ISS composite 28 June 2010
This composite shows five images of the ISS taken during an early-morning pass on June 28th. The time sequence of the images runs from right to left. Each image is a processed stack of between 15 and 30 frames from a webcam movie, captured using an Imaging Source DMK21AU04 webcam and a 10-inch Newtonian telescope with a x2 Barlow lens. The telescope was guided manually using a co-aligned 66 mm refractor piggybacked on the Newtonian tube. Details visible include the chain of main modules making up the habitat of the station, the bright heat-rejection panels on either side of the modules and near the solar arrays at the ends of the main truss, and the solar arrays themselves.
ISS composite 28 June 2010
This composite shows five images of the ISS taken during an early-morning pass on June 28th. The time sequence of the images runs from right to left. Each image is a processed stack of between 15 and 30 frames from a webcam movie, captured using an Imaging Source DMK21AU04 webcam and a 10-inch Newtonian telescope with a x2 Barlow lens. The telescope was guided manually using a co-aligned 66 mm refractor piggybacked on the Newtonian tube. Details visible include the chain of main modules making up the habitat of the station, the bright heat-rejection panels on either side of the modules and near the solar arrays at the ends of the main truss, and the solar arrays themselves.
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