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                    SKEGNESS-STARS
celestral photography & star-gazing group
CURRENT MOON
email me
a5by_x@hotmail.co.uk
We are hopefully going to start a small star-gazing group in Skegness that will get together once a week denpending on the weather to look at, and hopefully photograph the night sky's if you are local or from the surrounding area's then please click on the photograph to the left, and i will answer any of your questions.
Don't have a telescope! dont worry i have two scopes which we can use, but feel free to bring your own after all the more the merrier.

I must point out that i'm an amature the same as you, ive started this group because of my growing interest in the heaven's above. I hope to educate and excite everyone that comes, and you never know you might teach me a thing or two!
local weather - click here
The Hubble is thousands of miles deep in space which allows it to beam back fantastic pictures of of our galaxy and beond.click on the hubble photo and you will be able to gaze at some of its awe inspiring photography.
The hubble space telescope
just when it seemed like the summer movie season had ended, two of NASA's Great Observatories have produced their own action movie. Multiple observations made over several months with NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Hubble Space Telescope captured the spectacle of matter and antimatter propelled to near the speed of light by the Crab pulsar, a rapidly rotating neutron star the size of Manhattan.
An international team of astronomers has, for the first time, observed a stellar "survivor" to emerge from a double star system involving an exploded supernova.
A nearby black hole is hurtling like a cannonball through the disk of our galaxy. The detection of this speed demon is the best evidence yet, some astronomers say, that stellar-mass black holes — those that are several times as massive as the Earth's Sun — are created when a dying, massive star explodes in a violent supernova. The stellar-mass black hole, called GRO J1655-40, is streaking across space at a rate of 250,000 miles per hour, which is four times faster than the average velocity of the stars in that galactic neighborhood. At that speed, the black hole may have been hurled through space by a supernova blast.
Please send me your photos via the yellow link below.
YOUR PHOTOGRAPHS
MY PHOTOGRAPHS
To contact me click here.
SKYS THE LIMIT
my friends at skys the limit have offered our group a 20% discount off their already low prices. All telescopes and related products on their website, so check them out and dont forget to sign their guest book.
www.skysthelimit.org.uk
Please sign skegness-stars comment board! (click here)
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