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Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Info Post









Litle by litle the image gets deeper when more exposures gets added.


Previous version here:








The Helix nebula, NGC 7293. Planetary nebula in constellation Aquarius about 700 light years from the Earth..


(The helix has been often referred to as the "Eye of Good", 


I'll like to know, which one it's supposed  to belong... least we know now He/She has very large Blue eye(s).)





This is a start for an imaging project, since the Helix has lowish surface brightness, it'll need a long integration time. Now there is just One hour used for the Luminance channel and 10 min./each RGB-channel.


I think, about Five to ten hours is needed to reveal dimmer outer parts of this Planetary nebula.


Later we'll shoot all the narrow band channels, H-a, O-III and S-II, too. 








The telescope and technical information:







16" RCOS ja Apogee U9000 camera. 


LRGB combo.


Luminance 9x600s., Dark and Flat calibrated.


Red 5x600s, Dark calibrated 


Green 5x600s, Dark calibrated 


Blue 5x600s, Dark calibrated 


Raw data is shared with Petri Kehusmaa and J-P Metsavainio






Processing workflow:


Image acquisition, MaxiDL v4.xxx


Stacked and calibrated in CCDStack.


Deconvolution with a CCDSharp, 30 iterations


Levels, curves and color combine in PS CS3.




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