View allAll Photos Tagged ElephantTrunkNebula
IC 1396 including the Elephant Trunk Nebula as seen from the back yard at the end of August into September.
This is the sum of a large stack of sub exposures - 66 frames at 1200 seconds at 100 ISO - for a total of 22 hours of integration.
Polar alignment could have been better for the session, but it was OK enough once stacked.
This target is much larger than the full field of view with the SV4 scope and the APSC sensor of the DSLR. A mosaic would be best to show the full detail. A mosaic would require at least 8 more frames to show the proper area. This may be a major effort lasting several seasons.
Standard setup:
Stellarvue SV4 scope
Modified and cooled Pentax K10D camera
SSF6 flattener
Baader UV/IR filter with IDAS LPS2
Stellarvue SV70ED Guidescope with SSAG
Losmandy G11 with Gemini 2
Major change to the previous hardware config was the use of the DSBS side by side platform. This lowered the center of gravity of the system. Also, I moved the counterweights as far up the shaft as possible, reducing the moment of inertia of the system. These helped to improve the tracking significantly. I also added a stiff dovetail bar that fully extended past the base of the DSLR, finally removing all flexure from the system.
Calibration was done in Maxim using sets for each night for flats. Stacking in DSS using Median Kappa Sigma stacking. In the past, I've used KS clipping and that has left a fair amount of noise. I will try the MKS and see how it goes.
Stretched in Pix Insight: DBE, Masked Stretch script, Histogram Stretch to reset black point, Masked TGVDenoise, and Curves to increase contrast.
Here's the platesolve result:
=======================================================
Referentiation Matrix (Gnomonic projection = Matrix * Coords[x,y]):
-1.56006e-006 +0.000529752 -0.692199
-0.000529579 -1.52832e-006 +1.05242
+0 +0 +1
Projection origin.. [1983.489450 1312.487627]pix -> [RA:+21 39 18.50 Dec:+57 27 57.47]
Resolution ........ 1.907 arcsec/pix
Rotation .......... -89.842 deg
Focal ............. 656.61 mm
Pixel size ........ 6.07 um
Field of view ..... 2d 6' 4.3" x 1d 23' 25.4"
Image center ...... RA: 21 39 18.505 Dec: +57 27 57.45
Image bounds:
top-left ....... RA: 21 34 00.498 Dec: +58 30 41.19
top-right ...... RA: 21 34 15.578 Dec: +56 24 40.51
bottom-left .... RA: 21 44 39.317 Dec: +58 30 26.31
bottom-right ... RA: 21 44 18.716 Dec: +56 24 26.48
=======================================================
First light with my William Optics GT81 scope. Not sure I did it justice tho
115 Lights 75sec ISO400
30 Darks
50 Flats
50 Bias
Elephant’s Trunk Nebula (IC1396), 08/18/2020
This was a fun night and an unexpected result. I took my equipment out to my favorite dark sky location to camp and capture photons. I was looking forward to showing off my hobby to my wife and some friends who were camping as well. I got my gear setup and took my first capture, but the frame was very faint and unexciting. Kind of boring. Oh well. Everything else was going well so I decided to stick with it and see. The next day I did a quick stack and process and DAMN there was a ton of detail there after all! I did not quite get the framing right but that only means I have a reason to try this one again.
I don’t know how someone saw an elephant trunk when looking at this but hey you discover it, you get to name it I guess. It is found in the constellation of Cepheus and is about 2,400 light-years from us. The “trunk” itself is over 20 light-years long. In 2003 several very young stars where discovered in the circular cavity in the tip of the trunk. The stellar wind from these hot young stars may have carved out this hole.
Equipment:
RASA 8
CGEM-dx mount
ZWO ASI294MC-Pro
ZWO Asiair Pro
Optolong L-Pro filter
Details:
Location – Buck Creek Campground, WA
Bortle Class 3
Gain 120
40 300-second Lights
60 Darks
60 Bias
60 Flats
Astro Pixel Processor
Lightroom
Photoshop
#astrophotography #astronomy #comos #nightphotography #space #telescope #deepsky #asi294mcpro #amateurastronomy #backyardastronomy #asiair #asiairpro #rasa #celestron #astropixelprocessor #optolong #telescope #astronomyphotography #deepskyobject #zwo #longexposurephotography #IC1396 #elephanttrunknebula
One of my less successful images. The stars streaking in the bottom left was because the center of the field of view moved when I inspected the images on the camera.
Location: Long Island, NY
Camera: Hutech modified Canon Rebel XT
Lens: Tamron 75-300, 168mm @f/7.1
Exposure: 38x4 minutes(152 minutes)
Filter: Astronomik CLS
ISO: 1600
AstroTrac used for Tracking
Calibrated with dark and flat frames.
Lost the guide star halfway through so I did not get as much data as I wanted.
7X 15 minute subs
AT 8IN
MPCC CLS filter
Orion Starshoot V2
CGEM
DSS and Carboni's tools
Subject: IC1996 (Elephant Trunk Nebula)
Image FOV: 7.3 degrees by 4.9 degrees (438 minutes by 294 minutes)
Image Scale: 20 arc-second/pixel
Date: 2009/08/06
Exposure: 18 x 10 minutes = 3h total exposure, ISO800, f/3.4
Filter: Astrodon 5nm H-alpha filter
Camera: Hutech-modified Canon 30D
Lens: Leica APO Telyt-R 180mm f/3.4 at f/3.4
Mount: Astro-Physics AP900
Guiding: ST-402 autoguider and SV66 guidescope. MaximDL autoguiding software using 5-second guide exposures
Processing: Raw conversion and calibration with ImagesPlus; Aligning and combing with Registar; Gray conversion, levels adjustment, cropping/resizing, JPEG conversion with Photoshop CS. No sharpening or noise reduction.
Remarks: Temperature at start/end: 57F/50F; SQM-L reading start/middle/end: 18.64/18.56/18.49 (one day past full moon). The warm temperatures and bright moonlight cause problems in this photo.
The famous Elephant Trunk Nebula (IC 1396) in the constellation Cepheus. This was captured in my backyard in Philadelphia using a 5nm Astrodon Hydrogen Alpha narrowband filter.
Preliminary exploration of The Elephant Trunk Nebula. Stack of 8 subs captured with a modified Canon 70D then aligned, stacked and lightly processed in Adobe Photoshop. From this point I will move forward on the target taking 100 or more additional 300 second exposures @ ISO1000. As always thanks for looking!
Elephant trunk nebula detail
H alpha
Remote telescope T-21
11x5 Min Ha exposure
17" Planewave CDK in New Mexico
Pix insight
Elephant Trunk Nebula, IC 1396. Reprocessed image from 2017 using PixInsight to suppress stars and bring out the dark lanes.
~30 x 240”
ES 102ED, 0.8x Reducer
Zwo ASI1600MC-C
Celestron AVX
Orion SSAG
PHD2, PixInsight 1.8
This is the second stage of the project to image the Elephant Trunk Nebula. The first stage was capturing the Ha/OIII Data with a dual band filter. This time, to catch the colour of the stars and the non HA/OIII data of the dust cloud, a full spectrum image was made. The series is not finished yet, more RGB data needs to be collected, but the series can show the progress of obtaining a final image nicely.
56 x 180 Seconds OSC = 168 Minutes Exposure, ca. 2,8 Hrs + 44 x 300 Seconds Ha/OIII dual Band = 220 minutes exposure, ca. 3,6 Hrs.
Total is ca. 6,5 Hrs.
Camera = ASI 533MC Pro
Telescope = Celestron Edge HD 800 @ F7
Mount = HEQ5 Pro (Belt mod - CG-5 augmented)
Off Axis Guiding with ASI 290MM.
Image Captured with N.I.N.A.
Processing with Pixinsight, and PS.
Milky Way & Cygnus
Optics: Fujifilm XF 27 mm
Exposure: Fujifilm X-E3 (APS-C) 27mm f2.8 iso1000 120sec * 19 Light frames, 15 Dark frames
Mount: Toast Pro (TP2)
Software: DeepSkyStacker, Astronomy Tools, GradientXTerminator, Photoshop
Annotated by nova.astrometry.net
Subject: IC1396 -- Elephant Trunk nebula
Image FOV = 3 degrees 25 minutes by 2.6 degrees (205 by 156 minutes)
Image Scale = 10 arc-second/pixel
Date: 2008/10/04
Location: near Halcottsville, NY
Exposure: 18 x 10 minutes = 3h total exposure, ISO800, f/4.8
Filter: Baader 7nm H-alpha filter
Camera: Hutech-modified Canon 30D
Telescope: SV80S 80mm f/6 + TV TRF-2008 0.8X reducer/flattener = 384mm FL, f/4.8
Mount: Astro-Physics AP900
Guiding: ST-402 autoguider and SV66 guidescope. MaximDL autoguiding software using 6-second guide exposures
Processing: Raw conversion and calibration with ImagesPlus; Aligning and combing with Registar; Gray conversion, levels, curves, cropping/resizing, JPEG conversion with Photoshop CS. No sharpening or noise reduction.
Remarks: Temperature at start/end: 28F/29F, SQM-L reading at start/end = 21.26/21.29
The Elephant's Trunk Nebula: a concentration of interstellar gas and dust within the much larger ionized gas region IC 1396 located in the constellation Cepheus about 2,400 light years away from Earth.
Imaged July 2017 with hydrogen-alpha and oxygen-III filters through Stellarvue SV70t refractor and ZWO ASI1600 camera. 80 individual images at 3 minutes each (total of 4 hours integration each channel).
Wide field shot of IC 1396 to show the neighborhood around the Elephant Trunk nebula.
21 x 10 min
EON 80mm
50mm guidescope/Starshoot autoguider
Televue .8 focal reducer/flattner
Orion Starshoot V2
CGEM
DSS PS Elements
Carboni's tools
The Elephant Trunk Nebula is an active star forming region in the larger emission nebula IC1396.
Technicals:
This is a first light w/ the TMB92 and a Televue 0.8x FR/FF for 400-600mm scopes. It seems to do well, although I don't have the spacing perfected yet as shown by the stars in the corners. I'm quite pleased w/ this result. The f-ratio of the system is 4.4, giving a fast gathering of light. The contrast is improved compared w/ my last result on this object shown here with similar exposure time but on a f/6.25 doublet.
Imaging scope: TMB 92 SS + Televue 0.8x Reducer/Flattener
Imaging Camera: ST8300M (capture with Equinox Image)
Filters: Baader filters in FW5-8300 filter wheel
Guide scope: Astro-Tech 106mm Triplet
Guide camera: Starfish Fishcamp (guided with PHD)
Mount: Atlas EQ-G
Calibrated in Equinox Image and processed in PixInsight.
Halpha - 8x10min (1x1)
In the same way that dust is blown around by the wind here on Earth, space dust can be blown around by the wind and radiation from stars. This image of the Elephants Trunk nebula from NASAs Wide-field Survey Explorer, or WISE, shows clouds of dust and gas being pushed and eroded by a massive star. The bright trunk of the nebula near the center is an especially dense cloud holding up against the stars powerful radiation and stellar wind, like a windsock standing strong while the rest of the gas and dust gets broken up and swept away.
Elephant trunk is a term commonly used by astronomers for this type of structure. Similar structures can be found in many other nebulae, however this is the only nebula that uses the term in its moniker. More distant examples of elephant trunks can be seen in previously featured WISE images such as LBN 211.91-01.37 and the Soul nebula. Theyre all formed in basically the same way -- a nearby massive star (or cluster) emits vast amounts of ultraviolet radiation and stellar winds that clear out all of the gas and dust surrounding it, leaving behind only the most dense parts of the cloud. These dense portions then protect some of the gas downwind creating a trunk-like feature.
The culprit star here, HR8281, is located close the center of the image. Its one of the three bright blue stars near the upper left tip of the trunk that form a triangle about as wide as the glowing tip of the trunk. Of those three, its the uppermost one in the center. Its destructive effects on the surrounding nebula can be seen by the dark cavity its created, outlined by the brighter dust clouds encircling it. The entire nebula, also known as IC1396A, fills most of the field of view. Its located only 2,450 light-years away, quite close compared to other similar nebulae. The trunk itself is about 30 light-years long, while the full nebula stretches over 100 light-years across.
If you look closely at the tip of the elephant trunk you can see a small dark area, appearing as a sort of opening. This is a small void in the gas formed by a pair of new baby stars that recently formed in the dense cloud. Their radiation and wind is clearing out the nearby gas and dust, creating a smaller version of the same effect seen on a larger scale in the full image. The reddish stars scattered throughout the image are likely new stars still wrapped inside their dusty cocoons.
The colors used in this image represent specific wavelengths of infrared light. Blue and cyan (blue-green) represent light emitted at wavelengths of 3.4 and 4.6 microns, which is predominantly from stars. Green and red represent light from 12 and 22 microns, respectively, which is mostly emitted by dust.
08-05-13
This image is 53 light frames at 120 seconds a piece, 45 dark frames, 35 flat frames, and 40 bias frames. Images stacked in Deep Sky Stacker, and post processing done in Photoshop. Had to do a little burn/dodge to help make the darker regions pop out a bit more as the red from the nebula bled into the darker region. I may revisit this region later on this year.
Equipment:
Omni XLT 150 with CG-4 mount
Modded Canon 350D
T-ring and adapter
Intervalometer
Polar Scope for alignment
- See more at: adirondackastro.com/2013/08/ic-1396-elephant-trunk/#sthas...
My new attempt at IC1396... unfortunately, slightly out of focus. The elephant trunk is however visible this time at the top.
This is a total of about 100minutes of 2 minute exposures, unguided using a modded Canon 350D DSLR and a 200mm L-series f2.8 prime lens at f3.2. ISO was 800.
IC 1396, Elephant Trunk Nebula
Optics: Takahashi FS60CB with 0.72x Reducer (255 mm F4.2)
Exposure: Sony A7S (Unmodded) iso12800 x 1.5min x 150 subs (with Dark, Flat, Flat Dark, Bias)
Filter: Optolong UHC
Mount: Toast Pro (TP2)
Software: DeepSkyStacker, Astronomy Tools, GradientXTerminator, Adobe Photoshop
Location: Montclair, California, USA (Bortle 8)
Date: August 28-29, 2022
Moon: Waxing Crescent (4-9%)
Camera: ZWO ASI6200MC Pro
Telescope: William Optics ZenithStar 61II APO f/5.9
Flattener/Reducer: William Optics FLAT61A Field Flattener
Filter: Antlia ALP-T 2”
Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ6-R Pro
Guide Camera: ZWO ASI120MM Mini
Guide Scope: William Optics UniGuide 32 f/3.75
Camera Settings: Gain 100 | f/5.9 | 300 sec
Acquisition: 83 x 300 sec Lights | 30 Darks | 30 Bias
Integration Time: 6 hr 55 min
Software: PixInsight, NoiseXTerminator, StarXTerminator, Adobe Lightroom Classic
Copyright © 2022 Steven K. Wu Photography. All Rights Reserved.
Astrobin: astrob.in/foia0r/0/
The IC1396 area imaged with a modded Eos 350D and Canon 200mm f2.8 USM prime lens on a HEQ5-Pro (unguided).
about 40mins of data in 50 second subs, stacked in DSS and edited in Photoshop.
In the same way that dust is blown around by the wind here on Earth, space dust can be blown around by the wind and radiation from stars. This image of the Elephants Trunk nebula from NASAs Wide-field Survey Explorer, or WISE, shows clouds of dust and gas being pushed and eroded by a massive star. The bright trunk of the nebula near the center is an especially dense cloud holding up against the stars powerful radiation and stellar wind, like a windsock standing strong while the rest of the gas and dust gets broken up and swept away.
Elephant trunk is a term commonly used by astronomers for this type of structure. Similar structures can be found in many other nebulae, however this is the only nebula that uses the term in its moniker. More distant examples of elephant trunks can be seen in previously featured WISE images such as LBN 211.91-01.37 and the Soul nebula. Theyre all formed in basically the same way -- a nearby massive star (or cluster) emits vast amounts of ultraviolet radiation and stellar winds that clear out all of the gas and dust surrounding it, leaving behind only the most dense parts of the cloud. These dense portions then protect some of the gas downwind creating a trunk-like feature.
The culprit star here, HR8281, is located close the center of the image. Its one of the three bright blue stars near the upper left tip of the trunk that form a triangle about as wide as the glowing tip of the trunk. Of those three, its the uppermost one in the center. Its destructive effects on the surrounding nebula can be seen by the dark cavity its created, outlined by the brighter dust clouds encircling it. The entire nebula, also known as IC1396A, fills most of the field of view. Its located only 2,450 light-years away, quite close compared to other similar nebulae. The trunk itself is about 30 light-years long, while the full nebula stretches over 100 light-years across.
If you look closely at the tip of the elephant trunk you can see a small dark area, appearing as a sort of opening. This is a small void in the gas formed by a pair of new baby stars that recently formed in the dense cloud. Their radiation and wind is clearing out the nearby gas and dust, creating a smaller version of the same effect seen on a larger scale in the full image. The reddish stars scattered throughout the image are likely new stars still wrapped inside their dusty cocoons.
The colors used in this image represent specific wavelengths of infrared light. Blue and cyan (blue-green) represent light emitted at wavelengths of 3.4 and 4.6 microns, which is predominantly from stars. Green and red represent light from 12 and 22 microns, respectively, which is mostly emitted by dust.
Elephant's Trunk Nebula IC1396A in the Cepheus constellation
Location: Waterloo, ON (red zone)
Date: Aug 4-10 2019
SHO narrowband image comprised of:
164x5min Ha, astrodon 5nm
100x5min OIII, astrodon 3nm
120x10min SII, astrdon 3nm
Total Integration: 32 hours
Imaging scope: WOStar71 f/4.9
Effective Focal Length: 348 mm
Imaging Camera: ASI1600MM
Mount: AZ-EQ5
Filter Wheel: QHYFW2
Gain: 139
Guide Camera: QHYIII5224MC via QHY-OAGM
Image capture and auto-focus via SGP.
Image processing & calibration: Pixinsight
Elephant's Trunk Nebula IC1396A in the Cepheus constellation
Location: Waterloo, ON (red zone)
Date: Aug 27, Sept 10, 11, & 24 2019
Black & White image:
164x5min Ha, astrodon 5nm
Total Integration: 13 hours 40 minutes
Imaging scope: WOStar71 f/4.9
Effective Focal Length: 348 mm
Imaging Camera: ASI1600MM
Mount: AZ-EQ5
Filter Wheel: QHYFW2
Gain: 139
Guide Camera: QHYIII5224MC via QHY-OAGM
Image capture and auto-focus via SGP.
Image processing & calibration: Pixinsight
Two nights capturing 10 hours and 45 minutes of data. Still some noise apparent, requiring more aggressive noise reduction than the the brighter North American Nebula (which was the primary object the second night, dipping below the roof of our house and then switching to IC1396).
Equipment:
WIlliam Optics RedCat51
Optolong 1.25" Ha
ZWO ASI183MMpro
Uniguide 32
ZWO ASI178MM
ASIAIRplus
Skywatcher EQ6R pro
129x300 sec, gain 120, -10C
Stacked and processed in PixInsight (BXT, MLT, STFHT & CT)