Contains:  Solar system body or event
Crater Tycho sits atop the Moon when viewed from the South, Niall MacNeill

Crater Tycho sits atop the Moon when viewed from the South

Crater Tycho sits atop the Moon when viewed from the South, Niall MacNeill

Crater Tycho sits atop the Moon when viewed from the South

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Description

After a few months set up for deep sky, I changed over to planetary with a view to imaging the conjunction of Neptune and Jupiter the following morning, where they would be in the same FOV. Unfortunately, the skies were cloudy.
However, I did take the opportunity in the evening, when the skies were clear, to image the Moon. I last imaged it in September 2021. 
I used my ZWO ASI 1600MC which has a large FOV and relatively small pixels, with no barlow. It required 9 panels and I set the captures to run until 8GB of data were captured, usually ~ 500 frames. Of these I stacked 1/3rd. The stacked images were linked wavelet sharpened before they were stitched together with Photomerge in Photoshop.
This is exactly the orientation we see the Moon from my southerly location. For us it is normal to see crater Tycho towards the top of the image and its long rays raining down. 
There could be no better proof that the Earth is a sphere than the fact that the Moon is inverted in the different Hemispheres.

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Crater Tycho sits atop the Moon when viewed from the South, Niall MacNeill