astrophotography catalogue 2013

64
2013 ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITION WELCOME TO THE ASTROFEST 2013 ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITION The 2013 Astrofest astrophotography exhibition, presented at Western Australia’s biggest annual astronomy festival, is a celebration of superb, diverse and recent astronomical photography. Presented at Curtin University on the 16th of February 2013, and now in its fourth year, the 2013 astrophotography exhibition has attracted the largest number of entrants to date. This year’s astrophotos and timelapse videos are presented as a digital and print exhibition, and have been selected from twenty five astro-photographers. The exhibition also includes a showing of The World At Night digital exhibition, which brings an international perspective to astronomical photography. This year features a wide range of astrophotos, such as star trail, night-scapes, the Sun and Moon, and deep space images. The technical mastery

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Western Australia's largest astronomy festival organised by International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) and other astronomy group in WA. This event also features a wide range of astro-photos, such as sun, Moon, deep space, star trail, earth and sky etc.

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Page 1: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

2013ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITION

WELCOME TO THE ASTROFEST 2013 ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITION

The 2013 Astrofest astrophotography exhibition, presented at Western Australia’s biggest annual astronomy festival, is a celebration of superb, diverse and recent astronomical photography. Presented at Curtin University on the 16th of February 2013, and now in its fourth year, the 2013 astrophotography exhibition has attracted the largest number of entrants to date. This year’s astrophotos and timelapse videos are presented as a digital and print exhibition, and have been selected from twenty five astro-photographers. The exhibition also includes a showing of The World At Night digital exhibition, which brings an international perspective to astronomical photography.

This year features a wide range of astrophotos, such as star trail, night-scapes, the Sun and Moon, and deep space images. The technical mastery

Page 2: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

demonstrated by many of the exhibited entries is testament to the talent and capabilities of the exhibited astrophotographers. We also see a strong theme of night landscape images, often visually creative as well as new and young astrophotographers entering the field, with considerable success. Virtually all of the images are by Western Australian residents or visitors.

Two major astronomical events that took place in 2012 are featured prominently in the 2013 exhibition; the Total Solar Eclipse (14 November 2012), which was visible in Queensland and the Northern Territory, and the Transit of Venus (6 June 2012). These events have inspired West Australian astrophotographers to travel to capture these remarkable photos.

The 2013 exhibition is made possible by the collaboration and support of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Celestial Visions and The World at Night. The exhibition reveals the awesome beauty of the Universe we live in, and provides inspirational images that evoke wonder in the mysteries and beauty of the night sky. I trust you enjoy the 2013 astrophotography exhibition.

John GoldsmithAstrofest Astrophotography Curator

Cover Photo: Horsehead and Flame Nebulae on the belt of Orion. Andrew Lockwood

Page 3: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Moonbow at 5200mColin Legg

Taken just after moon rise at a Chilean Geyser field, high in the Andes.

Page 4: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

Pinnacles StarlightRonald Tan

A 25 second exposure shot of the Pinnacles rock formation taken with Canon 500D and Canon EF-S 15-85mm lens at 15mm. This shot was additionally lit with a torch and camera flash.

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Page 5: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Cosmic DreamingColin Legg

Sleeping under the stars on a hot night in central South Australia.

Page 6: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Pinnacles MoonsetGrahame Kelaher

Single shot of Moonset with the famous ‘Pinnacles’ rock formations in the foreground. Basic photoshop touchups applied.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 7: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Celebrating the night skyChris Thorne

Celebrating the night sky at Lake Ballard.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 8: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Pinnacles Milky WayGrahame Kelaher

Single shot of the famous ‘Pinnacles’ rock formations and a Milky Way backdrop. Basic photoshop touchups applied.

Page 9: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

An ancient landscape and a modern radio telescope

Pete WheelerThe full Moon lights the ancient Murchison landscape to reveal a ‘tile’ of the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) radio telescope. This is a 30 second exposure, taken with a Canon 550D equipped with a Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8 lens.

The MWA project is led by Curtin University and is a collaboration between research institutions in Australia, India, New Zealand and the US. The telescope has 4,096 antennas, with 32 located on each of the 128 “tiles” that are spread as far as 3km apart.The MWA is designed to have an excellent field of view on the sky (equivalent to about 500 full moons) and to be very adaptable, being almost exclusively electronically controlled.

Page 10: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Page 11: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

Sunset over SkymapperMehmet Alpaslan

This photo, taken from the AAT catwalk at Siding Spring Observatory on April 25th, 2012, shows the Moon and Venus rising over the Skymapper telescope, silhouetted in the foreground.

Page 12: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Page 13: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

Murchison Widefield ArrayJohn Goldsmith

Murchison Widefield Array radio telescope, southern stars and a fireball meteor.

The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) radio telescope consists of more than 2000 radio antennas spread across 3 square kilometres, in 128 groups. The network of radio telescope antennas are formed by groups of dual-polarisation dipole antennas.

Unlike steerable radio telescope dishes, these antennas contain no moving parts. Instead, advanced signal computer processing is used to focus the antennas on different parts of the sky.

In November 2012,The World at Night astrophotographer John Goldsmith recorded a fireball meteor above the MWA radio antennas. The fireball appeared low in the southeast sky, and created glowing dust that persisted for several minutes. The fireball was recorded by two cameras, during multi-hour timelapse sequences. One camera used a fisheye lens (180° view), and the other used a 24mm wide angle lens, close to the MWA antennas.

Page 14: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Geminid Meteors at Perth ObservatoryRoger Groom

Five bright Geminid meteors shoot across the skies of the Perth Observatory in this all night photograph. From a series of all-night photographs ten frames are stacked for the stars plus five selected frames with meteors.

Overlayed in Photoshop with a further stack of foreground exposures.

Page 15: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Comet McNaught, with the Australia Telescope Compact Array in the foregroundSteven Tingay

This image was taken on January 26th, 2007 at the Australia Telescope Compact Array radio telescope, located near Narrabri in NW NSW. A crescent Moon illuminates the foreground. The image was obtained using a Canon AE-1 Program 35 mm SLR camera and 400 ASA film, 50 mm lens (f1.8) and 30 s exposure. The commercially processed print was scanned to JPG format.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 16: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

25” ObsessionNova Vandenbeld

No processing, straight out of the camera.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 17: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Celestial South Star TrailGemma Boys

An hour of 30 second exposures stacked, showing the Celestial South Pole. 160 photographs stacked using software from www.startrails.de.

Page 18: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Night LightsColin Legg

A red Aurora Australis lights up the sky over Wilsons Promontory while millions of luminescent organisms render the waves blue. January 17 2013.

Page 19: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Celestial Splendour at Lake BallardJohn Goldsmith

A spectacular celestial sight with Jupiter and Venus, the crescent moon, the Seven Sisters (Pleiades), Taurus and Orion, rising above the “Pyramid Hill”, Lake Ballard, home to Antony Gormley’s “Inside Australia” art project and its 50 metal statues, stretching across the flat salt lake.

From a timelapse sequence, basic contrast / brightness adjustments applied.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 20: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Moonrise at Fitzgerald National ParkSean Standen

This is a 2 image stitch taken near Bremmer Bay in the South West. Each exposure was around 30 seconds at an extremely high ISO. Processing includes a small noise reduction, light vignetting and small colour adjustment.

Page 21: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Page 22: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

Skywatchers under the Milky Way & Southern Cross

John Goldsmith

Southern skywatchers have been treated to a comet display, in the centre of the iconic Southern Cross. The comet, called Comet Lemmon, passed through the centre of the Southern Cross, early in the hours of 20 January 2013. In this image, astrophotographers and skywatchers recorded the event, as the comet passed through the centre of the Southern Cross. the comet appeared as a hazy ball of light with a slight tail, with the astrophotos recording a bluish green in colour.

Astronomers and skywatchers are widely anticipating the appearance of two comets in 2013, Comet Panstarr and Comet ISON, both of which may provide superb views in 2013. *This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 23: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL LANDSCAPES

Bungle Bungles Full DomeColin Legg

360 x 195 degree view of the Milky Way setting over the Bungle Bungles in Western Australia.

Page 24: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL PANORAMAS

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Page 25: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL PANORAMAS

Page 26: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

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Page 27: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL PANORAMAS

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Page 28: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL PANORAMAS

The Milky WayDivya Palaniswamy

This photo was taken during mid June 2012 (one of coldest winters I have seen). Winter skies in Western Australia are absolutely brilliant. This was a learning night for me - I learnt a few very interesting things about the night sky and locating southern stars from an astronomer and astro photographer, John Goldsmith . For example the aboriginal stories about the “Emu in the sky.” This photo is a Panorama, each picture was about 3 min long on atracking mount. No extreme photo editing was made except for fixing the brightness and contrast of the image.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 29: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL TIMELAPSE

Celestial VisionsJohn Goldsmith

A collection of timelapse sequences from the Celestial Visions collection, including the superb Lake Ballard “Inside Australia” project, and the Pinnacles, Nambung National Park. Timelapse sequences also featured as part of the Luminous Night celebration, marking the centenary of The University of Western Australia (8 February 2013). *This timelapse was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 30: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL TIMELAPSE

An ancient landscape and a modern radio telescope

Pete Wheeler

A short timelapse sequence captured during a trip to the Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory (~700km north of Perth). It’s one of the 128 tiles that make up the new Murchison Widefield Array radio telescope.

The video contains about 2 hours worth of 30 second exposures from just after sunset until about 9:30pm. The Moon is lighting the landscape making it appear almost day like, and the dark patches are when the Moon disappears behind cloud. *This timelapse was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 31: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL TIMELAPSE

Geminids meteor shower TimelapseGrahame Kelaher

Timelapse sequence taken from the Pinnacles of the Geminids meteor shower.*This timelapse was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 32: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL TIMELAPSE

Delta Aquarid meteor shower TimelapseGrahame Kelaher

Timelapse sequence taken from the Pinnacles of the Delta Aquarid meteor shower.*This timelapse was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 33: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL TIMELAPSE

The Sweeping ShadowColin Legg

Wide angle views of the shadow sweeping across the landscape during the November 14 2012 FNQ Total Solar Eclipse. The light in the last 2 scenes was automatically tracked using a custom built bulb triggering device.*This timelapse was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 34: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTRONOMICAL TIMELAPSE

Nocturnal – Scenes of the Southern NightColin Legg

A compilation of nightscape scenes from Western Australia and Chile. Includes Comet Lovejoy, a decaying meteor train, a Total Lunar Eclipse and various moonrises and moonsets.*This timelapse was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 35: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Waxing MoonChris Dixon

This image is 130 x 1/1000 iso800 stacked in registax. The only editing was an adjustment to the contrast.

Page 36: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Lunar Eclipse over Lake JoondalupRonald Tan

This stacked image shows the whole lunar eclipse sequence and comprises some 44 images taken at 5 minutes intervals with a Canon 500D and Canon EF-S 15-85mm lens at 24mm. The images were stacked using Startrail.de.

Page 37: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Lunar eclipse Dec 2011 – another worldBrian Povey

The appearance of the moon during a lunar eclipse is another world – a ball of stone and dust – just like Earth really.

This image has some minor processing, just light and dark adjustments.

Page 38: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Transit of Venus Rising With SilhouettesRoger GroomThe Sun rises with the Transit of Venus already in progress, and foreground ridgeline and clouds silhouetted. The golden morning light, natural ridgeline and peaceful surrounds of Lucky Bay capture this 1 in 100 year event like a time capsule. Taken from one of the very few places good enough for observations – Lucky Bay, Esperance. Two bracketed exposures both through solar film. Minimal processing other than HDR blending.

Page 39: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Moon rises over Perth cityRonald Tan

The Moon rising over the Perth skyline taken with a Canon 500D and Canon EF-S 15-85mm lens. This images is comprised of two separate shots stacked using Startrail.de. One image showing the rising moon, and the other the lit office building as the lights came on.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 40: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Little Black Spot on the Sun, todayAndrew Lockwood

6th June 2012 saw the transit of Venus across the face of the sun. This image was taken about an hour into the event. Six separate panels were combined using Adobe Photoshop to produce this mosaic. Each image was derived from 900 monochromatic video frames, registered to each other, stacked and sharpened using Autostakkert 2.0. The false colour was applied using Photoshop. The imaging telescope was an 80mm Hydrogen Alpha telescope manufactured by Lunt Solar Systems.

Page 41: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Hello WinterBrian Sture

No processing. Taken from Mitchell Park South Perth a few days before the winter solstice. Taken on 18/6/2012 at 5.12pm.

Page 42: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Sun PillarChris Thorne

A Sun pillar: sunlight reflecting off high altitude ice, Perth.

Page 43: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Craggy SunChris Thorne

The Sun, low on the Perth city horizon, appears mis-shapen due to optical effects of bands of different air density in Earth’s atmosphere.

Page 44: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

The MegafilamentAndrew LockwoodStretching 78,000km across the face of the sun on August 11, 2012 this megafilament and the three ‘twister’ prominences were imaged using an 80mm diameter Hydrogen alpha telescope with a 0.7 Angstrom passband. These images were captured using a monochromatic video camera capturing 15 frames per second. One thousand frames in total were used, with the best 10% contributing to the final stack. The Pixinsight software was used to apply regularised Van Cittert deconvolution, and false colour added to produce the orange colour, with the prominences highlighted in red.

Page 45: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Total EclipseRon Hille

Three images of the November 2012 Solar Eclipse taken at Adams Dam, QLD taken using a Sony alpha 75-300mm lens (250mm), 1/400 second, F7 ISO200. Top Left: Emerging Sun creating ‘diamond ring effect’. Middle: First glimpse of emerging Sun. Bottom Right: Seconds before totality finishes.

Page 46: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Solar eclipse November 2012Brian Povey

What little of the November eclipse that was visible from Perth. I tried to take it rising above the city buildings but unfortunately clouds on the horizon obscured the view until it was well clear.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 47: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

SUN AND MOON

Outer solar Corona during total eclipse of November 2012Steven Tingay

The solar Corona at the point of totality during the solar eclipse of the 14th of November 2012, as seen from Palm Cove in far north Queensland. Image obtained using Canon EOS 1000D And 300mm lens (1/50 s exposure, F5.6). Image has been converted to black and white and an unsharp mask has been applied, to emphasise the highly filamentary nature of the outer Corona.

Page 48: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

Omega Centauri, a million stars in oneBrian Povey

Taken from Watson’s retreat. A mix of five stacked photographs. Colours are natural.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 49: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

Orion the HunterDaniel Tonello (10 years old)

Taken at Gingin as a guided, piggy back image.

Page 50: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

Incoming SpiralAndrew LockwoodThe Great Nebula in Andromeda, (M31, NGC224) and it’s companions, M32 and M110 are headed this way at 110km/sec. Fortunately we have time to duck as it is 770 KiloParsecs (2.5 million light years) away and won’t hit for another 4 billion years. This image was acquired using an unmodified Nikon D800 DSLR, with a 560mm f5 APO lens on an autoguided Losmandy G11 mount. 6 x 600s long sub frames were combined using Pixinsight to give a total exposure of 1 hour. Image processing included ANCR Denoising, some wavelet based structure enhancement and the usual curves and levels adjustments to maximise the dynamic range.

Page 51: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

Crab NebulaMark Bridger

Taken with SBig ST8300 and Baader narrowband filters on a Skywatcher ED80.

Processed in Nebulosity and Photoshop.

Page 52: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

Page 53: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

Comet Lemmon, First CometDivya Palaniswamy

A new comet named C/2012 F6 Lemmon was discovered on the 23rd of March 2012 of magnitude 20.7. Astronomers predicted this comet was becoming closer and brighter, crossing through the heart of the southern cross during mid January.

Along with my fellow astro photographers, I set out to photograph this spectacular event few kilometres away from Perth. It was a very exciting and heart pounding moment as it turns out to be my first comet and I managed to capture it!

No major processing has be done on this photo except auto colour correction.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 54: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

Horsehead and Flame Nebulae on the belt of Orion

Andrew LockwoodBarnard 33 is the horsehead-shaped dark nebula superimposed on the pale red glow of IC434. Nearby is the bright flame nebula NGC 2024, and the bright star left of centre is Alnitak (Zeta Orionis). These objects are all part of the Orion Molecular complex, visible as the dusty background across the whole frame, which is approximately 1500 light years away. Photographed with an unmodified Nikon D800 DSLR camera and a 530mm f5 APO lens, this is a combination of 12 600s exposures (2hrs total). The individual frames were digitally combined using PixInsight, and the post-processing consisted of level and curve adjustments, noise reduction and colour saturation increase.

Page 55: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

NGC 3372, The Great Carina NebulaDaniel Judge

Located up to 10,000 Light years from Earth, the Great Carina Nebula is located in the constellation Carina. This nebula contains Eta Carinae, a super massive star with a mass up to 150 times greater than our Sun, and is approx. four million times more luminous. This bright emission cloud has been imaged with narrowband Ha and OIII filters and processed such to highlight its beautiful structure.

DEEP SPACE

Page 56: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

The Witch’s BroomMark Bridger

Taken with SBig ST8300 and Baader RGB filters on a Skywatcher ED80. Processed in Nebulosity and Photoshop.

Page 57: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

Eta Carinae NarrowbandMark Bridger

Taken with SBig ST8300 and Baader narrowband filters on a Skywatcher ED80. Processed in Nebulosity and Photoshop.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 58: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

Tarantula Nebula NGC2070 HaRGBPaul Storey

The stunning detail of the Tarantula Nebula.

Nebula wide field 20 x 900 sec, Ha 18 X 600 sec, RGB, Darks, Bias, flats. Taken with Northgroup ED127mm APO, QHY10 camera. Stacked in CCDStack v2, post processing in Photoshop CS6. RGB with 70% merge Ha, levels, curves, selective colour.

Page 59: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

Messier 8, The Lagoon NebulaDaniel Judge

Located up to 6,000 Light years from Earth, the Lagoon Nebula is located in the constellation Sagittarius. The dark dust lanes within the center resemble a lagoon structure.

This bright HII emission cloud has been imaged with narrowband Ha and OIII filters and processed such to highlight its beautiful structure.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 60: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

Scorpius and Rho OphiuchiRick Tonello

Taken with a Pentax 6x7 film camera, 50min guided exposure.

Page 61: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

The Unicorn’s RosetteAndrew LockwoodHerschel initially catalogued this as a cluster of stars, now identified as NGC2244 visible at the centre of the image. Subsequently the nebulosity was discovered, gaining the additional designation NGC2239. The nebulosity and associated stars is about 3600 light years away in the constellation Monoceros, (The Unicorn).

This image is a combination of 6x600sec sub-frames taken using a Nikon D800 DSLR, a 530mm f5 APO lens on an autoguided equatorial mount. The images were calibrated using dark, flat and bias frames, then registered and stacked using Pixinsight. Subsequent processing included various denoising algorithms (ANCR, SCR) and manual stretching of the histogram and curves.*This photo was displayed as part of the digital exhibition

Page 62: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

The Great Orion NebulaRonald Tan

Image of the Great Orion Nebula taken with modified Canon 1100D and Explore Scientific ED80 telescope. Processed using Pixinsight.

Page 63: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

DEEP SPACE

RosetteMark Bridger

Taken with SBig ST8300 and Baader narrowband filters on a Skywatcher ED80. Processed in Nebulosity and Photoshop.

Page 64: Astrophotography  Catalogue 2013

ASTROFEST ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITION 2013

Curator: John Goldsmith (Image selection: Kirsten Gottschalk, ICRAR)

Exhibition contributors: Mehmet Alpaslan Grant Boxer Gemma Boys Mark Bridger Chris Dixon John GoldsmithRoger Groom Ron Hille Daniel Judge Grahame Kelaher Colin Legg Andrew LockwoodDivya Palaniswamy Brian Povey Sean Standen Paul Storey Brian Sture Ronald Tan Chris Thorne Steven Tingay Daniel Tonello Rick Tonello Nova Vandenbeld Rahi VarsaniPete Wheeler

Sponsors:WPM Group www.wpmgroup.com.auCelestial Visions www.celestialvisions.com.au

Associate: The World At Night www.twanight.org

For the full A4 catalogue visit www.icrar.org/astrophoto

All images in the Astrofest 2013 astrophotography exhibition remain copyright the photographers.