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Jerry_Lodriguss
06-12-2016, 09:02 AM
Who says you can’t shoot faint emission nebulae with a stock, unmodified, DSLR?

This is IC 1805 and LBN 667, the Double Nebula, in the constellation of Cassiopeia near the border of Perseus and Camelopardalis.

http://www.astropix.com/Double_Nebulae.html

Click on the link to see a larger version with more information.

It certainly is much easier to shoot emission nebulae with a modified camera, because the long-wavelength filter has been removed it passes almost all of the wavelengths of hydrogen-alpha light which give emission nebulae their distinctive color.

But you can make up for the wavelengths that get filtered out by just using more exposure. This is the price you have to pay.

A secret to being successful at this is to also use a light-pollution filter. These filters remove other wavelengths from light pollution and airglow and allow longer individual exposures that capture more hydrogen-alpha wavelengths in an individual exposure. Then you just stack a bunch of individual frames to equal one really long exposure – in this case, the equivalent of almost 5 and a half hours of total exposure in a stack of 41 eight-minute single exposures.

This image of the Double Nebulae was shot with a stock, unmodified, Nikon D5300 and a Nikkor 180mm f/2.8 lens working at f/3.46 with a 52mm IDAS LPS filter.

Jerry

DJT
06-12-2016, 07:49 PM
Nice work, Jerry

cometcatcher
06-12-2016, 08:47 PM
Beautiful image.

DarkKnight
10-12-2016, 08:41 PM
For me the shot is inspirational Jerry.

I'm about to embark on a similar journey with a D7200, an HEQ5 Pro and a WO 50mm guide scope.

How did you mount the 52mm IDAS LPS filter? Oh, and I'm very new to the astro photography genre.

Jerry_Lodriguss
13-12-2016, 03:26 AM
Thanks.

I just used a 72mm to 52mm step down ring to mount the IDAS LPS filter on the lens.

Jerry

Ryderscope
15-12-2016, 10:56 PM
Impressive Jerry.