The following are a selection of images I've taken from most recent to oldest. Currently, all planetary images are taken through a Celestron C6 using a Canon SL2 DSLR camera. Data is processed using aPIPP to process and convert the raw camera video, AutoStakkert to stack the video frames, Registax to sharpen the image using wavelets, Pixelmator to adjust color, contrast, etc, and finally Topaz DeNoise (in recent images) to help remove lingering noise. I'm currently processing all data on a 2016 12" Macbook with PIPP, AutoStakkert, and Registax (which are PC programs) running on the Mac using WineBottler.

Original on Transparent.png
  • Blog

  • Space Weather

  • Deep Sky

  • Sun-Moon-Planets

    • Sun
    • Moon
    • Mars
    • Jupiter
    • Saturn
  • Videos

  • Product Reviews

  • Shop

    • Books
    • Science Shirts
    • Beginner to Intermediate Telescopes
  • Contact

  • More

    Use tab to navigate through the menu items.
    Recent Mars Weather
    Mars Imagery
    2020 Mars Imagery
    Stephen Strum
    • Oct 11, 2020
    • 3 min

    2020 Mars Imagery

    1040
    2018 Mars Imagery
    Stephen Strum
    • Jul 8, 2020
    • 1 min

    2018 Mars Imagery

    60
    Related Blog Posts
    Solar Eclipses on Mars
    Stephen Strum
    • Apr 28
    • 2 min

    Solar Eclipses on Mars

    71
    Perseverance Lands on Mars
    Stephen Strum
    • Feb 23, 2021
    • 3 min

    Perseverance Lands on Mars

    180
    Celestron C90 vs C8 EdgeHD on Mars
    Stephen Strum
    • Oct 18, 2020
    • 1 min

    Celestron C90 vs C8 EdgeHD on Mars

    1230
    2020 Mars Imagery
    Stephen Strum
    • Oct 11, 2020
    • 3 min

    2020 Mars Imagery

    1040
    Imagery from Mars
    Stephen Strum
    • Jul 7, 2020
    • 1 min

    Imagery from Mars

    20
    Celestron C90 Imaging Challenge
    Stephen Strum
    • Jun 28, 2020
    • 2 min

    Celestron C90 Imaging Challenge

    4380
    Solar Eclipses on Mars
    Stephen Strum
    • Apr 6, 2019
    • 2 min

    Solar Eclipses on Mars

    190

    ©2020 by Earth to Space Science.