After imaging Saturn and its moons this evening I thought I would have a go at the Homunculus. I've only tried it once before with a modified webcam. It is a challenging object. I'm sure others can do better.
Thanks for looking.
RichardJ
Last edited by RichardJ; 04-04-2012 at 07:29 AM.
Reason: Further image provided
It was a surprise I got it. It was took with GSO 12 " - barlow GSO ED 2" 2x - extensor 35 mm - Cannon 350 D - 2 frames - DSS - 35 seconds - ISO 800 -PhotoShop - NeatImage on mar/2012
Very interesting capture Richard and a mighty fine Job
I seen this hubble image yrs ago and wondered where, what etc as it was named just as: A Stellar BadBoy ? ? So your image really puts it in perspective, Top work ! !
Richard, I had a go at this tonight.
It's really very hard to find the right balance with the capture.
I ended up going for 3 seconds subs @ iso400
Hope you don't mind if I share it here.
Well done. I like the colour. Next time I'm going to try to get a shorter exposure as well as a longer exposure and combine the images to try and reduce the size of Eta and show more central nebulosity. The seeing last Saturday night was excellent. I need to wait for the best conditions for this task.
Well done. I like the colour. Next time I'm going to try to get a shorter exposure as well as a longer exposure and combine the images to try and reduce the size of Eta and show more central nebulosity. The seeing last Saturday night was excellent. I need to wait for the best conditions for this task.
regards,
RichardJ
It seems to be Eta star, but it is the ejecta ionized clouds.
I could understand it when I took an Hubble image and processed it to be similar to what we can capture with our telescopes.
Take a look on photo that I shared here, where you can see a processed Hubble image and a similar capture that all us got. Take a look on original photo from Hubble, too.
I think that only with more ampliation you will get the separation of Eta and that cloud. On Hubble image you can see that Eta is less bright (because of the size) than that cloud. It is similar to double stars. Where Eta is the faint star.
it seems that all what we got capture is the Hubble's reddish part of nebula.
I reprocessed by original images and was curious how my new final image stacked up against a recent Hubble image. I've uploaded the result. I think not bad for a 10-inch Newtonian.