The Needle Galaxy, a large barred spiral galaxy seen almost perfectly edge-on. The name was given to its narrow profile. This is a bright galaxy that Charles Messier missed. William Herschel discovered this galaxy in 1785.
NGC4565 is between 30 and 50 million light years away, and is about 100,000 light years across (One light year = about 6,000,000,000,000 miles) , and is located in the constellation Coma Berenices. The small galaxy on the top right is NGC4562.
This image is a composite stack of 10 - 5 minute exposures taken with a Canon T3 at ISO 400. The telescope used was an Orion 8", f/5 Newtonian reflector. It is about 16 X 2 arcminutes in size.
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 NGC4565. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NGC4565. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
NGC4565, The Needle Galaxy
Saturday, April 21, 2012
The Markarian's Chain
On 4/18/12 I had to work late, so I brought the telescope and found that my office had darker skies than home. I took the opportunity of photographing the Markarian's Chain in Virgo. Astrometry.net says there are 17 galaxies in this field of view, and all but one was captured. I'm guessing IC3303 was too dim to be captured with the exposure I used.
This image is an unguided series of 12 frames at iso1600 and 3 minutes in length.
All of the galaxies are rather small, which does not surprise me, considering they're 60 million light years away. This is a very dense field of galaxies.
A list of galaxies shown in this image can be found at http://www.flickr.com/photos/32416606@N05/7092530347/
Also of note, I had just acquired a Bahtinov focusing mask just in time for me to image this group of objects. It really does take the guesswork out of focusing, which I have had some problems with in past images. It can be difficult to tell if you are focused until you take a couple of long exposure images and see a bright star with a "hole" in the center. This mask makes it much easier to determine if you are in focus.
I also purchased an integrated barlow / T-ring, which I used once while I was on site, but being I was unguided, the stars streaked a little more than I had liked. It is going to work however when I use the autoguider.
I also took a few frames of the Needle Galaxy, NGC4565 in Coma Berenices. There isn't near enough exposure time for this object, as I only took 6 frames at 3 min each...
This is a cropped image. I did take 1 single frame of this object using the barlow, and I believe it is going to work out nicely, but without guiding, I didnt continue photographing this object after the 1 frame. This image is without the barlow, and I had run out of time, as my primary target was the Markarian's Chain.
I will be revisiting this object again, as it is relatively large, and although it is quite narrow, I was able to capture the central dust lane. Looking forward to using the barlow on this object and guiding the scope for some longer exposures.
This image is an unguided series of 12 frames at iso1600 and 3 minutes in length.
All of the galaxies are rather small, which does not surprise me, considering they're 60 million light years away. This is a very dense field of galaxies.
A list of galaxies shown in this image can be found at http://www.flickr.com/photos/32416606@N05/7092530347/
Also of note, I had just acquired a Bahtinov focusing mask just in time for me to image this group of objects. It really does take the guesswork out of focusing, which I have had some problems with in past images. It can be difficult to tell if you are focused until you take a couple of long exposure images and see a bright star with a "hole" in the center. This mask makes it much easier to determine if you are in focus.
I also purchased an integrated barlow / T-ring, which I used once while I was on site, but being I was unguided, the stars streaked a little more than I had liked. It is going to work however when I use the autoguider.
I also took a few frames of the Needle Galaxy, NGC4565 in Coma Berenices. There isn't near enough exposure time for this object, as I only took 6 frames at 3 min each...
This is a cropped image. I did take 1 single frame of this object using the barlow, and I believe it is going to work out nicely, but without guiding, I didnt continue photographing this object after the 1 frame. This image is without the barlow, and I had run out of time, as my primary target was the Markarian's Chain.
I will be revisiting this object again, as it is relatively large, and although it is quite narrow, I was able to capture the central dust lane. Looking forward to using the barlow on this object and guiding the scope for some longer exposures.
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