The other day I took a picture to the Moon, taken as a photographic experimentation, of course I did so, the to do, then when we got home I saw her again and I noticed that in the lower left was also the star that I had framed.
It was not a star, Jupiter was to my surprise (Ed - by Jove! ;-)) And although the goal is not suitable for the type of photos I've seen cmq that was really him.
nb 1:1 for a picture where the object we can see better, go here
nb 1:1 for a picture where the object we can see better, go here
The only certainty was the fact of having with a software which brings me back to that time of the shooting and in that position in the sky. Stellarium did in my case, below a description from the site.
Wonderful software, to the great advice!
Stellarium is a free open source planetarium for your computer. It shows a realistic sky in 3D just like you see with eye naked, with binoculars or a telescope.
is being used in planetarium projectors. Just set your coordinates and go!
features of version 0.10.0
sky
*
catalog of over 600,000 stars * extra catalogs with more than 210 million stars
* asterisms and illustrations of the constellations constellations of eleven people
* *
different images of deep sky objects (all Messier's catalog)
* realistic Milky Way *
atmosphere as realistic sunrise and sunset * the planets and their satellites
interface
*
powerful zoom * time control * multilingual interface
* fisheye projection (a fish-eye) to the domes of the planetary
* mirror projection spherical domes
* GUI non-professional and full keyboard control * telescope control
view
* equatorial and altazimuthali
scintillation of the stars
* * *
shooting stars eclipse simulation *
landscape customizable, now with spherical projection
customization
* add your own deep sky objects, landscapes, constellation images, scripts ...
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