refractor I've had) I find that I know almost nothing about Lenses,filters,barlows ect, so The help with eye pices is great thanks! Were building a MASsIVE Super EW GOTO mount to hold the tube and ditch the DOB, it will be stationary mount but heay enough to handel the Tube for pics. Cheers, IC

  • @IcechickenSr its great that your building a GOTO mount, so then you will be able to take exposure picture with deep sky objects, I recommend looking at the ring nebula. I also recommend learning the Messier objects(M16=Eagle nebula) because it will help with the GOTO. You are free to watch my other video when I show all my lenses and stuff, check it out. Keep your 70 mm refractors so you can get a sun filter for it, those small refractors make great sun viewers. You gonna have a blast!

  • @IcechickenSr

    You won't be able to see Jupiter in the eyepiece THIS BIG unless you want to look at a blurry image. Jupiter is a difficult planet to view. Top powers always depend on your local sky conditions as well. I have seen Jupiter at 300x, but it is rare to use that kind of power because of sky conditions. Best powers for Jupiter depend on the size of your telescope as well. I have a 10" f4/72 Skywatcher and I rarely go past 200x on Jupiter.

    Cheers!

  • @IIXCygnusXII

    oops that would be F/4.72

  • @IIXCygnusXII hi am new to this whole thing av just bought the jessops telescope ta900-114eq i have seen jupiter but it just looks like a normal star or when i adjust it goes blurry i can not see the planet like in these videos, i use the barlow 3x with the 6mm is this too much power like you said?

  • Gute Aufnahme!

    Mann kann sogar Jupiter Monde sehen.

    m.f.g

    Achim

  • Wooow. I didn't know you coud even see jupiter with that much detail

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