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View Full Version here: : Henize 70 - Super Bubble In Dorado


AstroViking
07-01-2024, 03:31 PM
Hi all,

UPDATE: more data captured and new image located further down the conversation thread.

Thanks again to Brian for identifying this DSO. I need to improve my Google-fu when it comes to searching for the more obscure DSO catalogues, I think...

In case you want to go hunting for it yourself, it’s known as the ‘Super Bubble In Dorado’ and has been catalogued as ‘Henize 70’, N70, LHA 120-N44, and DEL-L-301. (Confusingly, Wikipedia gives it the catalogue ID of ‘LHA 120-N70’.)

It’s an emission nebula and ‘super bubble’ that may also have characteristics of being a super-nova remnant (SNR). The scientists are not in agreement about exactly what it is.

Size-wise, it’s been measured at about 300 light-years in diameter and about 170,000 light-years away.. That’s one seriously big bubble...

If you're curious, you can read more here: https://astrodrudis.com/n70-henize-70/

It's also a NASA APOD, back in February of 2019. https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap190204.html

Image data:

* Gain: 120
* Offset: 10
* Temperature: 0 degrees C
* Exposure: 120 seconds
* Frames: 60 Lights, 25 Darks, (120 minutes integration in total)
* Binning: 2x2
* Filter: Optolong L-Enhance
* Processed with SiriL (stacking, pre-processing and star removal with Starnet++) then finished in Affinity Photo v2

* Equipment: SW72ED @ 420mm / HEQ5-Pro / ASI183MC-Pro / SV165+SV305 / Kstars/Ekos

This one calls for a longer focal-length telescope and more data. The latter I can do easily enough, the former will have to wait.

Cheers,
V

gb44
07-01-2024, 08:57 PM
Cool pic.
Its a bit like the skull nebula.
I wonder if Google Lens would find this nebula. I cant use it as my phone aint working right but I'd be interested to know.

GlennB

Plossl68
07-01-2024, 10:00 PM
Cool target and a great shot. Great sense of 3D / depth to the bubble!

Dave882
07-01-2024, 11:59 PM
Very cool mate. Thanks for the extra info too

AstroViking
08-01-2024, 10:11 AM
Thanks folks!

Does anyone with a longer focal length 'scope want to have a look at this one? I'd love to see a closer view of it.

Cheers,
V.

AstroViking
13-01-2024, 05:49 PM
UPDATE:

I was able to grab another 2 hours of data (as well as proper Flat/DarkFlat calibration frames) last Thursday night. So I now have a total of 4 hours on this one.

I can see more detail in the bubble's tendrils of gas now, and I processed it slightly differently to try and increase the contrast between the bubble and it's background / surroundings.

I also found out that it has appeared as NASA's APOD back in June 1998! See https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap980613.html

Again - I'd love to see what a longer FL scope will produce.

Cheers,
V.

Plossl68
13-01-2024, 06:55 PM
Impressive to see the extra details from another 2 hours data!

Anth10
14-01-2024, 09:17 AM
That’s super impressive, nice wide field indeed.
One thing I like aside from the bubble itself is the rich star field surrounding it. I recall difficulty in locating this from my backyard back on 2018 - I’ve attached an image I took using 1250mm focal length at f5. Yours has some interesting detail in the bubble and nice framing to incorporate the other emission to the right.
Nice work.


Anth

AstroViking
14-01-2024, 02:24 PM
Paul and Anth, thanks for the kind words! :)

That's a great image, too, Anth - thanks for sharing. :thumbsup:

Cheers,
V