It was taken last Sunday at Wiruna. The on-again off-again clouds were a pest but I managed to get about 5 hours of good data out of 7 hours of imaging.
Details:
Telescope: 12.5" Plane wave CDK
Mount: AP900
Camera: FLI 16803 Proline
Exposure: 60 min L, 50 min R and G, 60 min B and 70 min Ha.
FOV: 49' x 49'
Acquisition: MaximDL
Processing: PixInsight
For the luminance I made a superluminance by combining the L, R, G and B masters. The Ha was eased into the red channel near the end of processing using PixInsight's NRGBCombination script.
It's hard to get much info about this object, but here is a combination of bits of stuff I could find: Gum 15, also known as RCW 32, is about 3,000 light-years away in the constellation of Vela. It is shaped by aggressive winds flowing from the stars within and around it. The bright star near the center of the nebula is HD 74804 which is responsible for ionising the gas. The central region shows dark patches of dust, while deeper pictures show some faint reflection structures crossing it that are only dimly visible in this picture. The various combinations of emission, reflection and dark nebulae make the nebula resemble a larger and fainter version of the better known Trifid Nebula.
Some minor chip defect quibbles, but a very classy image.
Nice
Thanks Peter. I should go back and fix it up. I spent too much time looking at the nebula without paying enough attention to the outlying areas.
Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley
Nicely done Geoff. It looks great.
Greg.
Thanks Greg
Quote:
Originally Posted by Placidus
Good to see something new and fresh. Subtly and gently processsed.
Guessing that this is a youngish area, without too much in the way of past supernova explosions.
How do you find the Proline 16803 ? We're literally within hours of ordering one as a replacement for our dead Aspen 16803.
Best,
MnTi
Thanks for the positive comments MnTi.
Regarding the Proline:Nice big field, -30 deg all year round, fast download, there is a tendency for column defects as Peter has mentioned, but they can be corrected if one doesn’t rush unthinkingly into the processing.
Lovely result Geoff. Andy might tick you over the composition..? but it looks quite lovely and rather Trifid like. Nice job after what sounds like a slightly testing evening of capture
Lovely result Geoff. Andy might tick you over the composition..? but it looks quite lovely and rather Trifid like. Nice job after what sounds like a slightly testing evening of capture
Mike
Thanks Mike. The problem was mostly thinhigh cloud. Often while I’m imaging I do some casual stuff like identifying the far southern constellations. So I was looking for the S Pole in an apparentlycloudless sky, bright stars everywhere. The SP is between Acrux and Archenar. Whoa! No Archenar. That was the start. It got worse then better then bad again etc as the night wore on. Still, the result was good.
Quote:
Originally Posted by cometcatcher
That's stunning. Love the Gums. Wish I could get some time on them but they are poor weather targets.
Lol Well maybe just a good idea to keep very bright stars away from the very edge of the frame, as they can detract from the main image
In this case either a wee crop off the top or an overall shift of the frame downwards may help
Echoing what's been already said, great pic
Good to see the Gums getting some astro love here
I did this one myself a few years back Geoff in a wider format, I am presently doing a similar scale image to what you have produced here. Last time I went fairly deep at 14 hours but might go a little deeper with the narrower field image. I really like the detail you have captured here. I am hoping for something similar myself to what you have captured.
You've got yourself a really nice result there Geoff. Very clean for 4.8 hours exposure and possibly one of the shortest I've seen you use in a long time!
You've got yourself a really nice result there Geoff. Very clean for 4.8 hours exposure and possibly one of the shortest I've seen you use in a long time!