Moon, der Mond, la Lune, la Luna, Měsíc, Луна, Φεγγάρι. All these names belong to our closest natural satellite. The distance between the Earth and the Moon changes approximately from 350 to 407 thousand km. If there would be a highway to moon and you would travel by car 130 km/h, it would take approximately 112 days to get there.

The Moon is the easiest object on the skies to photograph, not including the Sun and the clouds. It’s very bright object, therefore doesn’t require long exposure times. Honestly I hate the Moon, because it’s egoistic object, because if it shines, you can take a picture of the Moon only. All DSOs are blended, due to very bright background. Only one thing is possible to photograph when the Moon is shining – narrow band imaging of higher wavelengths just like H alpha or SII, because these wavelengths are in red region and therefore are not affected by blueish color of the background.

Moon_Tv1-320s_100iso_+27c_04906stdev_20140907-00h03m14s359ms

Telescope:Newton 200/1000 mm
Aperture:200 mm
Focal length:1000 mm
MountSkywatcher EQ-6
Autoguidingnone
Camera:Canon EOS 40D
Corrector:none
Filters:none
Exposure:1/320 s, iso 100