This stream effectively bridges the gap between amateur hobbyism and professional astrophysics, making the vast scale of the universe feel both accessible and immediate. It proves that with the right tools, anyone can participate in the profound act of observing cosmic history from their own backyard.
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LIVE: The Night Sky Is the Limit… Anything Can HappenAjouté :
Hey folks, coming live. Just give me one one minute.
I hope everything is everyone is doing well.
Can you hear me? Well, take No, let me know if you can hear me well.
Okay, thank you.
I want to make sure that we you can also Oh, you can hear the music fine too. Thank you. Thank you. No, the Yeah, I mean it's pretty leisurely activity right now. I don't think we are going to go very serious. I do have few areas in the sky that I wanted to take you all. I still need to send the pictures from last week. I got so busy I could not do it. I did process them though. I do have cleaned up images. I just didn't get time. I got uh one after the other too much going on.
Sounds. Yeah. Thank you. Yeah. So, we are going to the first galaxy called Samrio galaxy.
And this is basically going to look like a UFO, the real UFO, right? So, I wanted to show that and see if we can maybe take some pictures of that.
So, I'll I'll put the details here in the chat window.
So, that's where we are going now.
So that's the first object that we are going going to go. It'll be interesting once we not not the UFO files. This is mainly for people who wants to enjoy the night sky, right? So this is out there in the sky.
28 million light years away in Virgo constellation.
It's quite far. 28 million light years.
So when you are watching this on the screen, you are watching light that came from 28 million years ago.
28 million years ago. That's the light that we are watching right now. It's just incredible. The reason why I like about this one is it's part of the Virgo constellation. Yes, it's mainly for educational purposes only.
That That's right. No, this is mainly for fun. Uh just to have an idea what is going on. So yeah, one day we will capture something about planet 9 for sure. I do have material for the planet 9. I posted once but I do have updated material. So I will definitely post the new materials that are coming up.
So this is how the UFO galaxy is going to look like. I wanted to show everyone.
So this is live.
So let me know if you are I'll I'll put a poll out here.
Yeah, it's going to be quite interesting. So, we are going to go to the Virgo constellation and we will we we will be watching the Oh, you wanted to see picture only.
I I don't mind keeping anything everything. I really wanted to zoom in and show you guys the Samrio galaxy because that one looks like a UFO.
So, you might be enjoying the the view. Let me let me show you how it looks.
I I'll put it back if you guys don't like it.
I'm just removing the removing the data. So that way at least you have fairly good idea what is happening. Let me show you how this view is. I can put it back if you guys don't like it.
Because this gives you a very very close-up view.
Unless you are seriously interested in the data.
Yeah, I wanted to reduce it a little bit so that you can see the full picture of what is going on there.
Oh, sorry. You lost my sound. Okay, I just put myself on mute. I'm I'm sorry.
Okay, Nancy, the I was saying you never heard about Samo Galaxy. I I was saying that's a it's not as popular like as Andromeda or any other um any other galaxies, right?
So it's not that popular.
So you may not see that quite often like in any uh pictures or videos and all but people who are familiar with astronomy um they probably will know. I mean you you may not have heard that at all and I'm not surprised because it's not very popular one. It's not like like Andromeda or Virpool or some something that's very much we Can you guys hear me? Okay. Now, okay. So, this view is what people love.
Yeah. I This is a beautiful view folks.
There is no doubt about it.
This is a The way this will be is like I can zoom in for you guys more. Right. So that was the idea and that one definitely looks like a UFO.
So it's 23 million light years away.
So it's amazing. It's taking like a picture because this way we can I can send you decent pictures. Okay. Thank you, Glenn.
Thank you.
I will have a lag. and um and and that Oh, thank you, Dian. Thank you. This is high energy area, folks. I mean, watching nighttime like particularly if you ever wanted to look up in the sky and look at anything that you are looking at, most people look at the stars, right? So I mean you can obviously see some planets that is quite obvious but most mostly we don't think anything else because from our vantage point we are just looking at star even if I go out right now and look at the sky if there are some moon or planets out there I might see it but if If I if I have a way to see beyond that like zoom in and see we'll be start seeing all these crazy stuff like you know we will start seeing um you know lot of other structures in the universe so this is a real structure this is live real structure some galaxy and I mean the reason why even I brought brought this up was because this is going to make it make the sky looks real. I mean we most often don't have an opportunity to see the sky as it is because I mean first of all it's light pollution right that's one big problem other problem was we used to see I mean much better night sky before and now all we are seeing is pretty much like red light or whatever the haze that's going on. So, oh Susan, you're asking, "Have you ever thought of looking at space through the red vision or night vision?" Yeah. No, I did actually. In fact, the night vision telescopes or the night vision goggles or night vision equipment, we connect to the telescope and we can take a look at really live and it it's beautiful.
And our telescopes are now we can connect night vision to them but our telescopes are lot more powerful now than night vision. I mean you wanted to see live yes but you are seeing already live. So kind of yes or no answer.
Yeah we are using night vision uses filters. Okay. Yeah, Glenn, that's the right answer. Nit vision uses filters.
That's why you can see stuff that you can't see without it. And we are using those filters.
Yeah, it can we can yeah make it very similar to the night vision and we I mean yeah the yes this is live data Susan if you are asking we we are seeing the live data there is a little bit what delay that I have but I still wanted to put it out there. So, let's see. Oh, what is this? Someone is asking.
Um, this is a galaxy.
Oh, it's saying it's Yeah, it's a galaxy. It's a not our not ours but outside um our galaxy. We live in a galaxy called Milky Way. So this is outside.
Yeah, outside. This is a pretty much our neighborhood. Our neighbor, one of our neighbors, distant neighbors I would call it.
Yeah, I'm going to delay the chat and I'm going to put it out there. Let me see if it is going to work.
I don't know what it is bringing. So let me try.
Oh yeah, it does come up.
I was thinking it won't come up.
It may not be giving you all the chat that you need, but it will give you the latest and greatest chat. I'm looking at. So there is a quite a bit of delay in what I'm showing there. So yeah, you might you might see your chat there a while later.
So, we'll be taking this for a few more minutes and then the next stop that we might have.
If everything goes well, I'll be showing you uh needle galaxy which is going to look awesome. If you are just interested watching um that is much further away 30 to 50 million light years away and we will go to M51 which is the Virpole galaxy that is 31 million light years away And hopefully we will go to the NGC5907 which is a knife edge galaxy. I don't know how that is going to go but we'll see.
Um but at least we can find two or three more uh to see it. Yeah.
Yeah. You might see this chat a little bit lag. So don't Yeah, the needle galaxy. Um Nancy, correct?
That was a South Carolina here. Grandma, thank you for joining.
Thank you. Thank you for joining.
I did not see that before. Sometimes I switch my view that's why I drag the window there. So Oh yeah. Um Neal galaxy is the next target.
It's like very thin almost like another UFO looking galaxy. That's why I picked because everybody is looking after the UFOs now. So when they see me showing this live they might go crazy. It's like oh my god what are we looking at? But honestly these are not anything to do with the UFOs. These are real galaxies and we are taking I guess my target was to take at least 10 15 pictures. Uh I put 25 but that would be overkill.
So maybe we will take like 12 pictures that could be good enough.
I just need few so that I can process it and send it to you all those that way you get at least some decent I it's not perfect. It's not but at least we have we have done some work here. That's what you're seeing.
Yeah, these are all far away folks. The one that we are looking at right now, the Samrio galaxy, it's in the VGO constellation and the one that you are looking at on the screen and it is 28 million light years away and the black hole size in this galaxy is 1 billion cents.
1 billion sun size of black hole.
Generally black holes are going to get compressed to a smaller size.
And if sun becomes a black hole, it becomes much tinier than moon or something like that, right? It becomes like much smaller uh much much smaller.
But if you are looking at billion suns, imagine how big the black hole is.
That's what is there middle of this. So we could never Oh yeah, Christina, thanks for staying on the as a member for two months. Thank you. Yeah, we generally don't I generally don't go into too much detail because the kind of audience that I'm picking up now are very general. They are not like high um or deep into astronomy. I wanted to give them a chance to see what we are seeing really in the night sky. I I thought it'll be fun for them for anyone to look at it.
So, thank you. Thank you hopping on your astral goat Edward.
Thank you for saying that.
Um, yeah, very good question, Nancy, that you asked. Does it mean the black hole will swallow the whole galaxy? I believe the way I mean, at least what we know from a day-to-day standpoint, right? What we know now is we know I mean we haven't seen it. This is all theory, right? So we we haven't seen it meaning we don't have lot of data because these are millions of light years and millions of physical years away um time frame wise. But what we know is over a period of the time all the stars are going to come to an end and they all fall into that black hole and poof universe the galaxy disappears. Yeah that's forever not right now like we are talking millions and billions of years.
Yeah, the the concept is still real, Glenn. That that it used to be that universe inside a black hole used to be like a fringe idea. That's no longer an idea anymore. Actually, some of the way we can prove now things is that we may be in the black hole.
That's what people are finding out still. There is no way to figure it out that quickly. But that's what we are hearing.
Yeah. You wish you knew more about black holes. Um yeah. So it's not that complex. Okay. So black holes are black like meaning you can't see them and light cannot escape once it falls into that. So if you watch interstellar movie, this guy goes into a black hole which is weird. I mean no one can survive, no one can come out. Um but they made a whatever that multi-dimensional structure out of concept of a black hole. That's what they did.
And this black hole may be a byproduct of a star like when star comes to the end of life the star is going to explode and collapse into itself and turns into a black hole. So I have something important to look at with your trip 4.3 light years away.
Fire away Jason. What do you want to see?
Yeah, this is in VGO constellation folks.
You are seeing stuff from Vgo constellation.
Renee, thank you for your support. Thank you. Appreciate that.
Yeah. So these right right now we are coming to coming to an end like we are taking the picture 11 of 12 for the Samrio galaxy. And the next one we are going to go is the needle needle galaxy.
Oh, you are in your space RV. Nice.
Glenn, that's the beauty of it.
Yeah, I I I think this lag is way too much.
So, I'll stop. Way too much lag. So, Oh, it looks super cool. This is Let me zoom in more for you, Jason.
Um, yeah.
So that's the closeup view of this galaxy.
Yeah. Not I mean these are this is this is real science folks. So I don't think I I'm just showing you this because this is better than like I mean you got to have you have you have to see this. You have to at least get an idea of like what this means to us, right? Yeah. Yeah. Thank you. Thank you.
Yeah. Med Med USA I believe. Thank you.
I hope I'm saying your name right.
Yeah, it's So, we are coming to the last picture of the Samrio galaxy and we will send our telescope towards uh Rene. Thank you. Appreciate that.
Serene. Thank you.
Yeah, this is very good data point and uh for everyone to look at it. So this is quite a bit of this is quite a bit of data like which is the M1104 that you are looking at.
Yeah. So, this is coming to an end, folks. And I don't want to.
Yeah. Yeah, I don't want to get to a point where it's going to like do weird stuff. So, sorry I took the image away. It's right here. It's almost coming to an end. This is the last picture that it is taking.
Oh, so it's recycling it. Okay, I can stop.
So, the next one that we are going to is While you're doing that, you can enjoy the live views of the telescope.
Oh, it still goes to the beginnings.
Okay, let me see if it is going to keep the camera warm.
I hope it didn't park the mount.
Oh yeah, it did park the mount and I kept the tracking on.
So I need to be careful with this.
So this is called NGC 4565.
It's a beautiful night. So, I just don't want to waste it.
I know I'm going to take that comet picture again tonight. So, the 10p temple the I got very tiny picture. I I have no heart to show you all that picture because it's so tiny and I was like there's no point showing that to any everyone.
So I was trying to It comes in the night around 1:00. There is a new comet out there called Comet Tempe and it's a 10p temple. That's the full name.
Oh definitely. U Med I I don't mind at all uh sharing. I think a lot of people actually will be surprised pleasantly.
So the telescope is now going towards needle galaxy. So that's a almost like double the distance than the samrio.
So this is in how I don't know how to say this name called Bernesis. That's the name of Koma Bernesus.
Uh that's the constellation it is in. I never heard that name before.
But anyway, so it's like right there on the east. Oh, what's going on?
Oh, so it's in up in the horizon the meridian right now. Wow, that's going to be difficult.
I'm glad we are taking only you. You are seeing the where the telescope is going.
Yeah.
Yeah. I'm showing you the view of the Oh, wow.
I'll I'll show you guys what I'm seeing.
Look at this.
Yeah.
Look at all these.
They look much bigger than the stars.
I don't know if I need to.
We will try for a few minutes. If not, we will.
You are from north um sea hathron. You are from north British Columbia. Oh, nice.
Oh, yeah. Yeah. No, tonight is clear night. I'm not going to let let it go.
There is no way. I mean, we are cloudy all the time and when we have a clear night and particularly on a Saturday, I said I'm not losing it. I'm going to do something with it. Right. So, by the way, that British Columbia, we go to Whistler, uh, British Columbia. So, I'm quite familiar like that's my favorite favorite space to go, place to go. I love to bike there.
Uh, and also hike the mountains.
I I love that place.
I went there once and got hooked to it.
It's expensive now to fly, to go way too expensive. It became more difficult to go than before.
Oh, Kim, thank you for saying that. No, I I that's what was that was one reason why I share these images and the night sky to everyone because if we truly are realizing that we came from the stars, then we need to know where we came from.
If we don't then we are still considered as primitive right.
Um, I'll take 12 more and I'll do the same thing.
This is where we came from. So, we have to go back and look at where we started.
So, from Lancaster, Wisconsin. Thank you.
Thank you, Peggy. Thanks for joining.
How is the weather in Wisconsin now?
Yeah. Let's try this and see how this comes out. So this is another UFO looking galaxy. That's why I picked all these today because of the UFO disclosure, right? So this is literally a flying saucer looking galaxy. Okay, this is going to drive people crazy.
I know not many people wants to watch or let me fix the name to NGC noodle.
So generally this these particular sessions are designed for like members only but I don't feel like I wanted to restrict this for members only. So I said like why not just go public right? So I don't know I don't have heart to limit something to members only. That's me. So yeah it's beautiful pig. Oh your Wisconsin weather. Fantastic. Good to know. Yeah I it's going to get warmer.
Uh this summer for you is better summer.
are more hotter summer than previous summers, right? Because of all that El Nino, the Northeast is going to have very nice weather. They don't get they get a mild winter like Texas might get actually a hard winter. So, I want to see how the picture is going to come out.
Oh, yeah. Look, look at that.
You are now looking at the real UFO looking galaxy, folks.
This is 30 um I mean they they they're saying it's somewhere between 30 to 50 million light years. So we don't really have an exact measurement of it. I will zoom out for you for a second.
So this is how it looks. Actually there is one more on the top.
This is also another galaxy that one I'm pointing on the top right. And I'm zooming in for you so that you get a better view of this.
Oh, how many photos am I stacking? I'm just stacking 12 pictures, Nicholas. I'm because people get bored if I show them only one or two. So, I'm taking uh uh Nicola, I'm taking Nicole, right? I believe. Uh yeah. Uh Nicole, I'm taking um 12 exposures, 2 minutes each. That's all I'm doing.
I'm using Rasa 36. So, it's way too bright. It's 14 in telescope that is f2.
So, it's very powerful. So, I don't need a whole lot of exposure time. 2 minutes is already over overkill.
But I don't need more images also because I'm not going for perfection. I just wanted to show people a decent looking galaxy. So, oh, Glenn, thank you for saying that.
Yeah, this is a very clear picture, Steve. This is I would say uh clearer than I anticipated because I mean if you you're you're almost like relatively watching live right it's a 2 minutes exposure right but even if you are watching live you might not get this kind of a view you might get a lower end of the view but I believe even with a 2 minutes this is a very nice looking very nice looking one.
Oh I see eye drops the eight point UFO.
Yeah, that I the reason why I was so curious um I see that you are asking me about it was because I really was wondering what it what that was right. So I mean if it is really what we think it is or what we want it to be what it is then we are seeing something really wild right? So I just don't want to give up on an opportunity to prove one way or other way, right? I if that is real, I need to know where it came from, who saw it, how was it, what was it, I need to know all the details.
If it was not, I wanted to get rid of it from my head so that I don't need to think about that anymore.
So I was thinking about that last night and last night I have an idea that okay I'll take this MP4 file right the the video file I'll break that into frames right I can use a software to do that and I just broke that into five I I believe 5 seconds every other five every other five seconds I took the frames the almost 500 frames I that.
And to be honest with you, my thought process was maybe I'll take some of these frames and stack and get a good idea of what that uh what that u eight-ointed star was because I want to know what it is.
So I end up doing some homework and then I saw this artifact that well it is really not a not not what I think it is and it is like something which is literally humanmade right. I was like blown away by what I saw. The moment I saw that it is a paraglider I we live in Texas. We live in North Texas and Austin. So we have too many people that paraglide here, right? So I mean people love paragliding here. It's beautiful weather. You know you can wear that and you know sit on it and go. So what this pilot was looking at is the backside of that whatever that the guy is wearing. It's almost like he's wearing like a uh table fan, right?
Which is flying.
Yeah. So I was like I I got I was like I wanted to post it because not only I wanted to tell everyone but I was I was not I was not happy. I was mad. I was like, how come?
I mean, this is a silly little thing. I don't want to waste my time for watching that silly little thing as UFO that been kept in the archives for like 10 years, right? It's like you so many it must have changed so many hands, right? It's a very silly thing to still have it as unresolved after 10 years which is 2013 right so it's 13 years so yeah it's I I kind of like let's put it out there I don't know what these are I don't know whether when we say unresolved like what else do you need to see I mean it's like quite obvious any pilot can tell you right you don't need even a pilot any any parag glider or anyone And you know any beach goer will tell you right? So you don't need a technology for that.
Uh that's what I felt at least I thought I should put it out there.
So yeah. So this this galaxy we are looking at you the Yeah. This galaxy we are looking at is needle galaxy and that was a razor thin edge basically. So we don't have like almost like you don't see it like sideways. You see them they are in the almost like uh from our view point they are in our same plane as our our viewpoint this same uh plane. So you will see just the side of the galaxy.
That's what you're looking at.
And it has this thing in the middle almost like a UFO kind of a dome shape.
Right?
So there is a billion sun size black hole there in the middle.
It's one of the largest known black holes in the entire universe.
Largest known black holes in the entire universe.
what what you're looking at right now.
This galaxy, this one has like probably in the middle. I'll zoom in for you like right here in the middle. The little bit more brighter one is is the area where the black hole is.
You don't see black hole. You just see the brightness because it's eating all the stars away. And that brightness that you are seeing is The billion solar masses black hole is one of the biggest one that we know in the solar system in the sorry in the in the entire universe.
Thank you. Thank you.
So this is I mean we are taking picture of eight of 12 now.
Sorry, I I lost my voice, so I wanted to go get something. So anyway, um that's what is going on there. Now this is really decent looking picture. This is live view folks. You're looking at live view of needle and I think we are taking seven of 12. In few more minutes the next place we are going to go is M51 the poolool galaxy and we'll call it a night. Uh I think um we I I'm working on a new video called I don't want to give away the whole thing but it is about the moon about the moon and it is fantastic. It is like killing me all the time because I had it written up. I was I know exactly what I wanted to research on.
But I do wanted to put it out there.
It's very interesting.
It takes a while to download uh the pictures and edit it. He can't just put it in the coordinates and show up so we can see it. Uh yeah, yeah, yeah, Glenn, that's correct. I mean basically it's in my backyard the computer and it is connected through network cable and what you are seeing now is the live pictures of those ones that are being taken. So if I go back to the previous image that you're looking at.
So when I was sharing details with you all.
So it's taking picture 8 of 12, right?
That's what you're looking at. And it is 120 seconds exposure.
And once this is done on this computer, I can quickly copy uh from backyard to here. The pictures that I took last week, I downloaded already to my uh computer here. I didn't get time to do it. I I'm not very organized folks to be honest with you. I I just I just work on the next important thing and I don't work on everything else. So, and you are looking at this is the live data you're looking at.
And there is more to it on this side than what you are seeing a little bit more data but it becomes way too small.
That's why I'm not putting that. I just wanted at least a little bit better view uh to see it. Right now it's taking picture 8 of 12. Katherine, thanks for joining.
Yeah, I think I'm I'm knowing the crowd that actually I I'm noticed one thing.
The people who watch my videos are not necessarily the people who come to the live stream and it's the other way around too. So, it's like kind of I don't know there is a universe of people out there that are different blocks and also they're all different time zones.
I'm noticing from people from other countries, they actually watch on a different time zone and they watch it US nighttime and yeah, it's the other way around, too. So, Oh, Kim.
Yeah, if you I mean I I don't know. Just email me. You join as a member, please, if you don't mind and send me an email.
Yeah, you don't need to offer me as an assistant. I don't need you can you can um like you know connect stay connected. So there isn't much that I do to teach. I mean whatever I'm teaching I'm already putting that Kim on the on on there is stuff that I don't I don't have this concept of behind thescenes videos yet. I might end up doing it but they are very technical. I I mean I I've been doing this this for a very long time and there is a certain group of astrophotography crowd that are interested in what I wanted to say in that behind thes scenes videos.
That's pretty much it. That's how I see it.
Yes.
Oh, thank you. Thank you. No, today Hilton today is clear. Hil Oh, wow.
Hilton Hill Homestead. You put that as your username. That's a fantastic way to do that. Thank you. Thank you. So, yeah, Hilton, definitely you um tonight is beautiful night. I just don't want to lose it. So, at least I want to spend an hour or two pointing my telescopes. Like right now you are seeing the live telescope on the left side. It's pointing at the sky and this stuff the light that you are seeing is infrared light. It's not real light. You don't see light near the telescopes.
This is coming from the IR light from the ring camera. I need to turn that off.
But anyway, that's what you are watching.
Yeah. So this is this is that we are taking I'm taking like 10 12 pictures each.
I was a member due to my identity got stolen.
So I'm having all new cards. Oh, okay.
Yeah, no worries. Whenever you can join, please join.
I I don't know how How to how to put that somebody as a member? I I believe there is a way to do it. I don't know how to do it. Kim, I'll figure it out next time when you come in. If you don't have your cards, I believe we can gift a membership to like a member. I I just don't I'm fairly new to how to do that. But if I do it, it goes randomly. But to a specific person, I don't know how to do that. I I don't mind at all.
Yeah, we'll try. We'll try Oh yeah, it's a it's a beautiful line.
This is more than what I asked for.
So the next live image that I'm going to show not the not tonight the next one next time when I go live I think I'm done for tonight I have to make another video tomorrow morning but I was saying the next time when I go live I will show you if the night is clear and if we have I'm going to show you those fireballs and those uh meteors I'll show you that it'll be like a wide open sky.
Uh I have a way to wanted to present. I have something in mind.
Oh, Christina, sorry to hear it's cloudy. Yeah, I hate when it is cloudy.
I just Yeah, Katherine, this is a needle galaxy and it is 30 to 50 million light years away.
It's in Koma Bernesis. I hope I'm saying this right.
Binesis um which is a spiral galaxy. It's a edjon galaxy. So when you are seeing it, you're seeing the side of the galaxy.
You're not seeing the top. It's not like this, right? And it has the stuff in the middle like a bulge kind of thing in the middle. And that makes it uh basically the ones that you are seeing right now, the one in the middle, that is because it has a giant black hole in the middle of the galaxy. The size of that black hole is 100 billion sun sizes like 100 billion suns. It's that that's the size of our mass. That's the size of the black hole. It's actually 100 billion solar masses. That's what it is to be more precise. So meaning how much sun has material.
this is made from that kind of a material. I believe that's the best better way to explain it. It's beautiful.
So these are very uh I would say highly energetic, very powerful.
You know if you're asking me like where people go or where the souls go or you know if you are very spiritual I mean we go beyond all these galaxies probably we must came from flying away our souls probably must have come. I mean if you are thinking that way always I think that these are very easy to reach if you are in a different dimension because of we we being humans in this three-dimensional world we can to get from here to go there it takes like 30 billion whatever 30 million light years away but maybe in a different dimension you just close your eyes and you are over there. So that's how I feel like some of these cannot be that far and we probably can communicate. We don't know. We don't have the technology. We don't have the I guess awareness.
We didn't grow up to that level yet. And once we do, I think we should be able to communicate.
Yeah. So we are almost coming to an end.
So the sequence already ended.
So yeah, the telescope did not go to a different place. So which is a good news.
And let me check if the camera is still Cool. So, it didn't get warm.
The telescope is still tracking which is a good news. All right. So, we'll go, this is the last one, folks. We are going to go to Virpool Galaxy and after Virpool Galaxy, we will call it a night.
So, you are roughly few minutes away to like call it a night. Okay. So, let's try this out.
I can use the other screen. Give me a second.
Yeah, that way you can see the whole thing.
So, this willpool galaxy has a messier member. It is called M51.
And I believe it's 13:28. Yeah.
Yeah. Nancy, please uh you can watch this. It's getting recorded, so you should be able to watch this.
You'll be loving this. the new one that I'm showing you. You will love it. You probably may have seen it in books and textbooks and stuff. Okay? So, I'm 100% sure you are going to enjoy the galaxy we are going to.
It's going to be so much fun when we see that.
Okay. So, it's bent down a little bit.
You can see the scope.
You will love it.
This one you are going to enjoy this. The one that is coming up. I promise you that one you will have.
So this is completed. We are going I'm going to save this.
Oh, it went to that place and it is tracking there too. Cool.
So, I'm taking 12 pictures, folks.
Okay, 120 seconds.
If someone is interested, I'm dithering every fourth frame. I'm not interested in making a perfect picture. I'm just doing that because these are going to look nice. That's the whole point of it.
I wanted to take 100.
I will shut the um live stream, but it'll keep taking pictures. It's a very nice looking one, so I don't want to let it do that.
Yeah, I lost my voice. Sorry. Yeah. So anyway, so going coming back here, we are going to unstart focus every 30 minutes. Focus.
Yes.
Oh, Renee, thank you. Appreciate that.
Thank you.
Uh yeah, we Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Edward, the I'm tracking lot of these earthquakes and volcanoes.
There are quite a bit of them getting popped up. You are right. I I will post more data once I see uh quite a bit. I mean I don't want to create like a mass hysteria by providing almost the same data every day saying that the world is falling apart kind of data. So I'm taking time to leave that in some interval so that at least we can see anything meaningful and then we'll take a look at it. I'm just giving a little bit of a gap between those those events are getting crazy 100% the something is going on with volcanoes. I don't understand why so many of them are active. It's weird. I mean there are seven volcanoes always active in the world all over always. They almost like they are like open bottles, right? They are they are all over the world. All over the world. There are seven of them active volcanoes in the world. Never stop. They do all the time. There are several plates. The plate tectonics always will have earthquakes. Right? Now there is a difference between the always and the anomaly. Right? If it was always, I would be not interested at all. I mean it's everyday thing, right? But there are certain things that are abnormal and that's what we are catching now. And I will have more data uh I promise coming soon. I I just switched the topic because I don't want to make people like worried.
Yeah, like Kim that's what that's right.
Yeah. Some of them like there there are two types of broadly right two types of volcanoes, right? One of them is a open open vent volcano which is there is no cap to the bottle.
That doesn't mean that it's always open.
They actually they they are open meaning they don't if there is a pressure it always comes out. It doesn't stop.
But the ones that are closed ones they are the ones that explode. Right? They always have an explosion through the roof, right? So you can see some of them go all the way up to stratosphere, right? So that is a dangerous one. The the problem with those ones, the ones that explode like one, it's dangerous for human life. Um the people who are nearby the biggest issue is because they are going to explode and push out all this like lava and all not the lava the the smoke the dust everything uh into the sky and because they go into the stratosphere it spreads all over the world very quickly. So you are making the world more dirtier than at least the atmosphere dirtier than what it is. So no I'm not I'm not interested folks. So this is what we are getting now. We are taking picture of this galaxy. So you will see it. Let me switch to the other view and show you guys what's going on.
And this is called Willpool Galaxy. The reason why it looks that way the way it is looking right now is because it is a an inter like interacting galaxy. There is there are two of them here.
So that's why you are seeing that way.
You'll see some beautiful image in few minutes at least 2 minutes I would say.
Yeah, this one looks really cool.
It's really cool. It is 31 million light years away.
Not too long ago, back in 1800s, someone saw this in their telescope and they actually drew the picture and now we are taking pictures live. So that's fantastic.
Uh the name Oh, sorry. I I should have changed the name.
Thanks for remaining.
Yeah, the name of the galaxy is M51, the Willpool Galaxy. And once the picture comes out, you will see much more beautiful view of that. Hold on.
There you go. The beauty came out. So that's the that's a very very interesting looking one.
If you want to zoom in, I can show you.
Thank you. Thank you. So, this is our last galaxy for tonight where we can see all day long. Uh all night long, I would say, but I think uh we'll run out of time quickly. It's 10:48 my time.
We started 85 minutes ago.
It's a very interesting night, folks.
I Are you adding the color or is that real color? This is real color. I'm using a oneshot color camera like I think of you are using your cell phone to take a picture.
That's exactly what this is. No. No artificial stuff. No, this is as real as it can get.
Yeah. All I have is a IR UV filter. So it reduces the IR and UV. But I don't have this is not like a hydrogen alpha or any other filters there. So you're looking at live data.
It's almost you can't see with I mean we technically can see this with our eyes because this but this this galaxy is bright. You should be able to see if you can use a telescope decent enough you should be able to see this view. Not this view but at least some kind of maybe a fainter view than this.
Yeah. So, we are we are watching this live, folks. And if you are just joining, I didn't even say subscribe, like, all that good stuff. Please do that. I really wanted to last live stream that we went to, I was pretty disappointed. I have not seen like or subscribe from not the like.
They always like it. the new subscribers did not join. Whole bunch of people came in. So, so please do subscribe folks.
Thank you.
Steve, thank you. Have a good night.
Rene, thank you. Thank you. This is a I mean, I know you you said you wanted to check out. So, I mean, this is what I wanted you to see at least. That's why I was teasing. So, make sure this is good.
Yeah, this is pretty good data we could get this from our telescope. You are seeing the live telescope in the back or in the side I would call it.
I hope you are seeing aeroplane coming on the top. This is a live telescope.
It's in my backyard and you're I'm also taking pictures and you are seeing the data that is coming in and I I'm taking this is real time that is moving.
So this is live data folks. This is not artificial nothing. This is real data.
This is what is in the sky tonight.
And this one is yeah it has a spiral nebula to it.
So some satellite photobombed.
Look at that.
Something came and cut our picture in half.
Hey Peggy, thank you. Thank you. Good night. I know it is getting late folks for people are from all time zones. I I realize that. Thank you for joining.
Yeah, exactly. A galaxy and a collusion.
You are correct.
What caused the cut? Um, some satellite.
Oh, happy Mother's Day folks. If you are just joining, I think we are crossing the timeline.
To all the mothers in this group, happy Mother's Day, folks. Thank you.
Oh, what's the telescope I'm using? The telescope I'm using is called Rasa 36.
It is a 14 in diameter. It's a Celestron and it is F2. So, this is This is a fast telescope in the market at least in the consumer world like people like us not the universities or you know mega observatories this is the one that is out there available I don't think there is more powerful scope than this in the consumer market there are some but they go in uh like really astronomical prices and this isn't cheap. This is expensive scope. So that's why I don't want to talk about it.
You always wanted one. Yeah. And it's a messy commitment, Nancy. That's the problem. This is a almost like think of buying a car kind of thing, right? So there is no end to it this once you get into this it's like there is no one one um size fits all right so you have to have so many different kinds also you'll realize that as soon as you start getting one it's like oh my god this is not this is a neverending work so you take immediately I mean it's very Big financial commitment more than anything else.
Yeah. 14inch Rasa. Correct, Larry.
That's what it is. It's a Rasa 36.
Yeah. Once you are on it, you are you are in in it. There is no I guess going back.
But I mean you you're not missing anything. What I'm seeing what you is what you are seeing. So you're good. So don't don't don't spend money to see what I'm seeing. So because you could rather see it now. So without spending any money.
Yeah. Know I I love cat. My daughter loves cats. Uh uh Nancy, she uh goes and um I guess rescues them and she won't keep them because in her apartment. So she sends gives me the cat. It's like what do I do here at home?
So yeah. Yeah. I just wanted to be honest.
I don't want to tell you that. Okay, let's do this. And then you are half like a million dollars. So yeah, happy Mother's Day, Carina. Thank you. Thank you. Thanks everyone.
Yeah, this is fantastic.
We are in picture number five of 10 as we speak. So, few more pictures and then we'll call it a night. I mean, you can see these ones when we stack these they are going to look beautiful. I mean essentially what's going to happen is whenever we take these pictures right they goes to a point where you are like literally collecting light that's what it is from the sky and that light started millions of years ago right so you are collecting data data of the ancient something that started a long time ago, right? That's what you're collecting. So it becomes very quickly like you once you really feel it, you get connected to it so quickly. You are like okay I mean lot of people do the same type of activity for different reasons. When I look at it, I'm looking at it because I like to see that. I'm not doing that for the sake of taking pictures. I'm not doing that for the sake of like, you know, technology or something.
I'm doing that to understand what it is.
I believe that's my interest. My interest was to really get to know because all I know otherwise would be like what somebody tells me or whatever, right? So if I do this work and understand this, I get a lot more clarity. That's what I feel like.
Yeah, Larry, that that's how you end up like that's really what happens from 4 in to 127, 150, 250, and now you you need a 300. Oh, wow. Okay.
I I I the the usual telescopes, the refractor telescopes, I had a 150 like I'm using 150 but I'm using 150 for taking pictures of sun and it's a triplet. It's explore scientific 150 mm triplet carbon fiber and I'm using that with the solar filters.
Yeah, I I keep that like I wanted to use that once in a while. Once everything is done like basically once I um set up properly then I wanted to show you all live views of sun really close really close images it'll be fantastic.
Yeah, we wanted to like sometimes to get closer to the sun is good, right?
Yeah. So folks, we are almost there. We are taking picture seven of 10, I think. Um, looking at how people are signing out, I feel like it's time to call it a night. If everyone is okay with it, we'll call it a night. Thanks for joining folks.
Thank you everyone.
Appreciate coming in.
Thank you again.
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