Placidus
22-02-2021, 01:32 PM
NGC 3199 is a Wolf-Rayet nebula: a most amazing, extraordinary beast in which light pressure alone from a huge star expels the outer atmosphere. This atmosphere will necessarily be mostly hydrogen, with some oxygen and a touch of yet more heavily processed stuff such as sulphur and nitrogen dredged up from the depths.
This particular beastie is moving toward the right relative to the pre-existing interstellar medium, and consequently there is something of a bow shock happening on the right hand side of the image. The [SII], though scanty, does seem to form discrete thready structures.
Last night we added another 5.5 hrs of [SII] taken with an FLI PL16803 to the 13 hrs of [SII], 7 hrs of H-alpha, and 9 hrs of [OIII] previously taken with an Aspen CG16M in 2016. Total exposure 29 hrs.
A revised version of the full resolution image is here (https://photos.smugmug.com/Category/Wolf-Rayet/i-k4GzLqL/0/9fdb724a/O/NGC%203199%20Version%202.jpg)
20 inch PlaneWave. Field approximately 37 min arc, North up. Astrodon 3nM filters.
As usual, apart from the cameras, all robotics and software including acquisition and processing software designed/built/written by us. Nothing from the fish market or from Doyles.
Processing:
- Wavelet noise filter
- Deconvolve
- Separate into stars and starless, map stars to white.
- Colour balance the nebulosity to be on average colour neutral.
- Wavelet sharpen the nebulosity (increase contrast by just 60%)
- Recombine.
In exciting news, our third Honda EU300iS generator died this morning, minutes after taking the last sub. That averages one every 4 years. That's it. No more generators. Our lithium batteries and solar are ominously still at least a couple weeks away, a bit like controlled nuclear fusion.
Best,
Mike and Trish
This particular beastie is moving toward the right relative to the pre-existing interstellar medium, and consequently there is something of a bow shock happening on the right hand side of the image. The [SII], though scanty, does seem to form discrete thready structures.
Last night we added another 5.5 hrs of [SII] taken with an FLI PL16803 to the 13 hrs of [SII], 7 hrs of H-alpha, and 9 hrs of [OIII] previously taken with an Aspen CG16M in 2016. Total exposure 29 hrs.
A revised version of the full resolution image is here (https://photos.smugmug.com/Category/Wolf-Rayet/i-k4GzLqL/0/9fdb724a/O/NGC%203199%20Version%202.jpg)
20 inch PlaneWave. Field approximately 37 min arc, North up. Astrodon 3nM filters.
As usual, apart from the cameras, all robotics and software including acquisition and processing software designed/built/written by us. Nothing from the fish market or from Doyles.
Processing:
- Wavelet noise filter
- Deconvolve
- Separate into stars and starless, map stars to white.
- Colour balance the nebulosity to be on average colour neutral.
- Wavelet sharpen the nebulosity (increase contrast by just 60%)
- Recombine.
In exciting news, our third Honda EU300iS generator died this morning, minutes after taking the last sub. That averages one every 4 years. That's it. No more generators. Our lithium batteries and solar are ominously still at least a couple weeks away, a bit like controlled nuclear fusion.
Best,
Mike and Trish