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Category Archives: Astrophotography
My Latest Astronomical Image – Core of the Cave Nebula – June 21, 2022
This is the second and last image from June 21, 2022. This core area of the Cave Nebula. The nebula is actually much larger than this image, but my field of view is focused on some of the core glowing red gas. There are many stars in this image since this is along the main section of the Milky Way galaxy. The individual image data was acquired from 2:23 am to 3:52 am. This was also shot with the Orion 8″ Astrograph using 3 minute exposures. More exposure time would show more of the red gas.
It was a long night – I didn’t get to bed until 5:00 am, but I was able to sleep until 11:30 am to make up for the all night session. The weather turns bad over the next few days and I’ll take a break from the imaging I’ve done over the last week or so. It has been really fun though and I’ve had much more success than I did a year ago.
Quote from Wikipedia
“Sh2-155 (also designated Caldwell 9, Sharpless 155 or S155) is a diffuse nebula in the constellation Cepheus, within a larger nebula complex containing emission, reflection, and dark nebulosity. It is widely known as the Cave Nebula, though that name was applied earlier to Ced 201, a different nebula in Cepheus. Sh2-155 is an ionized H II region with ongoing star formation activity,[1] at an estimated distance of 725 parsecs (2400 light-years) from Earth.[2][3]”
My Most Recent Astro Image
Color picture taken August 2020 – M27, The Dumbbell Nebula. I have taken this image several times before as one of my favorite objects (exactly a year ago with my 12″ telescope) and I decided to repeat it with my newer 102 mm refractor. This image shows more detail than last years version and a larger area of the surrounding stars with many more faint stars since I took much longer images. The night was beautiful and stable, and the refractor has the sharpest and stable focus of any of my telescopes. There were 28 images shot in 4 colors at 5 minutes exposure for each image. It was a total of 2 hours and 20 minutes of integration time.
This is 1300 light years away and is a gaseous remnant of a star similar to our sun that is at the end of its life. There is a white dwarf at the center that illuminates the exploded gas.