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Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Info Post







The Pickering's Triangle


A detail of the Veil Nebula supernova remnant





Image is in mapped colors, from the emission of ionized elements, R=Sulfur, G=Hydrogen and B=Oxygen.



This combination is generally called to HST-palette. It's used originally by the Hubble Space Telescope.





I managed to shoot enough data for the S-II channel, to build a three channel color image, last night.

It was very windy and i had hard time with guiding. There was some serious technical difficulties with my gears. After spending ten busy hours up in the observatory, I had only four 20 min. S-II frames, duh...



Pickering's Triangle, Simeis 3-188, is a small part of the Veil Nebula supernova remnant in constellation Cygnus.

Veil Nebula is a cloud of ionized gas and dust, leftovers from an exploded star. The star went off some 5000-8000 years ago at distance of about 1470 light years. This, relatively faint target, is difficult to image due to the large angular diameter, about three degrees, and a dense star field.






Orientation





Area of interest is marked as a white rectangle, the apparent size of the Moon can be seen at lower right corner.






Image in natural colors






Natural color palette from the emission of ionized elements, 


R=Hydrogen + Sulfur, G=Oxygen and B=Oxygen + Hydrogen.







Technical details:





Processing work flow:


Image acquisition, MaxiDL v5.07.


Stacked and calibrated in CCDStack2.


Levels, curves and color combine in PS CS3.





Optics, Meade LX200 GPS 12" @ f5


Camera, QHY9


Guiding, SXV-AO, an active optics unit, and Lodestar guide camera 8Hz


Image Scale, ~0,8 arc-seconds/pixel


15 x 1200s exposures for the H-alpha, emission of ionized Hydrogen = 5h


9 x 1200s exposures for the O-III, emission of ionized Oxygen = 3h


4x1200s exposures for the S-II, emission of ionized Sulfur = 1h 20min.











Ps.





An animation, stars vs. starless







Sometimes I'm publishing starless versions of my images. The actual nebula stands out better by this way, since human brains has a habit to form false shapes from a group of random dots, like stars.
















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