Its been a long time, but now that the nights are getting longer and getting dark earlier, I now have the time to image the sky. On 9/5 I did a composite of the moon using 15 individual videos and stitched the segments together to get an image of the entire visible moon.
Then took a few closeups... Crater Copernicus.
Schiller to Clavius
Tycho
The Iris Nebula (NGC 2023) was imaged on 9/13. Here is a full frame and a cropped closeup.
9/16. Albiero, probably the prettiest double in the northern hemisphere....
NGC 6946, the Fireworks Galaxy. This one is always a difficult one for me due to light pollution.
On 9/23, I got the CCD out and imaged the Deer Lick Galaxy Group in LRGB.
9/24 it was the Cocoon Nebula's turn, but this one was shot using the Hα filter.
Then on 9/29, I imaged NGC 6939 and M15. I also imaged the Fireworks Galaxy again, but the transparency wasnt as good as earlier in the month, so I wont duplicate it here.
and finally, M15.
Amateur Planetary & Lunar & Deep Sky Photographer
From the New Middletown OH Observatory (South of Youngstown OH)
Sky Charts & Maps
Job 9:9
Job 9:9-10
9 He is the Maker of the Bear and Orion,
the Pleiades and the constellations of the south.
10 He performs wonders that cannot be fathomed,
miracles that cannot be counted.
NIV
Showing posts with label Cocoon Nebula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cocoon Nebula. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
September, 2014 Images
Labels:
Albiero,
Clavius,
Cocoon Nebula,
Copernicus,
Deer Lick Galaxy Cluster,
Fireworks Galaxy,
Iris Nebula,
M15,
moon,
NGC 2013,
NGC 6939,
NGC 6946,
Schiller,
Tycho
Saturday, August 25, 2012
The Cocoon Nebula
This image was actually taken on 8/18/12. I have been working on this image a few times, and although previous attempts were not bad, I have been struggling with amp glow with the Canon 300D.
Today, I took 25 bias frames. These are similar to dark frames - the lens cover is on, and the shutter speed set to 1/4000 second. The idea is to measure the pixel bias and subtract that bias from the flats, darks and lights. When I used the bias frames, the amplifier glow vanished! This made the image much easier to process and got rid of some nasty gradients on the right side of the image. I will have to try this out on the 1100D also, as I have some really bad gradients on it that I havent been able to process out. This might be the missing link. Although it did not remove ALL of the amp glow, it did remove most of it.
Here is the final image of the Cocoon Nebula (IC 5146, Caldwell 19).
The Cocoon Nebula lies at the end of Barnard 168, a dark nebula, which is visible in this image as the area above the red Cocoon that is mostly absent of stars. If you also look closely, there is some dim blueish nebulocity on the edge of the red, on the bottom right part of the Cocoon in this image. Although not as prominent in the Cocoon as in the Trifid, all 3 types of nebulocity exist in this object.
Today, I took 25 bias frames. These are similar to dark frames - the lens cover is on, and the shutter speed set to 1/4000 second. The idea is to measure the pixel bias and subtract that bias from the flats, darks and lights. When I used the bias frames, the amplifier glow vanished! This made the image much easier to process and got rid of some nasty gradients on the right side of the image. I will have to try this out on the 1100D also, as I have some really bad gradients on it that I havent been able to process out. This might be the missing link. Although it did not remove ALL of the amp glow, it did remove most of it.
Here is the final image of the Cocoon Nebula (IC 5146, Caldwell 19).
The Cocoon Nebula lies at the end of Barnard 168, a dark nebula, which is visible in this image as the area above the red Cocoon that is mostly absent of stars. If you also look closely, there is some dim blueish nebulocity on the edge of the red, on the bottom right part of the Cocoon in this image. Although not as prominent in the Cocoon as in the Trifid, all 3 types of nebulocity exist in this object.
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