Annual Meeting of the Deep Sky Section, 2011 March 12
- Introduction
- Then and Now: Thirty Years of Section Images
- Using the f/2 HyperStar System for Deep Sky Imaging
- Galaxy Clusters for the Amateur
- Things that Fade in the Night: Variable Nebulae
- Astrophotography in the 1980s: Why I didn't blow myself up
- Active Galactic Nuclei, and why amateurs should observe them
- The Herschel Space Telescope and Star Formation
- References
References
1 Brazell, O., J. Brit. Astron. Assoc., 120(6), 378 (2010)
2 Privett, G., J. Brit. Astron. Assoc., 120(6), 379-380 (2010)
3 Corradi, R.L.M., MNRAS, 410, 1439 (2011)
4 see Astronomy Picture of the Day, 2010 Nov 3, <http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap101103.html> (2010)
5 Drew, J.E., et al., MNRAS, 362, 753 (2005)
6 Ford, D.C., J. Brit. Astron. Assoc., 118(1), 53-58 (2007)
7 McKim, R.J. [ed.], The British Astronomical Association: The Second Fifty Years, pp. 104-5 (1990)
8 see, e.g., Parker, G., Making Beautiful Deep-Sky Images: Astrophotography with Affordable Equipment, Springer, New York (2007)
9 Hickson, P., ApJ, 255, 308 (1982)
10 Jones, K.G. [ed.], Deep Sky Observer's Handbook: Volume 5 (Clusters of Galaxies), Enslow Publishing, New Jersey(1982)
11 http://faintfuzzies.com
12 Ward-Thompson, D., et al., MNRAS, 369, 1201 (2006)
© 2011 Dominic Ford / The British Astronomical Association.