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How to Photograph the Moon and Planets with Your Digital Camera / by Tony Buick.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Patrick Moore’s Practical Astronomy SeriesEditor: London : Springer London, 2006Descripción: xiii, 272 páginas 312 ilustraciones recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9781846280467
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • QB1-991
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Equipment -- The Magic Ingredient -- Method -- The Universe and You -- Targets -- Our Moon -- The Moon — First Glance -- Regions of the Moon -- Moon Features and Techniques -- Lunar Events -- Solar System Moons -- The Planets -- The Sun -- Transits -- And What Else? -- In Conclusion.
Resumen: Using just a regular digital camera along with an amateur astronomical telescope, anyone can produce spectacular photographs of the Moon, as well as surprisingly good images of major planets. Purpose-made astronomical CCD cameras are still very expensive, but technology has now progressed so that digital cameras – the kind you use for everyday photos – are more than capable of being used for astronomy. Tony Buick has written this illustrated step-by-step manual for anyone who has a telescope (of any size) and a digital camera. Look inside at the beautiful color images he has produced – you could do the same. Much more than a manual of techniques and examples, this book also provides a concise photographic atlas of the whole of the nearside of the Moon – with every image made using a standard digital camera – describing important lunar features, including the sites of manned and robotic landings.
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Springer eBooks

Equipment -- The Magic Ingredient -- Method -- The Universe and You -- Targets -- Our Moon -- The Moon — First Glance -- Regions of the Moon -- Moon Features and Techniques -- Lunar Events -- Solar System Moons -- The Planets -- The Sun -- Transits -- And What Else? -- In Conclusion.

Using just a regular digital camera along with an amateur astronomical telescope, anyone can produce spectacular photographs of the Moon, as well as surprisingly good images of major planets. Purpose-made astronomical CCD cameras are still very expensive, but technology has now progressed so that digital cameras – the kind you use for everyday photos – are more than capable of being used for astronomy. Tony Buick has written this illustrated step-by-step manual for anyone who has a telescope (of any size) and a digital camera. Look inside at the beautiful color images he has produced – you could do the same. Much more than a manual of techniques and examples, this book also provides a concise photographic atlas of the whole of the nearside of the Moon – with every image made using a standard digital camera – describing important lunar features, including the sites of manned and robotic landings.

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