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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

By Tiffany Kelly
Pasadena Sun

David Jurasevich pointed a laser into the night sky, aiming it in the direction of a planetary nebula.

From the Mt. Wilson Observatory, set on a ridge at an altitude of 5,715 feet in the San Gabriel Mountains, it’s hard to see a colorful shell of ionized gas and dust with the naked eye. That’s where the 60-inch Hale telescope, built in 1908, takes over.

Jurasevich, a superintendent at the observatory, led a group of amateur photographers last Sunday night through an astrophotography workshop — the first of its kind offered through Samy’s Camera Pasadena and sponsored by Canon.

More at the Pasadena Sun.

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By Tiffany Kelly
Pasadena Sun

David Jurasevich pointed a laser into the night sky, aiming it in the direction of a planetary nebula.

From the Mt. Wilson Observatory, set on a ridge at an altitude of 5,715 feet in the San Gabriel Mountains, it’s hard to see a colorful shell of ionized gas and dust with the naked eye. That’s where the 60-inch Hale telescope, built in 1908, takes over.

Jurasevich, a superintendent at the observatory, led a group of amateur photographers last Sunday night through an astrophotography workshop — the first of its kind offered through Samy’s Camera Pasadena and sponsored by Canon.

More at the Pasadena Sun.