Quote:
Originally Posted by Atmos
Interesting little space bubble Ray, nicely done 
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thanks Colin - a few SNs can make a bit of a mess of their surrounds.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stevec35
Looks great to me Ray! It's certainly not an easy object.
Cheers
Steve
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Thanks Steve. It is a bit difficult, but very interesting.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tilbrook@rbe.ne
Great to see Henize 70 imaged Ray!
The first amateur image I remember of this was taken with through Ian Bedfords 30" scope with starlight express camera.
It blew me away when Ian did a basic stretch on the image and Henize 70 popped out.
Must be 10 years ago.
Cheers,
Justin.
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Thanks Justin. Yes, it is one of those objects that looks slightly unreal.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Placidus
Ray, that is inspiring.
The AAO write-up says it's a nebula around a bunch of WR stars. The APOD write-up says it's carved out by a mix of supernovas and "very hot" stars. Would love to know more about it, and in particular to see how much [SII] it has.
Nice work,
Mike
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thanks very much Mike. I also could not find much that was explanatory.
From the little that I could find (and please correct if any of this is wrong), it seems that a bubble may begin with OB star associations condensing from dense molecular clouds. The OB stars (probably including W-Rs) spew stuff everywhere in massive stellar winds, forming an initial ball of gas and dust. Eventually the highest mass stars become SNs and the supersonic blasts from these sweep up and shock up the previously ejected material and other collected material - they also clear out the central region. This forms the hollow shell structure.
I could find one spectrum from a superbubble and that was almost exclusively Ha. I recorded very little O3 from H70 - it seems to be predominantly an Ha region as well, presumably activated by UV from whatever OBs and hot cinders are left in the central region.
If you find any good info on these things, be very grateful if you would post it - they are fascinating structures.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Geoff45
Nice take on an unusual object. Colour looks good. Well done Ray.
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thanks Geoff. Colour is basically Ha - there was not much else in H70 itself. I suppose that I should have added some Ha to the G and B to simulate Hb, but I didn't think that would add a lot.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RickS
Bit of a change of pace for you Ray, but very nicely done.
Cheers,
Rick.
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Thanks Rick. Yep, way out of my comfort zone, but these things are fascinating and imaging in twilight is a good way to get and extra hour or two of data in a night.
Quote:
Originally Posted by rustigsmed
interesting object ray and nicely done as usual! plus its always nice to image something in another galaxy!
Russ
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Thanks Russ. exactly! how much fun to be able to see a bit of detail in something that far away.
regards Ray