View allAll Photos Tagged pixinsight
SNR G206.9+23
Optics
Skyrover 130SA 130mm f/5 Refractor
Camera
ZWO ASI6200MM Pro
Filters
Blue: Chroma
Green: Chroma
Luminance: Chroma
Red: Chroma
Mount
SkyWatcher AZ-EQ6 GT
Observatory
Daocheng Glacier Observatory
www.insightobservatory.com/p/home-page.html
Blue 34x300 sec
Green 32x300 sec
Ha 38x900 sec
Lum 57x 300 sec
OIII 64x900 sec
Red 33x300 sec
SII 64x900 sec
Integration in PixInsight, BlurXTerminator used.
horsehead nebula as H-Alpha LRGB
Distance: 1500 Ly
exposure time: 2,4 hours
Processing: PixInsight/affinity photo
Equipment:
Takahashi Epsilon 130ED
ZWO ASI294mmPro
ZWO EFW 8x
Astronomik Deep-Sky RGB und SHO MaxFR
Skywatcher EQ8
15x180s H-alpha
12x180s red
12x180s green
11x180s blue
February 2021
An LRGB image of IC4812
Data subs courtesy of Telescope Live.
Processed in PixInsight and Affinity Photo.
Equipment:
Lens: Rokinon 24mm f/1.4 (stopped to f/4)
Mount: Orion Sirius EQ-G (HEQ-5)
Imaging camera: ZWO ASI1600MM-Cool
Software:
SGP
PHD2
CdC
PixInsight
Acquisition:
Location: Atoka, Oklahoma (Bortle 3)
Dates: 5/12/18
Gain: 76 Offset: 15
Camera temp: -10C
R: 9x180"
G: 10x180"
B: 10x180"
Total integration time: 1hr 27min
64x darks per calibration (master dark in library)
No flats (had issue with them)
200x bias (master bias in library)
Preprocessing:
Batch PreProcessing script to generate calibrated images
StarAlignment to register all frames to a reference
DynamicCrop each master
DBE on each master
RGB processing:
BackgroundNeutralization
ColorCalibration
SCNR green 50%
TGV and MMT noise reduction (via Jon Rista's method)
ArcsinhStretch and HistogramTransformation
SCNR green 100%
Duplicated the image to create a starless version, using a starmask and several iterations of MMT and MT. Then pushed the faint nebulosity in the starless version using PixelMath expression: "1-(1-$T)*(1-$T)".
Combined the starless version with the image using PixelMath expression "F=0.4; (1-(1-$T)*(1-s)*F)+($T*~F)" followed by the same expression but F=0.2 (s=starless photo).
CurvesTransformation for saturation
ExponentialTransformation with a mask to further push faint nebulosity
ColorSaturation to selectively saturate blues
MorphologicalTransformation for slight star reduction
Captured in color and H-Alpha using the QHY367C Full Frame CMOS camera and Takahashi 130FSQ (System 1) December subscription data from GrandMesaObservatory.com in Purdy Mesa, Western Colorado.
Lying at a distance of approximately 2700 light years in the constellation Monoceros, The Christmas Tree Star Cluster and the HII regions Cone Nebula (top center) and The Fox Fur Nebula (center).
The setup I used is System 1 of 3 telescopes available through Grand Mesa Observatory’s Subscription services grandmesaobservatory.com/equipment/
Total Integration time 4.5 hours
Image capture details
Dates: November 14th, December 16th
Color 140 min, 14 x 600 sec
H Alpha 130 min 13 x 600 sec
Camera: QHY367C
Offset 76, Gain 2850 Calibrated with flat, dark & bias
Optics: System 1, Holloway Takahashi FSQ130 APO Refractor
Filters by Chroma (Narrowband are 5nm)
Image Acquisition software Maxim DL5
Pre Processed in Pixinsight
Post Processed in Photoshop
more images of mine of the NGC 2264 region
www.flickr.com/photos/terryhancock/33719397145/in/datepos...
www.flickr.com/photos/terryhancock/13759391413/in/datepos...
Constelación: Géminis
De SkySafari Plus: La nebulosa planetaria Sh2-274, conocida también como nebulosa Medusa, fue descubierta en 1955. Se estima que tiene unos 4 años luz de diámetro y que está a unos 1500 años luz de distancia de la tierra. Es irregular, con forma de media luna.
Una nebulosa planetaria representa la etapa final en la evolución de las estrellas de baja masa, similares al sol, durante el paso de gigantes rojas a enanas blancas. La forma de media luna de la nebulosa se asocia a la radiación ultravioleta emitida por la estrella ubicada en el medio.
Hacia la parte inferior derecha de la nebulosa puede verse el cúmulo abierto de estrellas NGC2395, que se estima tiene 45 estrellas visibles.
También pueden verse en toda la imagen 58 galaxias del catálogo PGC, tan lejanas, que aparecen como puntos.
Datos de la imagen:
Exposure: RGB: 4 hr 35 min (55 x 5 min)
Telescope: Celestron C9.25 Edge - Hyperstar
Camera: ZWO ASI071MC Pro
Focal ratio: f2.3
Capturing software: Sequence Generator Pro - SGP
Filter: IDAS NBX
Mount: iOptron CEM60
Guiding: Orion StarShoot Autoguider with PHD2 and Stellarvue F60M3
Dithering: Yes
Calibration: 100 darks, 100 flat darks, 50 flats
Processing: PixInsight
Date: 18-Ene-2021
Location: Bogotá, Colombia
Stack of 25 shots at 200mm focal length and F5.6
10 x 120s RGB @ 1000ISO
15 x 180s with IR645 filter @ 4000ISO.
D810A + Sigma 120-300mm F2.8 + NEQ6
Shooting conditions were dry and dusty on the ground, very clear dark skies, a bit of wind and mild to no seeing.
This time I have done the preprocessing and editing with PixInsight 1.8, using one of many great tutorials out there. Final editing done with DxO OpticsPro 11, I might have "pushed" a bit too much and brought the noise and some dark issues out ...
If I have the patience tomorrow, I'll repeat the operation with a mosaic I shot of Orion a few nights after this photo. The conditions were not as good and Orion was getting close to Christchurch's light halo, so yeah ... annoying editing ahead ... it might take a while before you see said mosaic ... ;-)
Description
First image captured with the new dual rig configuration.
More than 56 hours of integration time. (Usually I am integrating 25 hours.. now dual rig :D is working ).
NGC 7635, also known as the Bubble Nebula, Sharpless 162, or Caldwell 11, is an H II region emission nebula in the constellation Cassiopeia. It lies close to the direction of the open cluster Messier 52. The "bubble" is created by the stellar wind from a massive hot, 8.7 magnitude young central star, SAO 20575.
The nebula is near a giant molecular cloud which contains the expansion of the bubble nebula while itself being excited by the hot central star, causing it to glow. (Desc creditcs: Wikipedia)
Technical card
Imaging telescopes or lenses:Altair Astro RC250-TT 10" RC Truss Tube, Teleskop Service TS Photoline 107mm f/6.5 Super-Apo
Imaging cameras:ZWO ASI183MM-Cool, ZWO ASI1600MM-Cool
Mounts:Mesu 200 Mk2, Skywatcher EQ6R Pro
Guiding telescopes or lenses:Teleskop Service TSOAG9 Off-Axis Guider, Celestron OAG Deluxe
Guiding cameras:ZWO ASI174 Mini, ZWO ASI290 Mini
Focal reducers:Riccardi Reducer/Flattener 0.75x, Telescope-Service TS 2" Flattener
Software:Main Sequence Software Seqence Generator Pro, Pleiades Astrophoto PixInsight
Filters:Optolong OIII 6.5nm 36mm, Optolong SII 6.5nm 36mm, Astrodon HA 36mm - 5nm, Astrodon B Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon G Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon R Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon S-II 36mm - 5nm, Astrodon O-III 36mm - 5nm
Accessories:ZWO EFW, MoonLite NiteCrawler WR30, MoonLite CSL 2.5" Focuser with High Res Stepper Motor
Resolution: 2090x1760
Dates:Oct. 1, 2019, Oct. 11, 2019, Oct. 16, 2019, Oct. 18, 2019, Oct. 23, 2019, Oct. 28, 2019
Frames:
Astrodon B Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 70x30" (gain: 75.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon G Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 70x30" (gain: 75.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon HA 36mm - 5nm: 162x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Optolong OIII 6.5nm 36mm: 83x600" (gain: 111.00) -15C bin 1x1
Astrodon R Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 70x30" (gain: 75.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon S-II 36mm - 5nm: 82x600" (gain: 111.00) -15C bin 1x1
Integration: 56.2 hours
Avg. Moon age: 12.78 days
Avg. Moon phase: 51.26%
Astrometry.net job: 3037365
RA center: 350.189 degrees
DEC center: 61.178 degrees
Pixel scale: 1.007 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: 270.802 degrees
Field radius: 0.382 degrees
Locations: AAS Montsec, Àger, Lleida, Spain
Data source: Own remote observatory
Remote source: Non-commercial independent facility
Montura Star Tracker Skywatcher StarAdventurer
Teleobjetivo Sigma 150-600 Art.
68 lights de 1 minuto de exposición a ISO 3200 y f/6,2 y
12 Darks apiladas y procesadas con PixInsight y PS.
Es una pena, pero no consigo alinear mejor la montura y no puedo pasar de esos 400mm y un minuto de exposición. A partir de esos parámetros las estrellas dejan de ser puntos y se ven las trazas.
La nebulosa de la Laguna (también conocida como objeto Messier 8, Messier 8, M8 o NGC 6523), es una nebulosa de emisión (concretamente se trata de una Región H II) situada en la constelación de Sagitario. Está, aproximadamente, a una distancia de 5.000 años luz.
En la porción más brillante de la nebulosa se halla una estructura conocida cómo El reloj de arena, en la que se está produciendo una intensa actividad de formación de estrellas.
La nebulosa Trífida (también conocida como Messier 20 y NGC 6514) es una región H II en la constelación de Sagitario. El nombre de la nebulosa significa "dividido en tres lóbulos", dado que la característica sobresaliente es el aspecto de tres lóbulos brillantes separados por oscuras líneas de polvo.
La nebulosa Trífida, que es una nebulosa tanto de emisión como de reflexión, tiene un brillo aparente de 6.3 magnitudes. La nebulosa está relativamente cercana, a unos 1700 pársecs, algo así como 5500 años luz.
Su edad estimada es de 300 000 años, lo que la convierte en una zona de formación estelar extremadamente joven.
M11, an open star cluster in the constellation Scutum, is nestled against a rich background of Milky Way stars and dust. Also visible toward the left side of this image is a smaller star cluster, NGC 6704.
Telescope: William Optics ZenithStar 110mm f/7 APO
Reducer: 0.8x
Camera: Canon 450D (modified)
Mount: iOptron iEQ45 Pro
Integration: 45 min (9 x 5 min)
Processing Software: PixInsight 1.8, Adobe Lightroom
Capture Location: Near Goldendale, WA.
This 6-panel mosaic of the North America (NGC 7000) and Pelican (IC 5070 and IC 5067) Nebulae spans approximately 4.5 degrees , about 9x the apparent width of the Moon. Image data was captured over two 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
Fortunately the two single pictures have a small overlap. So it is possible to create a mosaic with Pixinsight
A two panel LRGB mosaic image of M42.
The two panel mosaic comprises of:
R - 7 hours
G - 6 hours 45 minutes
B - 6 hours 45 minutes
Total - 20 hours 30 minutes
15, 10, and 5 minute subs
12 and 6 second subs.
Acquisition - Planewave 12.5" CDK, PME, QSI 583 8WSG CCD, Lodestar auto guider, TSX, Maxim DL. Astrodon LRGB filters.
Processing Pixinsight 1.8
NGC 2174 and NGC 2175
First image using PixInsight to process. I'm kind of stunned in that I think I'm done after just 1 hour and 10 minutes of data!
Also used Topaz Denoise AI to finish it up.
Here is my best effort in Photoshop: flic.kr/p/2jW3stJ
Full details: telescopius.com/pictures/view/70236
This is just made up of all my 2014 data, with all the old data discarded. Over the course of the last 2 months I've taken 8 hours of luminance and 3 hours of each RGB channel.
A full moon and a series of winter storms meant this was very hard going and perhaps the longest it has even taken me to finish an image!
Altair Astro 6" RC & Atik 314l+, Processed in Pixinsight and CS5.
NGC 6914 is a reflection nebula located at approximately 6,000 light-years away in the constellation of Cygnus
Technical card
Imaging telescope or lens:Teleskop Service TS Photoline 107mm f/6.5 Super-Apo
Imaging camera:ZWO ASI1600MM-Cool
Mount:Astro-Physics Mach-1 GTO CP4
Guiding telescope or lens:Celestron OAG Deluxe
Guiding camera:QHYCCD QHY5III174
Focal reducer:Riccardi Reducer/Flattener 0.75x
Software:Main Sequence Software Seqence Generator Pro, Astro-Physics AAPC, Pleiades Astrophoto PixInsight
Filters:Astrodon HA 36mm - 5nm, Astrodon S-II 36mm - 5nm, Astrodon O-III 36mm - 5nm, Astrodon B Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon G Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon R Gen.2 E-series 36mm
Accessories:ZWO EFW, MoonLite NiteCrawler WR30
Resolution: 4480x3355
Dates: July 23, 2017, Aug. 3, 2018, Aug. 5, 2018
Frames:
Astrodon B Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 15x10" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon G Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 15x10" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon HA 36mm - 5nm: 25x300" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Baader Planetarium Ha 1.25" 7nm: 38x120" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon O-III 36mm - 5nm: 21x300" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon R Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 15x10" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Astrodon S-II 36mm - 5nm: 25x300" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1
Integration: 7.3 hours
Avg. Moon age: 14.63 days
Avg. Moon phase: 35.09%
Astrometry.net job: 2200954
RA center: 306.191 degrees
DEC center: 42.489 degrees
Pixel scale: 1.471 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: 269.573 degrees
Field radius: 1.143 degrees
Locations: Berga Resort, Berga, Barcelona, Spain
Data source: Backyard
50 Mio ly
Equipment:
10" /f4 TS ONTC Newton
ASI1600mmc v2
ZWO EFW 8x
Guiding TS9 OAG Lodestar
Losmandy G11
total 5,3 hours
2018
Constelación en que se encuentra: Perseus
Distancia: 1.000 años luz
De SkySafari:
#NGC1333 es una nebulosa de reflexion, que es parte del complejo de nubes de Perseo y es un área de formación de estrellas.
Aparece cerca de las nebulosas oscuras Barnard 1 y 2. Brilla en tonos azulosos. Alberga cientos de estrellas formadas recientemente, en el último millón de años. Muchas de esas estrellas generan importantes vientos estelares. Se estima que es un ambiente similar al de la formacion del sol hace 4.500 millones de años.
Datos de la imagen:
Exposure: 6hr 30min (180 x 3min)
Telescope: #Celestron #EdgeHD #C925 #Hyperstar
Camera: ZWO #ASI2600MC Pro
Focal ratio: f2.3
Capturing software: NINA
Filter: IDAS #NBZ
Mount: #iOptron #CEM60
Guiding: #ASI462MC with #PHD2 and Stellarvue F60M3
Dithering: Yes
Calibration: 30 darks, 30 flat darks, 50 flats
Processing: #PixInsight
Date: 25-nov-2024, 30-nov-2024
Location: #Bogotá, #Colombia
TS-Optics Photoline 140mm f/6.5
ToupTek ATR2600C
iOptron CEM70G
Antlia Tri Band RGB Pro 2"
TS-Optics TSFlat3
49 frames - 300 sec
Moon 77%
Pleiades Astrophoto PixInsight · Stefan Berg Nighttime Imaging 'N' Astronomy (N.I.N.A. / NINA)
Pixinsight NarrowBand Normalization - Palette SHO
Seeing 3/5
Transparency 4/5.
10 images derotated. 1.5X drizzle
C9.25 EDGEHD (F=2350mm)
ZWO120MC
SharpCap
Winjupos
AutoStakkert
PixInsight
RGB bicolor mix
distance 6300 Lj
Equipment:
TS 10" f/4 ONTC Newton
1000mm f4
GPU Aplanatic Koma Korrector
Moravian CCD G2-8300FW
Astrodon LRGB
Astronomik Ha Filter
Astronomik OIII Filter
Losmandy G11/LFE Photo
Guding:
Lodestar on TS Optics - ultra short 9mm Off Axis Guider
PHD2
6x900s red
6x300s green
6x900s blue
8x900s OIII
30x900s h-alpha
total exposure time: ca. 13 hour
Processing: PixInsight/CaptureOne
The Elephant Trunk nebula is a portion of the much larger ionized gas region known as IC 1396 located in the constellation Cepheus about 2,400 light years away from Earth. This image is a composite of over 44 hours of narrow band image data using an ASI1600 camera and a 10" Ritchey Cretien telescope.
Ha 19 x 10 min 3 x 30 min. OIII 9 x 30 min 19 x 10 min. SII 11 x 30 mins
Optics: Takahashi Baby Q FSQ-85ED F5.3
Camera: Xpress Trius SX-694 Mono Cooled to -20C
Guiding: OAG Lodestar X2
Filter: Baader Ha
Mount: Skywatcher AZ EQ6-GT EQ & Alt-Az Mount connected to the Sky X and Eqmod via HitecAstro EQDIR adapter
Image Acquisition: Sequence Generator Pro
Stacking and Calibrating: Pixinsight
Processing: Pixinsight 1.8
My tribute to "The Hubble Space Telescope", one of the most successful scientific endeavors that completely changed our view of the known Universe and our place within it.
Best viewed LARGE!
The image is not at full resolution, but is still best viewed as LARGE as possible. Zoom in and out by clicking on the image (in the gap under the Astrometry identification notes) and pan around. You can also view the image in lightbox mode by clicking HERE.
Original Resolution: 18 000px.
Current Resolution: 8 000px.
About M42, the Great Nebula in Orion:
M42 (NGC 1976) is a diffuse nebula situated in the Milky Way Galaxy, in the constellation of Orion. It is one of the brightest nebulae, and is visible to the naked eye in the night sky. M42 is located at a distance of 1,344 light-years from Earth, and is the closest region of massive star formation.
Why I like to "play around" with scientific data:
This Feynman quote sums it up...
"Feynman, that's pretty interesting, but what's the importance of it? Why are you doing it?'' ``Hah!'' I say. ``There's no importance whatsoever. I'm just doing it for the fun of it.'' - "Surely you're joking, Mr. Feynman'', by Richard P Feynman.
Data source:
The Hubble Legacy Archive (HLA).
The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI).
Processing:
Narrowband Monochrome FITS data in the HST Palette.
Processing and Linear workflow in PixInsight,
and finished in Photoshop.
Image processing by Martin Heigan.
Hubble Palette explanation:
www.astronomymark.com/hubble_palette.htm
Narrowband explanation:
www.swagastro.com/narrowband-information.html
My brief description of the Electromagnetic Spectrum of Light:
www.flickr.com/photos/martin_heigan/22278042895
Hubble Legacy Archive Credit:
Based on observations made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, and obtained from the Hubble Legacy Archive, which is a collaboration between the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI/NASA), the Space Telescope European Coordinating Facility (ST-ECF/ESA) and the Canadian Astronomy Data Centre (CADC/NRC/CSA).
Flickr Explore:
Martin Heigan
-
[Home Page] [Photography Showcase] [My Free Photo App]
[Flickr Profile] [Facebook] [Twitter] [My Science & Physics Page]
Imaging telescope or lens: Officina Stellare Veloce RH 200
Imaging camera: FLI MicroLine 8300 CCD-camera FLI
Mount: Paramount-ME
Guiding telescope or lens: Borg 77 ED
Software: Pixinsight 1.8
Filters: Astrodon Luminance, Astrodon Blue, Astrodon Red, Astrodon Green
Accessories: FLI Atlas, Starlight Xpress lodestar 2
Resolution: 3189x2363
Dates: Oct. 28, 2016, Nov. 28, 2016, Nov. 30, 2016
Frames:
Astrodon Blue: 26x300" bin 1x1
Astrodon Green: 25x300" bin 1x1
Astrodon Luminance: 72x300" bin 1x1
Astrodon Red: 25x300" bin 1x1
Integration: 12.3 hours
Here we have a look at the rarely seen Cederblad 30 reflection nebula and LBN 768 - This has been, by a long way, my most difficult target to date. I shot over 200 lum frames of which only 72 could be used due to background being high (net effect of altitude and general seeing conditions). Only for a brief period was the darkness suitable for shooting this image in the UK. To add to the complications even when the data was acquired it was extremely difficult to process. With 72 subs the data was relatively clean but very weak still. Overall it is probably a little softer than i would like but the data breaks down very rapidly when pushed any further. Or to put it another was I exercised artistic license to present the best version I could where required.
Not a target for the feint hearted and ideally one only for very dark sky locations. All that said it was fun to process and the challenges it presented forced me to find a few more tricks to get it to this state.
Hope you like.
Wikipedia says.....er, nothing actually; more rare than i thought!
Complete revision of this using PixInsight to stack the frames and apply drizzle. Took about 6 hours to complete the satck and 3 hours of processing.
apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap180216.html
Technical card
Imaging telescope or lens: Nikon 55mm Micro lens manual focus
Imaging camera: Nikon D5300
Mount: IOptron Skytracker v2
Software: PixInsight 1.8 Ripley PixInsight, Adobe Lightroom CC, ProDigital Software Astronomy Tools Actions Set, Sequator global Sequator 1.4a, Photoshop CC 2017
Resolution: 5736x3830
Dates: Jan. 13, 2018
Frames: 105x120" ISO800
Integration: 3.5 hours
Darks: ~20
Avg. Moon age: 26.32 days
Avg. Moon phase: 11.22%
Bortle Dark-Sky Scale: 4.00
Astrometry.net job: 1889350
Locations: Limington, Maine, United States
- Nebulosa Testa di Scimmia (NGC2175): Nebulosa a emissione, nella costellazione di Orione, distanza 6500 a.l.
- Nebulosa Medusa (IC443): Resto di Supernova, nella costellazione dei Gemelli, distanza 5000 a.l.
telescopius.com/pictures/view/251387/deep_sky/ic-2159/ngc...
Acquisizione:
1° sessione 48 light da 300sec. + (15 Dark - 15 Flat - 15 Bias) - Dithering
Integrazione complessiva: 4h
Guadagno: 100
Temp. Camera: -10°C
Temp. Ambiente: 4°C
Bortle: 8
- Camera: ZWO ASI2600MC Air
- Tubo: Askar FRA400
- Filtro Optolong L-eXtreme (7nm - H-Alpha/O-III)
- Montatura: ZWO AM3
- ASIAIR: Gestione/Acquisizione
- PIXINSIGHT + GRAXPERT + BlurXTerminator + Starnet: Allineamento, Somma, Correzione Gradienti , Deconvoluzione, Separazione Stelle e Riduzione Rumore
- PHOTOSHOP: Sviluppo finale
Re-processing of an earlier image.
Taken using T12 on iTelescope.net (Takahashi FQS-ED 106mm / SBIG STL-11000M). 45 minutes of data (3 Ha, 3 Sii, 3 Oii). Images stacked and processed using PixInsight
Best viewed LARGE.
Click on the image to Zoom In & Out on the Bubble Nebula. The "Bubble" is tagged in the image.
A widefield LRGB and SHO (SII+Ha+OIII) Narrowband image of the Bubble and Lobster Claw Nebula. The Bubble Nebula is also know as NGC 7635, Sharpless 162, or Caldwell 11 (a H II region emission nebula) in the constellation Cassiopeia. It lies close to the open star cluster Messier 52.
Also take a look at a closer view of the Bubble Nebula.
The "bubble" is created by the stellar wind from a massive hot, 8.7 magnitude young central star, SAO 20575 (BD+60°2522). The nebula is near a giant molecular cloud which contains the expansion of the bubble nebula while itself being excited by the hot central star, causing it to glow.
The Lobster Claw Nebula (Sharpless 157), is a bright emission nebula, and is clearly visible at the bottom right.
Gear:
William Optics Star 71mm f/4.9 Imaging APO Refractor Telescope.
William Optics 50mm Finder Scope.
Celestron SkySync GPS Accessory.
Orion Mini 50mm Guide Scope.
Orion StarShoot Autoguider.
Celestron AVX Mount.
QHYCCD PoleMaster.
Celestron StarSense.
Aurora Flatfield Panel.
Optolong 36mm L-Pro, LRGB & SHO filters.
QHYCFW2-M-US Filterwheel (7 position x 36mm).
QHY163M Cooled CMOS Monochrome Astronomy Camera.
Tech:
Guiding in Open PHD 2.6.3.
Image acquisition in Sequence Generator Pro.
Image Acquisition:
Sequence Generator Pro with the Framing Wizard.
Plate Solving:
Astrometry.net ANSVR Solver via SGP.
Photographed in the following wavelengths of light:
Imaged over several sessions in LRGB & SHO.
OIII line 500.7nm (6.5nm bandwidth)
H-alpha line 656nm (7nm bandwidth)
SII line 672nm (6.5nm bandwidth)
Enhanced emission lines:
OIII (496, 500nm)
H-beta (486nm)
NII (654, 658nm)
H-alpha (656nm)
SII (672nm)
Infrared cut-off at 700-1100nm
Processing:
Pre-Processing and Linear workflow in PixInsight,
and finished in Photoshop.
Astrometry Info:
View an Annotated Sky Chart for this image.
Center RA, Dec:349.675, 60.791
Center RA, hms:23h 18m 42.072s
Center Dec, dms:+60° 47' 28.518"
Size: 2.07 x 2.36 deg
Radius: 1.571 deg
Pixel scale: 4.14 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: Up is 358 degrees E of N
View this image in the World Wide Telescope.
Flickr Explore:
Martin
-
[Home Page] [Photography Showcase] [My Free Photo App]
[Flickr Profile] [Facebook] [Twitter] [My Science & Physics Page]
My latest capture of M42, the Orion nebula. This is considered as an easy target but it is also very easy to overexpose the core. I had to combine exposures from different duration to get the details in the core and still show all the details in the dust surrounding it. I am quite pleased with the result.
I will still certainly try again next year, like the last four years. Every time, I manage to improve on the last one.
TS80 Photoline, ZWO ASI 294MC PRO, Celestron AVX mount. Stacked and processed in Pixinsight.
NGC3981 LRGB
Planewave 17” CDK
Camera: FLI ML16803
Filter: Chroma L,R,G,B
Focuser: IRF90
Focal Length: 2939mm
Focal Ratio: f/6.8
Mount: 10 Micron GM3000
Location: Deep Sky West, Chile
12h of LRGB data, combination in PixInsight done:
L: 54 x 300sec
R: 30 x 300sec
G: 30 x 300sec
B: 30 x 300sec
First light with ZWO ASI2600 MC PRO. 45 X 60 sec stack of Globular cluster M003 shot. Amazed with low noise and amp glow. Stacked and processed in pixinsight.
Taken w/ William Optics Redcat 51, QHYCCD Polemaster, Skywatcher EQM-35, Nikon D7500.
153 x 90s lights @ ISO 800, ~45 dark, ~80 flat, ~100 bias, stacked in DSS and post-processed in Photoshop & PixInsight
Askar FRA300 Pro
ZWO 2600 MC Pro camera
ZWO AM5 mount
76x5 minute frames
Pixinsight / Photoshop
Leyburn, Queensland
August 2025
46x2min + 15x5min iso 800
canon 6D + Canon 400mm f5,6L
Skywatcher star adventurer
guiding using Qhy5ii-C + 32mm guidescope
PHD2
processing using pixinsight + photoshop 2020
Thought I would have a go at wide field. Taken with my Canon 1100D.
x21 30 second exposures.
As well as bad light pollution the moon was over 95% so it wasn't really a good time to experiment.
Processed mainly in Pixinsight with some extra help in Photoshop,
NGC 6822, also known as Barnard's Galaxy, is a barred irregular galaxy located in the constellation Sagittarius, about 1.6 million light-years from Earth. It was discovered by American astronomer E. E. Barnard in 1884, making it one of the first galaxies identified outside the Milky Way.
RGB: 42/35/33x5m
H: 76x10m
Total Integration = 21.8h
Planewave CDK24
El Sauce Observatory, Chile
Data from Martin Pugh