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Old 29-03-2018, 12:44 PM
Placidus (Mike and Trish)
Narrowing the band

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RCW 57, the Pekingese and the Hereford; 19 hrs Ha

RCW 57 at the prow of Argo appears to be a rather heterogeneous star-forming region.

Here we've shot a three panel mosaic to get a field width of just over one degree. We've processed it two ways, one to emphasise the brightest features, and and another to to bring out some extremely faint and wispy background material.

There are two dominant sub-regions, which could not be more different from each other.

At the left is the area around open cluster NGC 3603. Without much difficulty, one could see the weathered, splintered cross section of a hardwood log, left too long in the sun and rain. (On the other hand, one sees not the specifics, but the general feel of multiple overlapping and contradictory images of the face of a frenetic pekingese puppy, certainly lots of eyes and noses and mouths in about the right arrangement). Either way, the character of the area is of harsh contrasts and chaotic disarray.

On the right, we see a much softer, but less chaotic and more structured area given multiple NGC numbers, notably NGC 3581, but to us, in H-alpha, we see it is a coherent whole.

We invite you to see the very brightest lower half as a dancing Hereford cow. Two white horns extending upward. Curly dark Herford brow. One small black eye with a vein running diagonally across it. Two floppy ears. A white muzzle. Below, we see one very distinct arm and two dancing legs, each with brilliant white markings.

Above the cow's horns, we see a huge gypsy wagon with H-alpha shock fronts producing a canvas-like roof. In front of the wagon, and above the horns of the cow, there are two jet black dogs, one on our left upright and howling, one on the right merely a head in silhouette.

Far above the canopy of the wagon we see a spidery tangle of inky black threads like an octopus or Hydra, against the very faint general H-alpha glow.

Toward bottom left is a small bright insect, a butterfly or bee perhaps. There is much else to see.

3 nM H-alpha filter. Aspen CG16M on 20 inch PlaneWave. Nineteen 1 hour subs. Moon averaging about 50% full. Seeing pretty good at around 1.8 sec arc.

Processing with GoodLook 64.

Very best,
Mike and Trish
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Click for full-size image (RCW 57 NGC 3581 NGC 3603 Ha 19 hrs Thumb.jpg)
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Click for full-size image (RCW 57 NGC 3581 NGC 3603 19 hrs darker version thumb.jpg)
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Last edited by Placidus; 29-03-2018 at 01:17 PM.
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Old 29-03-2018, 01:07 PM
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strongmanmike (Michael)
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For such a well imaged object/s Mike and Trish and only in B&W, you have managed to somehow present it in a fresh way..dunno how but it just looks good probably the framing I recon

Nicely detailed too btw

Mike
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Old 29-03-2018, 01:17 PM
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LewisM
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What Mike said.
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Old 29-03-2018, 01:46 PM
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Great Detail showing there guys
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Old 29-03-2018, 02:17 PM
willik (Willik)
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Great image cant compete look at the Telescope you got and camera
you got a larger telescope than Perth observotory
Martin
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Old 29-03-2018, 02:28 PM
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LewisM
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Great image cant compete look at the Telescope you got and camera
you got a larger telescope than Perth observotory
Martin
Yes it’s time Perth Observatory updated from the 50mm Tasco they have.
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Old 29-03-2018, 02:38 PM
willik (Willik)
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They are thinking of buying your 50mm Tasco telescope from the one you use Lewis.
Martin
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Old 29-03-2018, 03:01 PM
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RickS (Rick)
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Fantastic to see such a wide view at that resolution, M&T I can't quite make out what dance the cow is doing
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Old 29-03-2018, 04:01 PM
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Peter Ward
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I read it right.

Nineteen..19...ten plus nine... one hour subs !

Hence the decadent silky smooth result.

Lovely
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Old 29-03-2018, 05:24 PM
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Geat picture Mike n Trish,
there is detail there that I've never seen before.

cheers
Allan
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Old 29-03-2018, 05:41 PM
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Atmos (Colin)
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Exquisite Ha image M&T
Even the more heavily stretched image still shows a lot of contrast in the brighter areas. Very well done M&T
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Old 29-03-2018, 06:24 PM
Placidus (Mike and Trish)
Narrowing the band

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Mike, Lewis, Andy, Martin, Rick, Peter, Allan, Colin,

Thank you so much for your kind words.

Pulling hair out at the moment, trying to book a flight from Duesseldorf to Dresden on EuroWings. Their web site is like a black hole that sucks credit cards. Experience reveals it doesn't work with Microsoft Edge. Not even two glasses of wine has stopped the shaking.

Best,
MnT

Last edited by Placidus; 29-03-2018 at 07:12 PM.
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Old 29-03-2018, 06:58 PM
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Old 30-03-2018, 06:28 PM
Placidus (Mike and Trish)
Narrowing the band

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Thanks, Louie.
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Old 01-04-2018, 06:32 PM
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Peter Ward
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Quote:
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"..... trying to book a flight from Duesseldorf to Dresden on EuroWings.....

Best,
MnT
Humm.. Eurowings?? Have you tried the RAF?
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Old 04-04-2018, 11:05 PM
Star Catcher (Ted Dobosz)
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Very good result M&T, nice and clean and I like both renditions.

Ted
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Old 05-04-2018, 08:16 AM
Placidus (Mike and Trish)
Narrowing the band

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Very good result M&T, nice and clean and I like both renditions.

Ted
Thanks, Ted.

We mentioned the striking difference between the left and right halves of the image. The left side shows a bright young cluster surrounded by clumpy flocculent dust. The right side shows big graceful arcs and bubbles. If the two sides were at about the same distance, that would strongly suggest that a density wave has passed from right to left, triggering a slowly moving wave of star formation. The right side with its arcs and bubbles would be older; the left side with its clumpy dust and bright new stars is much younger.
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Old 05-04-2018, 04:18 PM
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Ryderscope (Rodney)
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Great field and composition. Processing has brought out the detail very nicely. I'm tempted to have a go at this area with the TSA120.
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Old 06-04-2018, 10:43 AM
Placidus (Mike and Trish)
Narrowing the band

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ryderscope View Post
Great field and composition. Processing has brought out the detail very nicely. I'm tempted to have a go at this area with the TSA120.
Thanks, Rod! Your beast will do it and perhaps some of the surrounds in a single panel.
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