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Elephants Trunk Nebula

Sony a6000a - TS65Q APO

24 x 600s - ISO 400

 

Locations: Deep Sky West, Rowe, New Mexico, United States

PlaneWave17" CDK Telescope:

Elephant's Trunk Nebula: Grayscale, total of 11h.

L: 89x300sec

R: 21x300sec

G: 14x300sec

B: 9x300sec

 

Camera: FLI ML16803

Filter: Astrodon LRGB

Focal Length: 2939mm

Focal Ratio: f/6.7

Pixels: 9μm

Mount: Paramount Taurus 400

 

nova.astrometry.net/user_images/4099908#annotated

www.deepskywest.com/

 

planewave.com/product/cdk17-ota/

  

The Elephant's Trunk nebula or technically vdB 142 (Van den Berg 142), so named because of its similarity in appearance to a elephant’s trunk. The bright outline around the "trunk" is the surface of the dense cloud that is being illuminated and ionized by a very bright, massive star. The entire IC1396 region is ionized by this massive star, except for dense globules that can protect themselves from the star's harsh ultraviolet rays. The Elephant's Trunk nebula is now thought to be a site of star formation, containing several very young (less than 100,000 yr) stars that were discovered in infrared images in 2003. Two older (but still young, a couple of million years, by the standards of stars, which live for billions of years) stars are present in a small, circular cavity in the head of the globule. Winds from these young stars may have emptied the cavity.

This was done using the HST or Hubble Space Telescope Palette which is accomplished by combining sub frames using three narrowband filters that capture light produced by glowing hydrogen (Ha), oxygen (OIII) and sulfur (SII) present in the nebula. Green is assigned to hydrogen, blue to oxygen and red to the sulfur.

Acquisition Date: 11/08/2015 – 11/09/2015

Location: Western Massachusetts

Camera: SBIG STF8300M @ -15°C

Telescope: Stellarvue SV105T (f/7 – fl 735mm) reduced to f/5.6 (fl 588mm)

Mount: Astro-Physics AP1100

Guidescope: 60mm Stellarvue guide scope

Guide Camera: SBIG STi (mono)

Filters:

-Astrodon 3 nm Hydrogen Alpha (Ha): 11 x 30min. (390min.)

-Astrodon 3nm Oxygen III (OIII):08 x 30min. (240min)

-Astrodon 5nm Sulfur II (SII):07 x 30min. (210min)

Total Exposure:780min. (13.0hr)

 

Limiting Magnitude: 5.1

Comments: Stellarvue SFFR102 field flattener/reducer (0.8)

Started something completely new for me here. Ha-OIII Bicolour Version of Elephants Trunk Nebula in IC 1396.

ASI 2600 MC Pro - Skywatcher 150/750 PDS - NEQ 5

Optolong L-Extreme

Asiair & Mgen

51 x 600s

This image is a closeup of the elephant's trunk feature of the Elephant's Trunk Nebula (IC 1396). See image for context.

 

ZWO ASI6200MM-P/EFW 2" x7 (RGB, S-II, Ha, O-III)

Tele Vue NP101is (4" f/4.3)

Losmandy G11

 

RGB Stars: 10 subs/filter x 30s = 15m

 

SHO Nebula

S-II: 12 x 600s (2:00)

Ha: 16 x 600s (2:40)

O-III:: 16 x 600s (2:40)

7:20 hours total SHO integration

 

Processed in PixInsight

Finished in Affinity Photo

2020 was an unusual year as we all know. It was a very busy year for me working on a 3D Animated Motion Capture Series and Music Video from home, and as a result I didn't manage to image much.

 

About the Nebula:

The Elephant's Trunk Nebula is a concentration of interstellar gas and dust with-in the much larger ionized gas region IC 1396 (located in the constellation Cepheus), about 2,400 light-years away from Earth.

 

Reprocessing old data:

I don't often do this, but decided to reprocess old data from 2017 in the SHO Palette (SII, Hα & OIII). IC 1396 was imaged on my first "budget friendly" Telescope (a 6" GSO Newtonian Astrograph). This was one of my first attempts at Narrowband Astrophotography, and the data that I captured back then was less than ideal, but a nice challenge to process. It is all part of the never ending lifelong learning experience.

 

I would like to revisit the IC 1396 region again, and image the very interesting surrounding structure with my wide-field APO Refractor Telescope. It is interesting to look back and see what you've learnt (which is why I've always kept my old learning images as a record).

 

Wavelengths of the Electromagnetic Spectrum of Light:

Hydrogen-Alpha (656.3nm)

Oxygen-III (500.7nm)

Sulfur-II (672.4nm)

 

Astrometry Info:

Center RA, Dec: 323.737, 57.633

Center RA, hms: 21h 34m 56.951s

Center Dec, dms: +57° 37' 59.617"

Size: 46.8 x 60.6 arcmin

Radius: 0.638 deg

Pixel scale: 2.02 arcsec/pixel

Orientation: Up is 269 degrees E of N

View an Annotated Sky Chart of this image.

View this image in the WorldWideTelescope.

 

Processing:

Pre-Processing and Linear workflow in PixInsight, and finished in Photoshop (Starnet++ was also handy).

 

Gear and Tech Card:

See original 2017 image for more detail.

 

Flickr Explore:

2020-10-14

 

Photo usage and Copyright:

Medium-resolution photograph licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Terms (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). For High-resolution Royalty Free (RF) licensing, contact me via my site: Contact.

 

Martin

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For this rendition of the 2-panel mosiac, I ran all of the subframes through the same PixInsight WBPP run so that they would all be at the same local normalization, I applied ChannelCombination to the RGB masters for each panel separately before merging the panels, and I produced separate star and nebula images before applying nonlinear stretches. The stars image was stretched delicately while the nebula image was stretched very agressively. I like the stars that resulted from this treatment.

 

ZWO ASI6200MM-Pro

Tele Vue NP101is (4" f/5.4)

Losmandy G11

 

NINA for session management

PixInsight for processing

 

Each panel consisted of qty 8 240s subs each for RGB, and qty 16 subs for L. Total integration time was 2:20 per panel.

The Elephant's Trunk Nebula is an emission nebula associated with IC 1396, a star cluster in the constellation Cepheus. This 6-panel mosaic spans approximately 4 degrees , about 8x the apparent width of the Moon. Image data was captured under dark skies near Goldendale, WA.

 

Telescope: Tele Vue 76mm

Mount: iOptron iEQ45 Pro

Camera: QSI 683wsg

Filter: Astrodon H-a CCD 5nm

Mosaic: 6 panels

Integration: 65 min (13 x 5 min) per panel.

Processing Software: PixInsight 1.8.8

 

On 22nd of April 2020 I was able to try out the Canon EOS 600D full spectrum with my Samyang 135mm f/2.0. It was a great night with very dark sky (SQM-L 21,63 mag/arcsec²) here in the Spreewald region of southern Brandenburg (Germany). This is IC 1396 with the Elefant's Trunk Nebula with Sharpless 129 and Barnard 169-71 in the constellation Cepheus.

 

[Canon EOS 600Dfs, Samyang 135 mm f/2, f/2.8, ISO-1600, 70x90s, APP+PS]

Update 01/08/2022

First light for my ASI294MC Pro

(now) 6.5 hours total integration time (195x120s, gain 230 + 20 darks, 20 flats and 30 bias frames, taken on three nights)

Optolong L-eNhance

William Optics RedCat 51

ASIAir Pro

ASI120MM mini guide camera

iOptron Sky Guider Pro

Apart from one night (which I wasn't able to take advantage of) we've been under more or less permanent cloud cover here in the glorious UK since 2 October. That's as bad as I can remember in the 5 years I've been doing this stuff. So, to preserve my sanity, I decided to reprocess my last image, again!

 

This is a false RGB version: Red - Ha, Blue - Olll, Green - provided by a Noel Carboni action. I also added a splash of the RGB version I did of this last year, plus the RGB stars from that image - hence the crop. :)

 

ED80 with 0.85 reducer, HEQ5 pro

Cooled mono Canon 450D

Astronomik 12nm Ha and Olll filters

10 x 1200 seconds Ha, 6 x 1200 seconds Olll, iso 1600

Calibrated and stacked in Nebulosity

Processed with Straton and CS5

This milkyway region is located northern part of the constellation Cygnus and shows numerous nebulas in the constellation Cepheus as well as the mighty dark cloud Le Gentil 3.

 

September 17th 2020 - Canon EOS 1000Da, Canon EF f1.8 STM, F/4, ISO-1600, 20x6 Min. on Skywatcher Staradventurer, APP + Adobe Photoshop CC 2020

The Elephant's Trunk nebula is a concentration of interstellar gas and dust within the much larger ionised gas region IC 1396 located in the constellation Cepheus about 2,400 light years away from Earth. The piece of the nebula shown here is the dark, dense globule IC 1396A; it is commonly called the Elephant's Trunk nebula because of its appearance at visible light wavelengths, where there is a dark patch with a bright, sinuous rim. (Wikipedia)

 

Reprocessed. Now also with coloured stars.

 

Narrowband image: 19-20-21/4/15

Oxfordshire, UK

4.3 Hours Total Exposure

Bin 1x1: 7x1200s Ha

Bin 2x2: 6x600s SII, 6x600s OIII

 

Equipment:

T: Takahashi FSQ106ED

C: QSI683ws Mono CCD, Astronomik Filters (6nm Ha)

M: Celestron Advanced Vx

G: QHY5-II

 

Acquisition and Processing:

PHD2, Sequence Generator Pro, CCDStack2, Photoshop CS6

2022-08-06 - Canon EOS 600Dfs, Canon EF 50 mm f/1.8 STM, f4, ISO-1600, 26x7 min, on Skywatcher Star Adventurer, APP + PS 2022 CC

The Elephant's Trunk nebula is 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. The piece of the nebula shown here is the dark, dense globule IC 1396A; it is commonly called the Elephant's Trunk nebula because of its appearance at visible light wavelengths, where there is a dark patch with a bright, sinuous rim. (Wikipedia)

 

Narrowband image: 19-20-21/4/15

Oxfordshire, UK

4.3 Hours Total Exposure

Bin 1x1: 7x1200s Ha

Bin 2x2: 6x600s SII, 6x600s OIII

 

Equipment:

T: Takahashi FSQ106ED

C: QSI683ws Mono CCD, Astronomik Filters (6nm Ha)

M: Celestron Advanced Vx

G: QHY5-II

 

Acquisition and Processing:

PHD2, Sequence Generator Pro, CCDStack2, Photoshop CS6

Imaging telescope or lens:GSO 8" f/5 Newton

Imaging camera:ZWO ASI 183 MM PRO

Mount:SkyWatcher NEQ6 Pro Goto

Guiding telescope or lens:GSO 8" f/5 Newton

Guiding camera:Astrolumina Alccd5L-IIc

Focal reducer:Pal Gyulai GPU Aplanatic Koma Korrector 4-element

Software:Adobe PhotoShop CS5, FitsWork 4, CCDCiel, DeepSky Stacker Deep Sky Stacker 3.3.4, PHD2 Guiding

Filters:Baader Ha 1.25" 7nm, Baader Planetarium SII 1.25" 8nm, Baader Planetarium O3 1.25" 8.5nm

Accessory:TSOptics TS Off Axis Guider - 9mm

Dates:July 18, 2018, July 19, 2018, July 24, 2018

Frames:

Baader Ha 1.25" 7nm: 23x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1

Baader Planetarium O3 1.25" 8.5nm: 25x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1

Baader Planetarium SII 1.25" 8nm: 25x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1

Integration: 12.2 hours

Darks: 29

Flats: 29

 

Object description (wikipedia.org):

 

The Elephant's Trunk nebula is 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. The piece of the nebula shown here is the dark, dense globule IC 1396A; it is commonly called the Elephant's Trunk nebula because of its appearance at visible light wavelengths, where there is a dark patch with a bright, sinuous rim. The bright rim is the surface of the dense cloud that is being illuminated and ionized by a very bright, massive star (HD 206267) that is just to the west of IC 1396A. (In the Figure above, the massive star is just to the left of the edge of the image.) The entire IC 1396 region is ionized by the massive star, except for dense globules that can protect themselves from the star's harsh ultraviolet rays.

 

The Elephant's Trunk nebula is now thought to be a site of star formation, containing several very young (less than 100,000 yr) stars that were discovered in infrared images in 2003. Two older (but still young, a couple of million years, by the standards of stars, which live for billions of years) stars are present in a small, circular cavity in the head of the globule. Winds from these young stars may have emptied the cavity.

 

The combined action of the light from the massive star ionizing and compressing the rim of the cloud, and the wind from the young stars shifting gas from the center outward lead to very high compression in the Elephant's Trunk nebula. This pressure has triggered the current generation of protostars.

Locations: Deep Sky West, Rowe, New Mexico, United States

PlaneWave17" CDK Telescope:

Elephant's Trunk Nebula: Grayscale, total of 11h.

L: 89x300sec

R: 21x300sec

G: 14x300sec

B: 9x300sec

 

Camera: FLI ML16803

Filter: Astrodon LRGB

Focal Length: 2939mm

Focal Ratio: f/6.7

Pixels: 9μm

Mount: Paramount Taurus 400

 

nova.astrometry.net/user_images/4099908#annotated

www.deepskywest.com/

 

planewave.com/product/cdk17-ota/

  

After a month of cloud I finally managed to gather some Olll for this image, but not enough. Fed up with waiting for the occasional gap in the clouds though, so decided to draw a line under it! :)

 

ED80 with 0.85 reducer, HEQ5 pro

Cooled mono Canon 450D

Astronomik 12nm Ha and Olll filters

10 x 1200 seconds Ha, 6 x 1200 seconds Olll, iso 1600

Calibrated and stacked in Nebulosity

Processed with Straton and CS5

Reprocessed

L(Ha)

R(SII+10%Ha)

G(Ha)

B(OIII)

Ha 600x4 + OIII 600x2 + SII 600x2

PixInsight + PS

Taken on a new Moon over 4 nights in Sulpher, Hydrogen and Oxygen mapped SHO 20 hours 10 min exp Asi 1600 mono Swed80 Heq5 Derwent Valley Durham UK

L(Ha)

R(SII)

G(Ha)

B(OIII)

Ha 600sx4 + OIII 600sx2 + SII + 600sx2

Processed in PixInsight and PS

SBIG STL-11000M

Takahashi FSQ-106

Paramount GT-1100S

The Elephant's Trunk Nebula, IC1396A, is a combination of dark and emission nebulae in the constellation Cepheus and lies around 2400 light-years away. The trunk itself spans 20 light years shrouds many young protostars that are in the process of forming. It sits within the wider emission nebula IC1396.

 

Details:

Scope: TMB130SS

Camera: QSI690-wsg8

Guide Camera: Starlight Xpress Ultrastar

Mount: Mach1 GTO

RGB: 16x5min each

4 hrs total exposure

  

Description: This image of the Elephant’s Trunk Nebula IC 1396 was developed from 37x300s subs or 3.08 hours of total exposure time. A dual bandpass integrated image was first separated into Starless and Stars only images. The Starless image was split into its RGB components, which were individually boosted as appropriate, followed by the application of appropriate weighting factors to the individual RGB channels, further followed by LRGB Combination. The resulting image was then recombined with the Stars only image the result of which was post processed with various color masks using Curves Transformation to generate a final image.

 

Date / Location: 12 July 2023 / Washington D.C.

 

Equipment:

Scope: WO Zenith Star 81mm f/6.9 with WO 6AIII Flattener/Focal Reducer x0.8

OSC Camera: ZWO ASI 2600 MC Pro at 100 Gain and 50 Offset

Mount: iOptron GEM28-EC

Guider: ZWO Off-Axis Guider

Guide Camera: ZWO ASI 174mm mini

Focuser: ZWO EAF

Light Pollution Filter: Optolong L-eXtreme Dual Bandpass

 

Processing Software: Pixinsight

 

Processing Steps:

 

Preprocessing:

I preprocessed 37x300s subs (= 3.08 hours) in Pixinsight to get an integrated image using the following process steps: Image Calibration > Cosmetic Correction > Subframe Selector > Debayer > Select Reference Star and do a Star Align > Image Integration.

 

Linear Postprocessing:

Dynamic Crop > Dynamic Background Extractor (doing subtraction to remove light pollution gradients and division for flat field correction) > Background Neutralization > Color Calibration > Blur Xterminator > Noise Xterminator.

 

Nonlinear Postprocessing and additional steps:

Histogram Transformation > Star Xterminator to create Starless and Stars Only Images.

Starless Image > Noise Xterminator > Local Histogram Equalization > Multiscale Median Transform > Curves Transformation to boost O(III) and H-alpha signals > Split RGB channels > Create new green and blue channels > Boosted the channels as appropriate > LRGB Combination > Curves Transformation using various color masks.

Stars Only Image > Morphological transformation.

Pixel Math to combine the Starless Image with the Stars Only Image to get a Rejoined Image.

Rejoined Image > Dark Structure Enhancement > Topaz AI.

Pixel Math to combine the non-AI Rejoined Image with the Topaz AI Image to get a final image.

 

One of my favourite targets, a very large nebula with a star forming center feature and a lot going on.

 

The Elephant's trunk Nebula (IC1396) is located in the constellation Cepheus.

 

Taken multiple nights in September.

 

Thanks for viewing!

 

Technicals:

 

Nikon D5300 (non-modified)

24x720"

11x600"

ISO 400

ES 480mm/80mm

AZ-EQ5 Mount

Up in Smoke...

 

The Elephant's Trunk Nebula is a dense region of gas and dust seen in silhouette against a larger emission nebula. At the top of this object is a “globule” - a sphere of compressed material where star formation is actively proceeding. At the center of this body can be seen a pair of newborn stars whose stellar wind has cleared a small region within the globule. Also seen inside this clearing is a tiny emission nebula.

 

A blazing blue star above the elephant’s trunk (outside this image) is also blowing its own storm of stellar wind. This hurricane has torn material from the globule which is seen streaming toward the lower part of the image. This same stellar wind is inducing the leading edge of the globule to glow.

 

The Elephant’s Trunk Nebula lies 2,500 light years distant in the direction of the constellation of Cepheus, the king.

 

This image was captured under high desert skies near Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA with a telescope of 12" aperture at f/4.5 and an electrically-cooled CCD camera. This false-colored image was taken through hydrogen-alpha (green), oxygen-III (blue), and Sulfur-II (red) narrow-band filters.

  

The Elephant's Trunk Nebula or IC 1396 as it is otherwise known, but never with such a wide field of view, at a distance of around 2400 light years from earth and is mainly illuminated by a single bright star. It is thought that this region of space is home to a pretty young star forming region.

 

This image consists of the same data as the RGB Image but has been processed using my tutorial on creating SHO images from One Shot Colour Cameras which you can read here:

 

www.stastrophotography.com/creating-a-hubble-palette-imag...

 

RA: 21h39m00.01s

Dec: 57°29'24.00""

Constellation: Cepheus

Designation: IC1396

 

Image Details: 128x300S at Gain 100

Darks: 101 Frames

Flats: 101 Frames

Bias: 201 Frames

 

Acquisition Dates: Nov. 5, 2020 , Nov. 7, 2020 , Nov. 24, 2020 , Dec. 1, 2020 , Dec. 24, 2020 , Dec. 27, 2020

 

Total Capture time: 10.7 Hours

 

Equipment Details:

Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI6200MC Pro 62mpx Full Frame OSC

Imaging Scope: SharpStar 15028HNT Hyperboloid Astrograph

Guide Camera: StarlightXpress Lodestar X2

Guide Scope: 365Astronomy 280mm Guide Scope

Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ8 Pro

Focuser: Primalucelab Sesto Senso V2

Filter: Optolong L-eXtreme 2"

Power and USB Control: Pegasus Astro USB Ultimate Hub Pro

Acquisition Software: Main Sequence Software. Sequence Generator Pro 3.2

Calibration and Stacking: Astro Pixel Processor

Processing Software: PixInsight 1.8.8 and EZ Processing Suite for Star Reduction

Ha 600s x3

RGB 600s x1 bin 2x2 (each)

L(Ha)RGB

Processed in PixInsight

Imaging Dates:Sept. 20, 2019, Sept. 21, 2019, Sept. 28, 2019, Sept. 30, 2019, Dec. 20, 2019, Dec. 29, 2019

 

Frames:

Astronomik Ha 6nm: 51x300" (gain: 11.00) -20C bin 1x1

Astronomik OIII 6nm: 51x300" (gain: 11.00) -20C bin 1x1

 

Integration: 8.5 hours

 

Darks: ~101

Flats: ~101

Flat darks: ~101

Avg. Moon age: 16.67 days

Avg. Moon phase: 29.01%

Bortle Dark-Sky Scale: 4.00

 

Imaging Scope: Sharpstar Optics 15028HNT Hyperboloid Astrograph Reflector

Imaging Camera: Qhyccd 183M Mono ColdMOS at -20C

Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ8 Pro

Guide Scope: Sky-Watcher Finder Scope

Guide Camera: Starlight Xpress Ltd Lodestar X2

Filters: Astronomik 36mm RGB F2.2 Certified

Filterwheel: Starlight Xpress Ltd 7x36mm EFW

Power and USB Control: Pegasus Astro Ultimate USB Hub

Focuser: Primalucelab Sesto Senso Auto Focuser

Image Acquisition Software: Main Sequence Software SGPro

Guide Software: PHD 2

Processing Software: PixInsight

Imaging telescope or lens:Skywatcher Esprit 80 ED Triplet Super Apo

Imaging camera:ZWO ASI 183 MM PRO

Mount:SkyWatcher NEQ6 Pro Goto

Guiding telescope or lens:Skywatcher Esprit 80 ED Triplet Super Apo

Guiding camera:Astrolumina Alccd5L-IIc

Focal reducer:Skywatcher Field flattener for Esprit 80mm

Software:Main Sequence Software Seqence Generator Pro, Adobe PhotoShop CS5, FitsWork 4, DeepSky Stacker Deep Sky Stacker 3.3.4, PHD2 Guiding

Filters:Baader Ha 1.25" 7nm, Baader Planetarium SII 1.25" 8nm, Baader Planetarium O3 1.25" 8.5nm

Accessory:TSOptics TS Off Axis Guider - 9mm

Dates:May 14, 2019, May 23, 2019, May 29, 2019, June 1, 2019

Frames:

Baader Ha 1.25" 7nm: 44x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1

Baader Planetarium O3 1.25" 8.5nm: 27x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1

Baader Planetarium SII 1.25" 8nm: 25x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1

Integration: 16.0 hours

Darks: ~50

Flats: ~27

Bias: ~100

 

Object description (wikipedia.org):

 

The Elephant's Trunk nebula is 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. The piece of the nebula shown here is the dark, dense globule IC 1396A; it is commonly called the Elephant's Trunk nebula because of its appearance at visible light wavelengths, where there is a dark patch with a bright, sinuous rim. The bright rim is the surface of the dense cloud that is being illuminated and ionized by a very bright, massive star (HD 206267) that is just to the west of IC 1396A. (In the Figure above, the massive star is just to the left of the edge of the image.) The entire IC 1396 region is ionized by the massive star, except for dense globules that can protect themselves from the star's harsh ultraviolet rays.

 

The Elephant's Trunk nebula is now thought to be a site of star formation, containing several very young (less than 100,000 yr) stars that were discovered in infrared images in 2003. Two older (but still young, a couple of million years, by the standards of stars, which live for billions of years) stars are present in a small, circular cavity in the head of the globule. Winds from these young stars may have emptied the cavity.

 

The combined action of the light from the massive star ionizing and compressing the rim of the cloud, and the wind from the young stars shifting gas from the center outward lead to very high compression in the Elephant's Trunk nebula. This pressure has triggered the current generation of protostars.

The Elephant's Trunk Nebula or IC 1396 as it is otherwise known, but never with such a wide field of view, at a distance of around 2400 light years from earth and is mainly illuminated by a single bright star. It is thought that this region of space is home to a pretty young star forming region.

 

RA: 21h39m00.01s

Dec: 57°29'24.00""

Constellation: Cepheus

Designation: IC1396

 

Image Details: 128x300S at Gain 100

Darks: 101 Frames

Flats: 101 Frames

Bias: 201 Frames

 

Acquisition Dates: Nov. 5, 2020 , Nov. 7, 2020 , Nov. 24, 2020 , Dec. 1, 2020 , Dec. 24, 2020 , Dec. 27, 2020

 

Total Capture time: 10.7 Hours

 

Equipment Details:

Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI6200MC Pro 62mpx Full Frame OSC

Imaging Scope: SharpStar 15028HNT Hyperboloid Astrograph

Guide Camera: StarlightXpress Lodestar X2

Guide Scope: 365Astronomy 280mm Guide Scope

Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ8 Pro

Focuser: Primalucelab Sesto Senso V2

Filter: Optolong L-eXtreme 2"

Power and USB Control: Pegasus Astro USB Ultimate Hub Pro

Acquisition Software: Main Sequence Software. Sequence Generator Pro 3.2

Calibration and Stacking: Astro Pixel Processor

Processing Software: PixInsight 1.8.8 and EZ Processing Suite for Star Reduction

This is part of the area designated IC 1396 in Cepheus, which includes The Elephant's Trunk Nebula, at the bottom, looking a tiny bit like an elephant's trunk :)

 

Long time since I did a collaboration with my frozen northern buddy Dave Williams. This is 5 hours of 300 second subs @iso 800 for the RGB (mainly R!) and Ha kindly provided by Dave and used as luminance.

 

A little noisy in places - the DSLR RGB input provides that, so not a lot I can do about it until the next kit upgrade on 12th Never. :)

The Elephant’s Trunk Nebula, designated IC1396 in the constellation Cepheus, is a vast cloud of ionized gas located 2400 light-years from Earth. Its distinctive name derives from the dark, trunk-like region of dust and gas situated slightly off-center to the lower right in this image. The photograph was captured using a RASA8 telescope equipped with a dual narrowband filter and a color astronomical camera. The SHO Hubble palette, as applied during processing in Pixinsight and Photoshop, enhances the nebula’s visual appeal.

About 25 Hours Exposure with Spacecat51 and ASI533 MC Pro set to -10 degree and Unitygain. Off-Axis Guiding with PHD2. Autofocus via Deepskydads AF3. SGPro for Acquisition. Processing in PixInsight

 

I used the Baader UHC-S Filter but it produces Halos around Stars. Next time I'll use my new Optolong L-Extreme Filter. But I am still happy with the result.

  

"The Elephant’s Trunk Nebula is a dense region of dust and gas found within the considerably larger star forming region IC 1396 in Cepheus constellation. Designated IC 1396A, the elongated globule of dust and gas was named the Elephant’s Trunk because it resembles an elephant’s head and trunk at visible wavelengths, appearing as a dark patch with a bright winding rim. It is located at a distance of 2,400 light years from Earth."

 

i captured this image with my William Optics FLT132, FLAT8 0.72x reducer, ZWO ASI2600MC Pro camera and ZWO AM5 mount. I used the Antlia Triband RGB Ultra for around 2 hours and then the Optolong L-Ultimate narrowband filter for another 6 hours, with a total 8 hours integration time over two consecutive nights (in 180 and 300 second subs).

 

Pre and post processed in PixInsight, with final touches in Affinity Photo 2. i used the GeneralizedHyperbolicStretch (ghsastro.co.uk) in PixInsight, which was super useful in extracting/showing the dust clouds in this image. This is the SHO palette with RGB stars.

 

See the HOO palette version here: flic.kr/p/2pNwVfG

 

More acquisition details and different versions of the image (variations on the palette) in Astrobin: astrob.in/sl7sof/D/

 

Thanks for looking

 

I took on Elephant Trunk as my first serious, multi-night imaging project. This image is from 128 60s subs (2h08m total integration time) taken during two night's work in luminance only. Processing in PixInsight consists of cropping, and heavy histogram and curves stretches.

 

It appears that many more hours of integration will be required to get a decent image.

 

ZWO ASI6200MM-Pro/EFW 7 x 2"

TeleVue NP101is

Losmandy G11

In the constellation of Cepheus lies the Elephant's Trunk Nebula, I have successfully imaged this before but decided to re-image using the SharpStar 15028HNT

 

Image Details:

Dates:Dec. 29, 2012, Sept. 20, 2019, Sept. 21, 2019, Sept. 28, 2019, Sept. 30, 2019, Oct. 8, 2019, Dec. 4, 2019, Dec. 6, 2019, Dec. 8, 2019, Dec. 20, 2019

 

Frames:

Astronomik Ha 6nm: 51x300" (gain: 11.00) -20C bin 1x1

Astronomik OIII 6nm: 51x300" (gain: 11.00) -20C bin 1x1

Astronomik SII 6nm: 51x300" (gain: 11.00) -20C bin 1x1

 

Integration: 12.7 hours

Darks: ~101

Flats: ~101

Flat darks: ~101

Avg. Moon age: 15.06 days

Avg. Moon phase: 54.62%

Bortle Dark-Sky Scale: 4.00

 

Imaging Scope: Sharpstar Optics 15028HNT Hyperboloid Astrograph Reflector

Imaging Camera: Qhyccd 183M Mono ColdMOS at -20C

Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ8 Pro

Guide Scope: Sky-Watcher Finder Scope

Guide Camera: Starlight Xpress Ltd Lodestar X2

Filters: Astronomik 36mm RGB F2.2 Certified

Filterwheel: Starlight Xpress Ltd 7x36mm EFW

Power and USB Control: Pegasus Astro Ultimate USB Hub

Focuser: Primalucelab Sesto Senso Auto Focuser

Image Acquisition Software: Main Sequence Software SGPro

Guide Software: PHD 2

Processing Software: PixInsight

   

Some binned SII and OIII...added to the Ha from the other day.

The OIII is weak link here...but I think it provides a background gradient...not well seen here.

(5x900 and 5x1500 seconds SII/OIII respectively,binned)

Camera running at -30C

They both need flats ...

 

Hubble color scheme.

Reprocess (version 2) here;

www.flickr.com/photos/daveh56/6351104513/

03 Sep 2021 - 22 Aug 2022

 

Lens: William Optics GT81 IV

Camera: ZWO ASI294MC Pro

Mount: iOptron CEM25p

Guiding camera: ZWO 120MM Mini

Total 9.8hr exposure

Starless version

 

Image Details:

Dates:Dec. 29, 2012, Sept. 20, 2019, Sept. 21, 2019, Sept. 28, 2019, Sept. 30, 2019, Oct. 8, 2019, Dec. 4, 2019, Dec. 6, 2019, Dec. 8, 2019, Dec. 20, 2019

 

Frames:

Astronomik Ha 6nm: 51x300" (gain: 11.00) -20C bin 1x1

Astronomik OIII 6nm: 51x300" (gain: 11.00) -20C bin 1x1

Astronomik SII 6nm: 51x300" (gain: 11.00) -20C bin 1x1

 

Integration: 12.7 hours

Darks: ~101

Flats: ~101

Flat darks: ~101

Avg. Moon age: 15.06 days

Avg. Moon phase: 54.62%

Bortle Dark-Sky Scale: 4.00

 

Imaging Scope: Sharpstar Optics 15028HNT Hyperboloid Astrograph Reflector

Imaging Camera: Qhyccd 183M Mono ColdMOS at -20C

Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ8 Pro

Guide Scope: Sky-Watcher Finder Scope

Guide Camera: Starlight Xpress Ltd Lodestar X2

Filters: Astronomik 36mm RGB F2.2 Certified

Filterwheel: Starlight Xpress Ltd 7x36mm EFW

Power and USB Control: Pegasus Astro Ultimate USB Hub

Focuser: Primalucelab Sesto Senso Auto Focuser

Image Acquisition Software: Main Sequence Software SGPro

Guide Software: PHD 2

Processing Software: PixInsight

A region of star formation 2400 light-years from Earth. The Elephant's Trunk itself is the long dark structure just to the bottom-left of centre in this image. It is part of a much larger nebula called IC1396, which fills the frame.

 

* May and June 2021

* Bristol, UK (Bortle 8 )

* Telescope: Askar FRA400 f/5.6 Quintuplet APO Astrograph

* Camera: ZWO ASI 2600MC-PRO

* Filter: Optolong L-eXtreme

* Mount: Orion Sirius EQ-G

* Guide: William Optics 32mm; ZWO ASI 120MM Mini

* Control: ASIAIR PRO

* Software: PixInsight, Photoshop, Lightroom, Topaz DeNoise AI

* 480 x 120 seconds

------------------------------------------------------------

Total integration time: 16 hours

------------------------------------------------------------

By Lee Pullen

2h15m Total (45m Ha, SII, OIII). Takahashi FSQ106ED

QSI683ws Mono CCD

Astronomik Ha (6nm), SII, OIII filters

QHY5-II Guide Camera

PHD2, Sequence Generator Pro, CCDStack, Photoshop CS6

Guess who got an ED80 for his birthday then? :)

 

This is my first half successful attempt at using the thing with my new go-faster budget guiding kit :) Guiding was fine, but I ran out of vis towards the end, and as the Reading Fest had just kicked off, I had to contend with searchlights passing through the frame every 20 seconds or so! So on that basis, this ain't too bad - even though it needed a little encouragement during the processing :) Horrendously noisy, hence the small image :)

 

SW ED80/EQ5

Nikon D70 modded, iso 1250, Baader Neodymium filter

15 x 6 mins for a total of 1 hour 30 minutes

Guiding: Quickcam Pro4000/9x50 finderscope, PHD

Stacked in DSS and processed in CS5

    

First Narrowband Imaging Attempt. Low signal-to-noise. Altair Wave 80 + Atik 460EX + EFW2 + Baader Narrowband Filters.

 

SII : 2 hrs 55 min

Ha: 2 hrs 5 min

OIII: 1 hr 35 min

 

(reprocess from 8AM image...)

 

First try at tricolor with the ST10...newe camera with higher sensitivity.

Moon out but impatient

Sort of surprised/puzzled/horrified to see that the snr (in OIII and SII) is no great shakes...

And the ADU for the SII,OIII with 3nm filters is WAY less than the 9 (?) nm Ha filter..

So I am a bit puzzled..they were fairly similar with the ST2000....

Will add the old 9nm OIII and do a direct comparison.Maybe its a better choice somehow...

Head scratching,a bit

Anyways...

This is 4-6 exposures @ 1200 seconds, and the OIII is 1500.

View Large On Black ?

 

A nicer version,same color assignments

bf-astro.com/elephantTrunk.htm

IC 1396 and VdB142

Credit: Giuseppe Donatiello

 

(J2000) RA: 21h 39.1m Dec: +57° 30′

IC 1396 is larger ionized gas region located in Cepheus at about 2,400 light years. The entire IC 1396 region is ionized by the massive star HD 206267, except for dense globules that can protect themselves from the star's harsh ultraviolet rays.

In the center of the nebula is located, in fact, VdB142 (also IC 1396A); it is commonly called the Elephant's Trunk nebula.

SHO from Woolwich, London [22/27-10-2018] 33x300s each filter.

ASI1600MM-Pro + 130PDS

 

The brighter portions of this huge nebula in Cepheus are visible through a telescope under dark skies, but it takes a long exposure photograph to capture all the fine detail and faint extents seen here. Many dark globules of dust permeate this region, notably the "Elephant's Trunk" seen protruding in from the left. The very bright star near the bottom is Herschell's "Garnet Star."

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