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Abell 39 — A Peculiarly Well-Formed Bubble in Dusty Space

Abell 39 is a planetary nebula in the constellation of Hercules. This quirky, delightful bauble is one of those deep-sky objects I’ve wanted to photograph since the moment I learned of it. Planetary nebulae are usually admired for their remarkable shapes and structures, but Abell 39 is striking to me for rather the opposite reason: it appears as an almost perfectly spherical, turquoise, soap bubble, with ripple-like shimmers of structure throughout. Amidst the negative space of a relatively featureless, dusty black backdrop of space, dotted with galaxies and stars, Abell 39 captures my imagination a delightful way. Like some sort of cosmic being’s child blew a bubble that has yet to pop.

 

I photographed Abell 39 during a few nights of camping in April and May 2024 in Skull Valley, located in Utah’s west desert, United States. Edited in PixInsight and Adobe Photoshop using 13 hours and 55 minutes of images.

 

Equipment Used

Celestron EdgeHD 8 SCT (0.7x Reducer)

- ZWO ASI2600MM Pro, ASI2600MC Pro Duo

- Astronomik MaxFR OIII

- Rainbow Astro RST 135E

- ZWO ASIAir Plus

Takahashi ε180D (1.5x Extender)

- ZWO ASI2600MC Pro Duo

- ZWO AM5

- ZWO ASIAir Plus

 

For more information about Abell 39, technical information about how this was photographed, post-processing notes, see:

mypetstars.com/astrophotography/Abell39

 

Creative Commons License

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 DEED

Attribute to James Peirce

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Uploaded on September 22, 2024
Taken on September 22, 2024