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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Info Post






A new imaging project from the last night, Merlotte 15, the heart of the Heart nebula.


Image shows now just the emission of Hydrogen, H-alpha. I'll shoot other emission channels for the color image soon. 20 x 1200s frames, =6h 40min. 






The heart of the Heart


Melotte 15 (Mel 15)






6h 40min. H-alpha light, image spans about 30 arch minutes vertically. (the angular size of the moon is ~30 arch miutes = 0,5 degrees)



The open cluster centered in this image is known as Melotte 15 . Melotte 15 is embedded within a central portion of the much larger glowing nebula identified as IC 1805. 




The interesting structure in the center of the image is a giant area of hydrogen gas that is caused to glow by the intense ultraviolet radiation from the massive stars of the Melotte 15 star cluster.

Dust and gas clouds are  twisted by the pressure of the intense radiation, the solar wind.

This formation is estimated to be 7,500 light years away from Earth, North is up.








A starless version






This experimental image shows the actual  nebula without stars. 







A closeup










Orientation image






The area of interest is marked in this older wide field HST-palette image.








A study about the scale in the sky


Click for a large image







An apparent size of the Moon is marked in the images as a scale.



















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