Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley
Looks great but it really needs some O111. The magenta colour seems off to me. Perhaps the lack of O111 causes that.
I like the cloudlike structures in the ring you don't normally see so the Aluna is showing its stuff there.
Greg.
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Ta Greg. I actually pretty happy with the colour balance. H-alpha (i.e. pure red) dominates the ring and outer zones. The core is bright in OIII (blue green) but the transition zone should be red+ blue/green i.e. a shade of magenta.
I hammered this thing years ago with a SII filter and came to the conclusion there was sweet Fanny Adam's worth in there hence don't bother these days.
That said, with just 45 minutes of colour data in a glowing urban sky, despite my best gradient removal efforts it's likely the colour has a bias...I just haven't able work out in what direction
Quote:
Originally Posted by DiscoDuck
Thanks for the kind words. I just sharpened the nebulosity in mine a bit, Peter (Astrobin link updated in my thread). Given I haven't processed an image since April, I think I have forgotten how to do it!! (I also managed to stuff up star colours - which Greg picked me up on). I had focused on selectively sharpening the cometary globules, as I was interested in those, but omitted to at least do SOME sharpening on the brighter bits of the neb (that could take it).
Your pic is amazing - especially given the suburban capture.
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You are welcome & thanks. Unfortunately without a dark observatory site I am limited to NB or brighter RGB object imaging, so tackling low surface brightness objects like this one from the 'burbs is always a challenge.
Quote:
Originally Posted by multiweb
Really nice shot Peter.  You're definitely starting to pick up some structure in the chevrons and faint outer nebulosity. I also always look for that little side on galaxy on one side next to the bright star embedded in the red neb that is the hallmark of a good shot. Did you see the amount of faint fuzzies in the center visible through the Oiii in the ESO shot? It looks like a window into the universe right behind it. Now that's way cooler than processing it to taste trying to make it look like an eye. Well done again.
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Thanks Marc. I suspect with a few hours of luminance I might be able to get some of those awesome faint fuzzies into the data...but they are tiny too. You need good seeing to resolve them. The Chart32 image also has them in spades. Humm...quite the challenge for an urban imager like myself..

AO to the rescue?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Retrograde
Some very nuanced and delicate details details in this Peter and of course amazing depth for a relatively modest integration (we all know there's almost never enough exposure on this object).
I really like your treatment.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JA
It looks to be well slapped and a fine image
Best
JA
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Glad you enjoyed the view Gentlemen. I'm not done with this one yet. Rubbish seeing caused some rainbow fringing on the RGB stars and as Greg suggested a tad more OIII is likely to reveal more of the spoke pattern in the OIII emissions. I'm not done with this white whale yet!