Monday, January 7, 2008

NGC1893

Telescope - Tak FSQ-106
Camera – SBIG ST2K
Images taken over the nights of 1-1-08 to 1-6-08. Exposures were a combination of 10m & 15m subs. Total exposure time of 14.75 hrs (S2-285m, O3-180m, Ha 420m). Images Calibrated/Combined/Aligned in CCDStack with final processing in Photoshop CS3.

(The following description was from the APOD site)

The image shows the faint emission nebula IC 410 in false-colors. It also shows two denizens of the glowing gas cloud at the right - the "tadpoles" of IC 410. The picture is a composite of images taken through narrow band filters intended to trace atoms in the nebula. Emission from sulfur atoms is shown in red, hydrogen atoms in green, and oxygen in blue. Partly obscured by foreground dust, the nebula itself surrounds NGC 1893, a young galactic cluster of stars that energizes the glowing gas. Composed of denser, cooler gas and dust, the tadpoles are around 10 light-years long. Sculpted by wind and radiation from the cluster stars, their tails trail away from the cluster's central region. IC 410 lies some 12,000 light-years away, toward the constellation Auriga.

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