All these pictures of Mars were taken at prime focus with a 10 inch Meade LX200 GPS telescope and a Logitech Quickcam Pro 4000.
This series of images shows how much Mars rotates in 4 hours.
The pictures are from left to right and top to bottom:
This was only my third nights' attempt at Mars webcam astrophotography and the images are getting much prettier and has much more detail visible in them too.
Picture of Mars taken from AVI made on 15 June 2003 at 0:31 (early in the morning)
Exposure time of each frame: 1/25 second. 5 frames per second were taken for 30 seconds.
Only the top 85 percent quality frames were stacked using Registax to create this picture.
Dissapointing first results with the Meade 2x Barlow lens.
Picture of Mars taken from AVI made on 15 June 2003 at 0:45 (early in the morning)
Exposure time of each frame: 1/5 second. 5 frames per second were taken for 30 seconds.
I learned during the next week that a 30 seconds AVI does not supply enough quality frames to stack for a quality picture - especially for a fainter Barlow lens magnified image.