View allAll Photos Tagged CrescentNebula

76 lights (dithered/drizzled)

20 darks and flats

 

Celestron Edge HD8 with reducer

ZWO ASI 2600MC OSC

Radian Ultra Quadband

 

Processed in PI and PS

Crescent Nebula in the Cygnus region

 

A quick look at NGC6888: about 40 minutes' worth of 10s frames, processed in GraXpert and Siril.

The #CrescentNebula aka #NGC6888 is an emission nebula in the #Cygnus constellation about 5000 light years from Earth. It is caused by the fast-moving stellar winds from the star WR136 colliding with and energizing the slower moving wind ejected by the star 250,000 years ago when it became a red giant. This image is 50 minutes (10x300 seconds) of exposure captured with my 250mm lens and ASI533mc pro camera. #StillLearning

The Crescent Nebula. SeeStar S50 1100 10s subs

NGC 6888 Crescent Nebula in the Constellation Cygnus

 

Photo by Dave Simpson

Crescent Nebula in Ha and O3

Nebulosa crescente (NGC6888) é uma nebulosa formada por uma estrela que emite ventos estelares em diferentes velocidades que se chocam, gerando essas formas e cores. Fica na constelação do Cisne, bem ao norte, e é uma região rica em h-alpha, por isso vemos tanto vermelho. Estou muito satisfeito com essa foto pois é um objeto que queria capturar a tempos e me dediquei a aprender novas técnicas para seu processamento. Deu certo! Minhas fotos devem melhorar bastante daqui em diante. Foto feita em bortle 3 com filtro L-Enhance.

 

Crescent Nebula (NGC6888) it's a nebula formed by stelar winds ejected from a star in different velocities colliding. It is in Cygnus constellation and is a h-alpha rich region. That's why we see so many red. I'm very proud of that picture because it's an object that I wanted to capture for some years and I learned and used new processing technics in it. It worked! I think my pictures will improve from now on. Picture taken in a borle 3 site with L-Enhance filter.

 

Camera Zwo Asi 294mc Pro, gain 125 at -10°C, William Optics zs sd (66/388mm) with 0.8 focal reducer (leading to f4.9 and 310mm focal lenght). Guiding with Asiair and ASI290mc in an adapted finderscope 50mm, Eq5 Sky-watcher mount and AstroEq tracking mod. 19 Ligth Frames of 300s, 30 darks and 50 bias. 1 hour and 35 minutes total exposure. Processing on Pixinsight. Bortle 3. Used Optolong L-Enhance filter.

 

#astrophotography #astrofotografia #astromomia #astronomy #telescopio #telescope #williamoptics #zs66 #zs66sd #Eq5 #asi294mcpro #AstroEq #nebula #NGC6888 #CrescentNebula #Bortle3 #bortle3sky #Nebula #DeepSkyStacker #deepsky #pixinsight #asi290mc #ZwoAsi #zwoasi290mc #asiair #guiding #optolong #optolonglenhance

La nébuleuse du croissant

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Gear - Matériel 🔭

Mount : Skywatcher EQ6-R

Scope : TS Optics 94 EDPH

Guiding : ZWO ASI290MM Mini on ZWO OAG

Imaging camera : ZWO ASI071MC Pro

Filters : Optolong L-extreme

 

Picture - Prise de vue 📷

Total integration : 9h35

Light : 115 x 300s

Dark : 30

Flat : 20

Gain : 90

Sensor temp : 0°C

 

Software - Logiciels

Imaging session : Nina

Guiding : PHD2

Stacking : PixInsight

Processing : PixInsight, Photoshop

This is the result of reprocessing the same data from the summer. I wasn't happy with how the surrounding nebulosity looked in the original image.

 

Telescope: William Optics GTF81 f6.6 (535 mm focal length)

Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ6-R Pro

Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI294MC Pro Cool

Guidescope: ZWO 60mm / 280mm FL

Guide Camera: ZWO ASI174MM

 

Filter: Optolong L-eNhance Dual Band Pass Imaging Filter

 

Total Integration time: 5hr 20m (80x4m exposures)

Calibration: 25 darks, 25 flats, 25 dark flats

 

Software: APT (acquisition), Pixinsight (stacking and processing) and Photoshop (final touches)

 

Taken from my backyard (Bortle 6) the night of July 14, 2020

Caldwell 27, the Crescent Nebula, in HaOIII with RGB mix.

Crescent Nebula in the Constellation Cygnus

 

Photo by Martin Bradley

Shot this image with limited amount of time due to weather. I only got about 75min (5mx15) but the optics made up for a lot of it.

Constellation Cygnus - Sadr (star) (Narrowband image)

Telescope: William Optics GTF81 f6.6 (535 mm focal length)

Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ6-R Pro

Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI294MC Pro Cool

Guidescope: ZWO 60mm / 280mm FL

Guide Camera: ZWO ASI174MM

 

Filter: Optolong L-eNhance Dual Band Pass Imaging Filter

 

Total Integration time: 5hr 20m (80x4m exposures)

Calibration: 25 darks, 25 flats, 25 dark flats

 

Software: APT (acquisition), Pixinsight (stacking and processing) and Photoshop (final touches)

 

Taken from my backyard (Bortle 6) the night of July 14, 2020

NGC 6888, the Crescent Nebula, in Cygnus.

 

4h50min (only so far) with the Celestron C8 @ f/7, Nikon D5300a, HEQ 5, MGEN III, L-Extreme filter.

 

Edited in PixInsight, Affinity Photo

 

Località: Verona, Italia

Data: 04/05.07.2024

209x60'' (3 hr, 29 min total)

The Crescent Nebula is an emission nebula that stretches about 25 lightyears across and is located about 5,000 lightyears away from Earth.

Created by its central Wolf-Rayet star, these stars are rare, massive stars in a late evolutionary phase, characterized by extreme stellar winds and rapid mass loss. With surface temperatures ranging from 30,000 to 200,000 Kelvin, they are among the hottest stars in the universe.

WR stars have shed their outer hydrogen layers, exposing their helium-burning cores, often showing strong emission lines of helium, carbon, and nitrogen.

These stars are highly luminous, up to millions of times brighter than the Sun. Their explosive mass loss plays a crucial role in enriching the interstellar medium and they are often precursors to supernovae or even black hole formation.

Image of the Crescent Nebula (NGC6888), about 5000 light years away. Taken with an Orion EON 130mm triplet with field flattener, using a QHY168C 14-bit color camera, and a 48mm diameter OptoLong Quad pass filter in front of the camera. This is a combination of different filter stacks, each of many 300 sec exposures from backyard Sunnyvale California location. Scope was mounted on a Losmandy G11 mount, and using a Celestron 80mm piggyback scope with ASI178MM video camera and PHD2 for autoguiding. Final image integration and denoising were done in Affinity Photo.

The Cygnus constellation is full of various hydrogen nebulae, but they are very faint in visible wavelengths, so it's very difficult to see them with your eyes in a telescope. However, when you use a modified camera, which lets the infrared wavelengths go through, and you take a long exposure, the complicated nebulae will appear.

 

One of the brightest nebulae in Cygnus (which is even visible in big telescopes) is called the Crescent Nebula and lies roughly in the center of my image. In the upper right corner, there you can also see Tulipan nebula (or Sh2-101), which is fainter than Crescent and lies at a distance of 6000 light years, which is about 1300 ly further than Crescent. Another interesting region lies in the bottom left corner. It's a Sadr region, which is named after a Sadr star, which is the brightest star in the picture and lies 1800 light years from Earth.

 

This image was taken on the 7th of July with my modified camera Canon EOS 1300D and CLS filter, which lets only H-alpha and OIII parts of the spectrum pass through and that's why, it can capture such beautiful details in the nebulae. The result amazed me. It is created only from 3 hours of data, which isn't pretty much for this region. Truly happy with this progress and looking forward to the next tries.

 

Canon EOS 1300D (modified), SVBony CLS filter

Sigma 135mm f/2.8

iOptron SkyGuider Pro

 

EXIF: 120x90sec (3 hours in total), ISO 3200, f/5.6

Darks, flats, dark flats, biases

 

Processed in DSS, Siril, StarNet++, and Photoshop

07/07/2023, Mašov, Czech Republic (Bortle 5)

NGC 6888, the Crescent Nebula, glowing in the heart of the constellation Cygnus, about 4,700 light-years away. This beautiful emission nebula is actually a cosmic bubble, created by the powerful stellar winds of a massive Wolf-Rayet star known as WR 136. This star, about 20 times the mass of the Sun, is shedding its outer layers at an incredible rate. As the fast wind from its current life stage slams into slower-moving material it ejected earlier, the gas heats up and lights up in a spectacular display of hydrogen (red) and oxygen (blue-green) emissions.

 

The Crescent Nebula spans about 25 light-years across, but it’s far too faint to see with the naked eye — even through a telescope it requires dark skies and patience. Thankfully, long-exposure astrophotography lets us capture the intricate filaments and delicate details hidden in this stellar bubble.

 

Cygnus is full of wonders. The Crescent is a reminder that even in its death throes a massive star can create something breathtakingly beautiful.

 

Acquisition details: 70mm Quad APO Astrograph, AVX mount, QHY183C CMOS camera, Optolong L-eXtreme dual band narrowband filter, (100x120s) 3 hours of data taken on July 31, 2025. Processed using DSS, SAS, Ps.

Caldwell 27, the Crescent Nebula, in HaOIII with RGB mix.

Charissa Consiglio

4/13/06

3 minutes

Bright

The Crescent Nebula, C27, in RGB+HSO.

Seestar capture of 180 images, stacked and edited in Photoshop.

Crescent-Nebel in Cygnus

C27 Crescent Nebula @ 1660mm, Foraxx Palette

Crescent nebula Askar 103 1x flattener LExtreme filter

ZWO ASI 2600MC Air

The #CrescentNebula is an emission nebula in the #Cygnus constellation. It formed 250,000 to 400,000 years ago when fast stellar winds from a hot WR star collided with slower moving winds expelled by the star when it exploded into a red giant. It lies 5000 light years away, which means that the light from the red hydrogen and blue oxygen of the object took 5000 years to reach the sensor of my camera. #StillLearning

C27, the Crescent Nebula, in Foraxx palette.

The Crescent Nebula, C27, in RGB+HSO.

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