Three photographs of the Sun at H-alpha wavelength. Visible sun eruptions on the middle and overexposed image, while the under-expose image captures the well defined sun spots and the turbulences.
Million stars form the brightest and largest globular cluster known orbiting our galaxy - Omega Centauri (NGC 5139). It lies in the constellation of Centaurus, visible from the southern hemisphere.
Orion Nebula (Messier M42) and the Running Man Nebula (NGC1977, left), two diffuse nebulas south of the Orion's belt in the constellation of Orion. 45minutes of exposure.
Triangulum Galaxy (Messier M33 or NGC 598) is a spiral galaxy in our Local Group in the constellation Triangulum. Image taken through a 100mm refractor telescope with about 1h of exposure time.
Starfield with The Pleiades (Seven Sisters or Messier M45), an open star cluster in the constellation of Taurus. 100mm refractor telescope and about 15min of exposure time.
Orion Nebula (Messier M42) and the Running Man Nebula (NGC1977, left), two diffuse nebulas south of the Orion's belt in the constellation of Orion. 45minutes of exposure.
Star field with Messier M39 (or NGC7092), an open cluster in the constellation of Cygnus.
Starfield with The Pleiades (Seven Sisters or Messier M45), an open star cluster in the constellation of Taurus. 100mm refractor telescope and about 15min of exposure time.
Million stars form the brightest and largest globular cluster known orbiting our galaxy - Omega Centauri (NGC 5139). It lies in the constellation of Centaurus, visible from the southern hemisphere.
The Wild Duck Cluster (Messier M11) is one of the most famous and compact known open clusters, containing about 2900 stars in the constellation of Scutum.
Astrophotograph of the Great Globular Cluster from Hercules constellation, known under the designation of M13 (Messier Catalogue index 13) or NGC 6205.