Check out these Pulsar telescope images:
47 Tucanae: A globular cluster located about 15,000 light years from Earth in the constellation of Tucana.

Description: This Chandra image provides the first complete census of compact binary stars in the core of the globular cluster known as 47 Tucanae. As the oldest stellar systems in the Milky Way Galaxy, globular clusters are laboratories for stellar and dynamical evolution. Nearly all objects in the Chandra images are “binary systems,” in which a normal, Sun-like star companion orbits a collapsed star, either a white dwarf or neutron star. The data also reveal the presence of “millisecond pulsars” that rotate extremely rapidly, between 100 to nearly 1000 times a second.
Creator/Photographer: Chandra X-ray Observatory
NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, which was launched and deployed by Space Shuttle Columbia on July 23, 1999, is the most sophisticated X-ray observatory built to date. The mirrors on Chandra are the largest, most precisely shaped and aligned, and smoothest mirrors ever constructed. Chandra is helping scientists better understand the hot, turbulent regions of space and answer fundamental questions about origin, evolution, and destiny of the Universe. The images Chandra makes are twenty-five times sharper than the best previous X-ray telescope. NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages the Chandra program for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory controls Chandra science and flight operations from the Chandra X-ray Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Medium: Chandra telescope x-ray
“Watching and Waiting”

Radio-Telescope sat on its transport rails..
King Arthur’s Wizard

Merlin Radio-Telescope
A few nice Pulsar telescope images I found:
CSIRO Parkes Radio Telescope

The Parkes Observatory is a radio telescope observatory, 20 kilometres north of the town of Parkes, New South Wales, Australia. It was one of several radio antennas used to receive images of the Apollo 11 moon landing in July 1969.
CSIRO Parkes radio telescope is the largest and oldest of the eight antennas comprising the ‘Australian Telescope National Facility’. The Compact Array of six 22-metre dishes near Narrabri and another near Coonabarabran link up with the 64 metre Parkes to synthesise a telescope some 300 kilometres across.
Since commissioning in 1961, Parkes Observatory has been responsible for many world firsts in radio astronomy. Highlights include: the identification of the first known Quasar in 1963; mapping of important regions in the galaxy, the Milky Way; participating in the NASA Apollo Moon missions, Voyager II encounter of Neptune in 1989, Mars missions in 2004; ESO’s Giotto Spacecraft encounter of Halleys Comet in 1986; Galileo Spacecraft’s exploration of Jupiter and its moons in 1997; Cassini Huygens mission to Saturn and Titan in 2005; all sky radio surveys of the Southern Skies; Pulsar survey work including the discovery of the first double Pulsar system in 2003; SETI Project Phoenix; and an ongoing search for hidden galaxies.
Parkes Dish – the movie star
The movie “The Dish” was loosely based on Parkes involvement with the Apollo moon landings. Parkes has also starred in television commercials, documentaries and even a Korean romance movie.
A few nice Televue telescope images I found:
Jupiter: SEB Revival

Jupiter’s apparent size as seen from the Earth has noticeably shrunk since I last imaged it, but even a small telescope shows that the resurgence of the South Equatorial Belt is well underway.
9 January 2011, 18:32 GMT
Vixen SP-102 refractor
Tele Vue 2.5x Powermate (giving an effective focal length of 2500mm)
Canon EOS 40D DSLR
Exposure time 1/100 sec, ISO 800
186 photos, stacked and sharpened in RegiStax V5.1
Additional levels & curves enhancement, colour-balancing etc. in Photoshop
Broadstairs, January 2011.
Full Moon (TV-60)

This is a single shot (no stacking) taken with a Tele Vue TV-60 APO refractor (360mm focal length). Mild sharpening, contrast enhancement and cropping in Digital Photo Professional; otherwise no additional processing. This is a colour image – note the almost total absence of blue fringing on the limb.
I’m sure Al Nagler doesn’t need me to sell telescopes for him, but the quality speaks for itself.
Check out these Astro telescope images:
Full Moon

Close to a full moon actually. Once again a composite of several eyepiece projections taken through a 1970’s Celestron C8. Original composite is 6000 pixels wide. Bad seeing conditions and moon was low in the horizon. View all sizes for more detail.
Some cool Galileo telescope images:
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